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ELI 2006 Spring Focus Session

Mobility and Mobile Learning: The Next Phase of Anytime, Anywhere Learning

Spring Focus Session Podcasts:

ELI is podcasting interviews with session speakers on mobility and mobile learning to enhance and extend the focus session experience. Audio from session presentations will also be podcast after the session. You can access the podcasts from the EDUCAUSE blog site under the following tags:

Preregistration (online, phone, fax, e-mail, etc.) for the ELI Spring Focus Session is closed. Please contact Member Services at (303) 449-4430 or conf@educause.edu to be placed on a wait list.

Smart phones, cell phones, PDAs, MP3 players, Pocket PCs, Tablet PCs, and other handheld devices are increasing opportunities for mobile communication and interaction. Mobile devices promise

  • ubiquitous access,
  • freedom from traditional space/time constraints, and
  • flexibility.

Without question, today’s learners have embraced mobile technologies. For example, nearly all college and university students own cell phones, and the world’s estimated 1.5 billion mobile phones are three times the number of personal computers. Beyond the sheer numbers, many of today’s phones have the processing power of a mid-1990s PC.1 Because of that processing power, available applications include SMS, podcasting, games, beaming, and geocaching. Video and television are already available on mobile phones.

As wireless networking and mobile devices proliferate in our daily lives, educators are being challenged to consider how mobile devices contribute to learning. Mobile learning promises to extend convenience and access—and to foster alternative practices such as podcasting and augmented reality.

ELI’s 2006 Spring Focus Session brings together IT professionals, faculty, librarians, administrators, and learning designers to better understand mobile devices and mobile learning. Join us in investigating questions such as:

  • What is mobility? Survey current mobile devices as well as their application and use.
  • Why is mobility significant? Review what we know about lifestyles, learner preferences, and technological directions. Consider the projections for mobility, technologically and socially. Explore how mobility relates to the principles that underlie successful learning.
  • How is it being used? Participate in demonstrations and discussions of mobile technologies and mobile learning.
  • What are the implications for teaching and learning? Explore the implications for colleges and universities, such as infrastructure, policy, faculty development, support, and assessment.
  • What will the future look like? Consider what mobility and mobile learning might be like in the next five years.

Who Should Attend

This focus session is designed for those involved in the use of technology to improve learning but who are not expert in mobile applications. Interested groups may include:

  • Information / instructional professionals
  • Faculty
  • Administrators
  • Librarians
  • Other areas as determined by your institutional context

We encourage you to attend as a team. Institutions that send a team to a focus session derive the greatest value from the meeting. Teams encourage collaboration and are able to better implement what they learn from the focus session on returning to their home institution.

Meeting Preparation

Attendees will be asked to complete readings in preparation for the focus session. These materials will be made available to all participants at least one month before the session.

Outcomes

As a result of the focus session, we expect that participants will:

  • acquire a deeper understanding of mobile devices/applications and mobile learning;
  • identify designs, components, principles, and processes they should consider incorporating into their own mobile learning projects;
  • anticipate new and creative ways of using mobile devices to advance learning; and
  • establish a community of interest that builds on individual and collective practice.
Endnote

1. J. Atwell, “Mobile Technologies and Learning: A Technology Update and m-learning Project Summary” (London: The Learning Skills and Development Agency, 2004), http://www.m-learning.org/docs/The%20m-learning%20project%20-%20technology%20update%20and%20project%20summary.pdf.


 
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