educational use of mobile technologies: a review of the literature

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Dr Ann Ooms Dr Stuart Downward Kingston University, London United Kingdom Educational Use of Mobile Technologies A Review of the Literature

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A MoRSE (morse.ac.uk) project presentation by Dr Ann Ooms and Dr Stuart Downward. The paper presents an overview of literature concerning the use of mobile technologies on geography fieldwork.

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Page 1: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Dr Ann OomsDr Stuart Downward

Kingston University, LondonUnited Kingdom

Educational Use of Mobile Technologies

A Review of the Literature

Page 2: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Overview 2001 Cox-Peterson & Melber2001 Kakehi, Kura, Kusaka, Fujino, Fujimoto &

Takahashi2002 Hersthammer, Fossen, Sautter, Sæther &

Johansen2007 Bergin, Anderson, Molnar, Baumgartner,

Mitchell, Korper, Curley & Rottmann2007 Fletcher, France, Moore & Robinson2007 Marskall, Stokes, Truscott, Bridge, Magnier

& Calderbank2008 Lynch, Bednarz, Boxall, Chalmers, France &

Kesby

Page 3: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Cox-Peterson & Melber (2001)“Using Technology to Prepare and Extend

Field Trips.” The Clearing House.Location: United StatesLevel: K-12Recommendations – not research basedPrepare students prior to field trip

On-line resources of museums, zoos, aquariums

Decrease novelty effect because students will know what to expect

Teachers can find information about location, discounts, opening times, etc.

Page 4: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Cox-Peterson & Melber (2001)Connecting with curriculum

Websites: databases, puzzles, additional information to add depth, curricular materials for educators,

Sharing field trip memoriesUse digital (video) cameraStudents develop a multimedia presentation

or narrativesVirtual trips

Page 5: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Kakehi, Kura, Kusaka, Fujino, Fujimoto & Takahashi (2001)“Development of eTrip System: Collaborative

Learning Platform for a Field Trip.” WebNet 2001: World Conference on the WWW and Internet Proceedings, Orlando, FL.

Location: JapanLevel: High SchoolEvaluation eTrip System

A collaborative learning platform for school education over the internet that supports the learning flow for a field trip: pre-during – post

Student-extended databaseElectronic bulleting board Accessible by students, teachers, experts, parents,

other schools

Page 6: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Kakehi, Kura, Kusaka, Fujino, Fujimoto & Takahashi (2001)Pre field trip

Students search for information in the databaseStudents submit reports to the databaseStudents discuss on electronic bulletin board

During field tripStudents record the experience (are given: digital

camera, GPS, Notepad, Cellular phone)Students submit report to the database via

templateStudents look at other students’ reports

Post field tripStudents write full reportStudents present in class

Page 7: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Hesthammer, Fossen, Sautter, Sæther & Johansen (2002)“The use of information technology to enhance

learning in geological field trips.” Journal of Geoscience Education, v. 50, n. 5, November, 2002, p. 528-538.

Location: Norway – on a field trip in Utah (geological and geophysical problems relevant for oil and gas exploration)

Level: University Experiment: two groups

Advanced flight (field) simulatorCombines topography with any type of attribute such as

geological maps, topographic maps and satellite images – 3D visualization of topography

Digital camera and Portable PC – in groups – problem-based learning

Page 8: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Bergin, Anderson, Molnar, Baumgartner, Mitchell, Korper, Curley & Rottmann (2007)“Providing remote accessible field trips

(RAFT): an evaluation study.” Computers in Human Behavior, 23, p. 192-219.

Location: United KingdomLevel: 11 to 18 year old students2 studies: linking field and classroom

studentsVideo-interactive trials (students communicate

with remote experts at their place of work)21 studentsAge: 13-14

Page 9: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Bergin, Anderson, Molnar, Baumgartner, Mitchell, Korper, Curley & Rottmann (2007)

Data-transfer and role assignment trials (field and classroom students interact - synchronous) Students in field trips transferring information to students in

classroomStudents in field tips had specific tasks/roles assigned60 students Age: 11-18

ResultsStudent interest in the topic increased significantly (p <

0.05) RAFT is a motivating experience for both classroom and

field studentsEqual levels of interest for classroom and field studentsField students benefited more than classroom studentsNo gender difference

Page 10: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Bergin, Anderson, Molnar, Baumgartner, Mitchell, Korper, Curley & Rottmann (2007)Results

Increased interest in technology for femalesOverall a positive and engaging experience

for students

Page 11: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Fletcher, France, Moore & Robinson (2007)Practitioner Perspective on the use of

Technology in Fieldwork Teaching”. Journal of Geography in Higher Education, Vol. 31, No. 2, 319-330.

Location: United KingdomLevel: Higher EducationMethodology

Questionnaire to GEES departments in HEExpert group meeting

Page 12: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Fletcher, France, Moore & Robinson (2007)Results

Hardware used: Desktop computersLaptop computersGPSPalmtop/handheld computerMobile phoneDigital camera

Software used:Spreadsheets: 50%Presentation applications: 40%

Absence of a widespread pedagogic drive for use of technology

Page 13: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Lynch, Bednarz, Boxall, Chalmers, France & Kesby (2008)E-learning for Geography’s teaching and

Learning Spaces. Journal of Geography in Higher Education, Vol. 32, No.1, 135-149

Level: higher educationExamples of e-learning using a variety of

technologiesCommunities of learners: Blackboard, WebCTMobile learning: access to resources anytime

anywherePodcastingDistance/blended/flexible learning

Page 14: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

Lynch, Bednarz, Boxall, Chalmers, France & Kesby (2008)Geography’s learning spaces: 3D

Face-to-face – blended – onlinePassive learning – interactive learningLow technology use – high technology use

Page 15: Educational Use of Mobile Technologies: A review of the literature

ConclusionUse of technology to support student

learning on fieldtrip is under-researchedSeveral papers provide examples but little

supported by research data