mobile learning & digital literacy

Post on 13-Dec-2014

2.384 Views

Category:

Education

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

Slideshow of a presentation given in the summer of 2011 at the PALE summer camp.

TRANSCRIPT

mobile learning & digital literacy

François Guité

1. mobile learning

2. digital literacy

3. pedagogical considerations

1. mobile learning

mLearning is the acquisition of any knowledge and skill through using mobile technology, anywhere, anytime, that results in an alteration in behaviour.

Definition of mobile learning (S.J. Geddes, 2004)

ReflectionOf.Me : http://reflectionof.me/2000-vs-2010

2000 2010

1st revolution:computer engineering

2000 2010

Adapted from R. Kurzweill (2001) : http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-law-of-accelerating-returns

$US 1,000 of computing buys:

Brian Solis: The Conversation Prism v.3 (2010) http://www.theconversationprism.com/

The conversation prism

2nd revolution:data production

Brian Solis: The Conversation Prism v.3 (2010) http://www.theconversationprism.com/

The conversation prism

The Internet doesn’t only allow the distribution of information to millions of people,

(Douglas Rushkoff)

Brian Solis: The Conversation Prism v.3 (2010) http://www.theconversationprism.com/

The conversation prism

it allows millions of people to ditribute information.

Copyleft

4th revolution:intellectual property

Size of Wikipedia

zBritannicaUniversalis Wikimedia (2010 )http://blog.wikimedia.fr/apprehender-la-veritable-taille-de-wikipedia-1249

5th revolution:networks

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_24/b4038405.htm

Inactives are online, but donʼt yet participate in

any form of social media

Creators : publish Web pages, write blogs,

upload videos to sites like YouTube

Major mobile-learning trends

■ location-based integration

■ online class management

■ domination of e-books

■ cloud computing

■ bring your own device

■ online collaborative learning

■ the rise of the tablet

■ social media for education

■ snack learning

■ m-learning in workplace training

(Online College, 2011) http://www.onlinecollege.org/2011/07/05/10-major-mobile-learning-trends-to-watch-for/

2. digital literacy

Subway ad

Subway ad

Subway ad

QR codes

The evolution of reading Bohn, R.E. et Short, J.E (2009)

http://hmi.ucsd.edu/pdf/HMI_2009_ConsumerReport_Dec9_2009.pdf

The ability to identify, understand, interpret, create, communicate, compute and use printed and written materials associated with varying contexts.

Definition of literacy (UNESCO)

Canadian adults with a low level of literacy

Canadian Council on Learning (2008)

http://www.ccl-cca.ca/ccl/Reports/ReadingFuture/Snapshot-2.html

low

Average reading time

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/arts/books/national-book-count-aims-to-show-that-books-count/article1866480/

Statistics Canada (2005), Bureau of Labor Statistics (2009), Australian Bureau

of Statistics (2006), Eurostat (2007)

The awarenesses, skills, understandings, and reflective-evaluative approaches that are necessary for an individual to operate comfortably in information rich and IT-supported environments.

Definition of e-literacy(Martin, A. & Ashworth, S.; 2004)

http://www.ics.heacademy.ac.uk/italics/vol5iss4/martin.pdf

Definitions of digital literacy are generally built on three principles:

■ the skills and knowledge to access and use a variety of digital media software applications and devices

■ the ability to critically understand digital media content and applications

■ the knowledge and capacity to create with digital technology.

Media Awareness Network (2010)

http://www.media-awareness.ca/francais/organisation/galerie_de_presse/memoire_litteratie_numerique_pdf/memoirelitteratienumerique.pdf

Transliteracy

Transliteracy is the ability to read, write and interact

across a range of platforms, tools and media.

Sue Thomas, Université de Montford

Knowledge is more…

readily available

searchable

archived / organizable

multimedia

multicultural

hyperlinked

collaborative

social

collective

interactive

integrated

synthesized

real time

fortuitous

organic

augmented

What if teachers were the ones who didn’t know how to read?

Mabrito M. & Medley R. (2008)

http://www.innovateonline.info/pdf/vol4_issue6/Why_Professor_Johnny_Can't_Read-__Understanding_the_Net_Generation's_Texts.pdf

e-readers

Reading formats and devices

Reading differences

3. pedagogical considerations

Homogeneity

Difference not acknowledged.

Learners grouped in one kind of educational institution are perceived to be similar and therefore get the same treatment.

Heterogeneity

Difference seen as a challenge to be

dealt with.

Learners are perceived to be different. Adjustments are made to come to terms with their needs.

Diversity

Difference seen as an asset and opportunity.

Learners are perceived to be different. Their difference serves as a resource for individual and mutual learning and development.

OECD : from homogeneity to diversity

OCDE (2010) Educating Teachers for Diversity: Meeting the Challenge http://www.oecd.org/document/38/0,3343,en_2649_35845581_44572006_1_1_1_1,00.html

We are currently preparing students for jobs that don’t yet exist,

using technologies that haven’t been invented,

in order to solve problems we don’t even know are problems yet.

(Scott McLeod, Karl Fisch)

http://thefischbowl.blogspot.com/2006/08/did-you-know.html

The digital divide

socialchange

schoolevolution

Remplacer par :• pédagogie• didactique• TIC• ouverture• innovation• etc.

Replace with: • pedagogy • materials • ICT • openness • innovation • etc.

Generational differences in adopting ICT

https://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Marketing/Digital_Marketing/Are_your_customers_becoming_digital_junkies_2839 (McKinsey, 2011)

Mes enseignants ont les compétences requises pour m’accompagner dans mon apprentissage des TI

http://www.cefrio.qc.ca/index.php?id=74&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=4820&tx_ttnews[backPid]=45&cHash=d5a0460346

(CEFRIO, 2009)

My teachers have the skills toaccompany me in my learning of IT

Yes, most of them

Yes, some of them

No

The DIKW model Ackoff, R. (1989)

Attention

■ access

■ context

■ collaboration

■ motivation

■ literacy

■ connectivity

motivation

connectivity

Advantages of m-learning

http://knowledgetree.flexiblelearning.net.au/edition06/download/Geddes.pdf

(Geddes, S.J., 2004)

School motivation (Viau, 1994)

Determinants

Student perception

• of the value of the task

• of his competence

• of his controllability of the task

(Viau, 1994)School motivation

Intellectual engagement

http://www.cea-ace.ca/sites/default/files/ace-2009-qatfaea-infographique.pdf

0

25

50

75

100

5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

45414248

5767

7682

% of grade 5 - 12 students engaged in their learning and school

(CEA, 2009)

Constructing knowledge

http://www.francoisguite.com/2007/10/constructivisme-socioconstructivisme-et-connectivisme/

analysefilterrelate

interpretetc.

dotry

evaluatecorrectetc.

Linking knowledge

http://www.francoisguite.com/2007/10/constructivisme-socioconstructivisme-et-connectivisme/

searchlink

synthesizeshare

collaboratepublishetc.

constructivist methods

■ cooperative learning

■ action learning

■ authentic learning

■ project-based learning

source: Nicole Tardif

cognitivist appoaches

■ strategic learning

■ cognitive style

■ metacognition

■ knowledge transfer

■ explicit teaching of strategies

source: Nicole Tardif

individualized approaches

■ personalized programmes

■ modular learning

■ e-learning

■ self-regulation of learning

■ flipped instruction

source: Nicole Tardif / François Guité

individualized approaches

■ personalized programmes

■ modular learning

■ e-learning

■ self-regulation of learning

■ flipped instruction

source: Nicole Tardif / François Guité

connectivist approaches

Connectivism is the theory that knowledge is now distributed through a network of connections, and therefore that knowledge lies in the hability to built and navigate within those networks.

(Siemens, G. et Downes, S., 2010)

connectivist approaches

■ social media

■ online communities

■ social learning

■ informal learning

■ mobile learning

source: François Guité

BYOD

(Bring Your Own Device)

Affordances

If schools cannot integrate information and cognitive technology,If schools cannot integrate information and cognitive technology, the latter will integrate education.

My own experience

francoisguite.com

francoisguite.posterous.com

twitter.com/FrancoisGuite

gplus.to/FrancoisGuite

delicious.com/guitef

Thank you!

Download the slideshow at is.gd/4sYC0B

top related