Choosing the Right CBSE School A Comprehensive Guide for Parents
Mlearning
1.
2. *Define the M Learning
Any sort of learning that happens when the
learner is not at a fixed, predetermined
location, or learning that happens when the
learner takes advantage of the learning
opportunities offered by mobile technologies
3. *Objectives of using the Mobile Learning in DE:
Available anywhere, anytime and any pace.
Be two way and multi-media.
Enhances knowledge.
No time constraints .
More independent.
Content is adaptable to meet individual needs.
Improved communication and organization.
Easier access, Increases motivation.
4. *Features of the Mobile Learning
Enables knowledge building by learners in different
contexts.
Enables learners to construct understandings.
M-learning is convenient, in the sense that it is accessible
virtually from anywhere.
Mobile technology often changes the pattern of
learning/work activity.
5. *Advantages of the Mobile Learning
Relatively inexpensive opportunities, as the cost of
mobile devices are significantly less than PCs and laptops
Multimedia content delivery and creation options
Continuous and situated learning support
Decrease in training costs
Potentially a more rewarding learning experience.
6. *Challenges of the Mobile Learning :
Technical challenges include:
Connectivity and battery life.
Screen size and key size.
Meeting required bandwidth for nonstop/fast streaming
Number of file/asset formats supported by a specific device
Content security or copyright issue from authoring group
Multiple standards, multiple screen sizes, multiple operating
systems
Reworking existing E-Learning materials for mobile
platforms
Limited memory.
Risk of sudden obsolescence.
7. *Social and educational challenges include
Accessibility and cost barriers for end users.
How to assess learning outside the classroom
How to support learning across many contexts
Content's security or pirating issues
Frequent changes in device models/technologies/functionality
etc.
Developing an appropriate theory of learning for the mobile age
Conceptual differences between E- and M-learning
8. **How the Mobile Learning are used to deliver and support
learning.
Bluetooth: A short range wireless connection. This enables PDAs (Personal
Digital Assistants) to pass messages to and from other mobile devices.
PDAs: Personal Digital Assistants have evolved to mini PCs able to carry out
many of the basic functions of a larger PC using the Palm OS or MS Pocket
PC operating system.
MP3s: Audio file format that efficiently compresses files and enables them to
be shared.
CAMs: Video cameras now embedded into mobile phone and PDAs.
WAP: An international protocol that allows users to access the internet via
their WAP enabled mobile phones.
9. *Concerns raised by researchers and distance students/tutors about the
Mobile Learning:
Design: Designing for mobile learning becomes a critical Challenge.
„How to enhance the experience without Interfering with it‟. And so
designing for mobile learning becomes a critical challenge. „How to
enhance the experience without interfering with it‟ was the title of
Russell Beales (University of Birmingham, UK) workshop
session."For lots of people, children particularly, education is not
optional," he said. "It‟s something that they have to do, and they don‟t
necessarily want to do it. Whereas one of the good things about
technology is that it offers an opportunity for choice."Thus, said Peter
Lonsdale (University of Birmingham, UK)we shouldn‟t cram existing
activities onto mobile devices, but instead make use of different ways
of organizing
10. learning communities: "Children want to learn," claimed Ann Jones (Open
University, UK), "but what they want is choice over what to learn. You can
stop a child from learning by just presenting a load of
information."Evaluation How can we effectively measure learning in mobile
Environments? How can we effectively measure learning in mobile
environments? Josie Taylor (Open University, UK) ran a session exploring
this, and the group discovered that evaluation overlaps with design. Mobile
learning is often blended with other types of learning. A mobile device could
act as a tool for thinking: for example, when learners know that everything is
being recorded or is easy to record, this changes their behavior. Thus, argued
Barbara Wasson (University of Bergen, Norway), we should focus on
activities, and the dialectic relation between the learner and the technology,
not on people or technology in isolation.
11. *Case studies/examples:
*Carnegie Mellon University Project
Carnegie Mellon University today announced the expansion of its Mobile&
Immersive Learning for Literacy in Emerging Economies (MILLEE)project,
which will gauge the effectiveness of mobile phone-based games for teaching
English lessons to students in rural India.
*Mobile Technology Applications in the Korean Higher Education
“Mobile campus” has made students and faculty staff access authentic, updated
information sources and communicate with each other anytime, and anywhere
within the campus. In South Korea, All of Life Is Mobile more colleges and
universities have moved to mobile learning environments A student used her cell
phone to enter the main library at Sookmyung Women‟s University On campus,
students touch their mobiles to the electronic box to mark their attendance.
University of North Carolina at Wilmington takes benefits of the mobile learning.
*Resource:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MLearning