Learning in a Mobile Age

Posted by LeighJaschke on Aug 18, 2009
Author: 
Traxler, John
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Publication Date: 
Mar 2009
Publisher/Journal: 
International Journal of Mobile & Blended Learning, IGI Global
Abstract: 

The launch of the International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning is one of several indicators that mobile learning globally is reaching a critical and sustainable momentum and identity. The past six or seven years have seen a host of pilots and initiatives across sectors and across countries and these have established firstly that mobile learning takes learning to individuals, communities and countries where access to learning was challenging or problematic and secondly that mobile learning enhances, enriches and extends how learning is understood. Environmental factors have meant that this development has been haphazard.

The mobile learning community is now faced with broader challenges of scale, durability, equity, embedding and blending in addition to the earlier and more specific challenges of pedagogy and technology, but these developments take place in the context of societies where mobile devices, systems and technologies have a far wider impact than just mobile learning as it is currently conceived. This paper looks at the definition and evolution of mobile learning as the starting point for a discussion of this wider impact.

Citation: 
Traxler, John (2009). Learning in a Mobile Age. International Journal of Mobile & Blended Learning 1(1), 1-12 January-March 2009. IGI Global
Learning in a Mobile Age data sheet 1770 Views
Author: 
Traxler, John
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Publication Date: 
Mar 2009
Publisher/Journal: 
International Journal of Mobile & Blended Learning, IGI Global
Abstract: 

The launch of the International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning is one of several indicators that mobile learning globally is reaching a critical and sustainable momentum and identity. The past six or seven years have seen a host of pilots and initiatives across sectors and across countries and these have established firstly that mobile learning takes learning to individuals, communities and countries where access to learning was challenging or problematic and secondly that mobile learning enhances, enriches and extends how learning is understood. Environmental factors have meant that this development has been haphazard.

The mobile learning community is now faced with broader challenges of scale, durability, equity, embedding and blending in addition to the earlier and more specific challenges of pedagogy and technology, but these developments take place in the context of societies where mobile devices, systems and technologies have a far wider impact than just mobile learning as it is currently conceived. This paper looks at the definition and evolution of mobile learning as the starting point for a discussion of this wider impact.

Citation: 
Traxler, John (2009). Learning in a Mobile Age. International Journal of Mobile & Blended Learning 1(1), 1-12 January-March 2009. IGI Global

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