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How Katy Independent School District Turned Its Students' Love Of Mobile Into Better Le... - 0 views

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    This article depicts a school district where the use of mobile technology has been a big success. It gives a detailed account of how this is true.
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5 Ways Higher Education Is Leveraging Mobile Tech - 3 views

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    This article discusses ways to use mobile technology in a higher education setting, including uses to increase engagement among students and to provide safety and emergency information. The author fails to include any uses that actually involve learning or improved communication and transparency between students and teachers, which I believe is an oversight that many schools have when considering implementing mobile technology in their schools. 
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    Jeff Kirchick is Director of Universities at SCVNGR, the popular mobile game about going places, doing challenges and earning points. He presents regularly about the future of mobile and location-based services in education. You can follow Jeff on Twitter @JeffreyKirchick or e-mail him at jeff@scvngr.com.
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MobiMOOC--a MOOC for learning about learning! - 0 views

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    We just missed it, but right now we're in the midst of MobiMOOC, a MOOC organized by educators to teach other educators about mobile learning. Kind of a neat concept, I think! But one of the keys is how good is the instruction in helping educators integrate in mobile learning with good pedagogy instead of just showcasing mobile technologies...probably one of the common dangers with these types of initiatives.
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Education Week: Picking and Choosing Digital Content - 0 views

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    This is a great snapshot of the direction that curriculum design can move in with the availability of mobile technology in classrooms. The article discusses the ability to mix and match objectives and choose content that is relevant to the particular students in the class by creating digital content and eBooks. This is great for differentiation. One concern mentioned is the availability of the digital content to all students as not all schools have implemented mobile learning environments, where all students have access.
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Why aren't universities creating engaging mobile platforms for students? - Tech News an... - 1 views

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    universities barrier mobile learning
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Visions of Mobile Learning - 1 views

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    A really intriguing collection of where educators think mobile learning/ubiquitous computing are heading towards.
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    These are awesome! I love how far out of the box some of these educators were willing to go...what a nice collection of "crystal ball" visions to document and archive to then see if any (or all) of them ever actualize.
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Economics focus: To do with the price of fish | The Economist - 0 views

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    An old article from 2007 referenced in my discussion post on infrastructure and mobile learning. It's interesting to consider the capacity and willingness to leverage the power of mobile devices to overcome infrastructure deficiencies in the developing world.
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India's $35 tablet is here, for real. Called Aakash, costs $60 -- Engadget - 3 views

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    Tying into discussions this week about bringing access to mobile devices to all via non-prohibitive costs, while still reaching a set of bare-minmum technical specs for actual use: India's "$35 tablet" has been a pipedream in the tech blog-o-sphere for awhile now, but it's finally available (though for a price of roughly $60). Still though, as an actual Android color touch tablet, with WiFi and cellular data capability - I'm curious to see how it's received and if it's adopted in any sort of large scale
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    http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jkCXZtzqXX87-pXex2nn23lWFwkw?docId=87163f29232f400d87ba906dc3a93405 A much better article that isn't so 'tech' oriented. Goes into the origin and philosophy of the $35 tablet, and future prospects
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    I had heard months ago that India was creating this, but was not going to offer it commercially - rather, just for its own country. Just like the Little Professor (Prof Dede) calculator, when tablets get this affordable, educational systems can afford classroom sets of them and then use them regularly. But to Prof Dede's point - can they do everything that more expensive tablets can do? Or better yet - do they HAVE to?
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    I think this is what they're aiming to do - all classrooms/students across the country having this particular tablet. They won't be able to do everything today's expensive tablets can do, but I think they'll still be able too to do plenty. This $35 tablet's specs are comparable to the mobile devices we had here in the US in 2008/2009. Even back then, we were able to web browse, check email, use social networking (sharing pics and video too), watching streaming online video, and play basic 2D games. But even beyond those basic features, I think this tablet will be able to do more than we expect from something at this price point and basic hardware, for 2 reasons: 1. Wide-spread adoption of a single hardware. If this thing truly does become THE tablet for India's students, it will have such a massive userbase that software developers and designers who create educational software will have to cater to it. They will have to study this tablet and learn the ins-and-outs of its hardware in order to deliver content for it. "Underpowered" hardware is able to deliver experiences well beyond what would normally be expected from it when developers are able to optimize heavily for that particular set of components. This is why software for Apple's iPhone and iPad, and games for video game consoles (xbox, PS3, wii) are so polished. For the consoles especially, all the users have the same exact hardware, with the same features and components. Developers are able to create software that is very specialized for that hardware- opposed to spending their resources and time making sure the software works on a wide variety of hardware (like in the PC world). With this development style in mind, and with a fixed hardware model remaining widely used in the market for many years- the resultant software is very polished and goes beyond what users expect from it. This is why today's game consoles, which have been around since 2005/6, produce visuals that are still really impressive and sta
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Mobiles For Teaching And Learning: Translating Theory into Practice " Educational Techn... - 1 views

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    Supporting Teachers With Mobile Content And Methods For Reading Instruction
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Mobile apps enhance study habits, learning - News - The Reflector - Mississippi State U... - 3 views

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    Mobile apps seem to enhance study habits, including classroom assignments. It also benefits the teachers.
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Carnegie Mellon Researchers Test Mobile Phone Games To Teach Children -- THE Journal - 4 views

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    mobile phones for language learning
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In Rural Africa, a Fertile Market for Mobile Phones - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Mobile Phones are being used to pull people out of poverty through informal learning and direct work applications
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Mobile phones close literacy gap in Pakistan | Articles | FutureGov - Solutions for Gov... - 0 views

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    a literacy program delivered through mobile phones helped close literacy gap in pakistan
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The Current State Of Mobile Learning In Education | Edudemic - 3 views

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    report from T-Mobile + infographic on mlearning 
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How to Launch a Successful BYOD Program | MindShift - 0 views

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    mobile devices as a route to 1-1
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    ""Mobile learning is all about changing instruction. Because if the instruction doesn't change, allowing the kids to bring their own device will do nothing,""
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Mobile Learning | MindShift - 2 views

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    How to implement BYOD, and other articles to support tech implementation plans.
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Mobile Learning: The future of education and youth employment | Forum:Blog | The World ... - 0 views

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    Summer Davos happened this week. A quick highlight from there that is related to our field. Nothing much new in the article itself but WEF is connecting the importance of improving current education with youth employment issue. the word AR is also used within this article. 
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How to dissect a body on your iPhone - CNN.com - 2 views

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    Personally, I cannot imagine dissecting a body on my iPhone. But, obviously 3,000 customers see this as a must-have. Def. a step towards mobile/distance learning.
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    Neato! Personally I will leave the dissecting to the MDs. A lot of these iPhone apps (maybe all of them) would better impact education on a larger screen. I bet the oompa loompas inside Steve Job's secret Technology Factory are up to a tablet mac. Such a device would best serve doctors trying to educate their patients.
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5 Views of the Future of Mobile Learning - 0 views

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    This links to five different presentations on where mobile learning is going!
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