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The mLearnopedia content community collects and organizes the best information from around the web that will help you learn and stay current on
mobile learning. If you would like to be included and or participate, please contact: Judy Brown
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31 Articles match "2008","Construction"
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The Latest from Mobile Learning
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What might mobile media afford education? « David Gagnon
8221; This little part of the near-west side at one time had a rich irish community, but do to the construction of a hospital and other city planning, the tight community was replaced with parking lots and random storefronts. Mobiles are not only another platform but also come with a whole cool set of new interfaces and approaches. « Mobile Learning Post a Comment Click here to cancel reply. « Home Pages Past Instructional Projects Presentations Who is David Gagnon? The
davidgagnon.wordpress.com
- Thursday, February 11, 2010
Mobile Learning – Frohberg et al. | andrew j. cerniglia
85% of 16 year-olds owned a cell phone in 2008 . Tools can be either used for “content delivery” at one extreme, or “content construction” at the other. Mobile technology is ideally suited to construct a more vivid, complex, and nuanced understanding of already existing knowledge through examination/deliberation/collaboration in context . HOME Curriculum Pedagogy Policy Psychology Research Technology Umm… andrew j. cerniglia why we learn RSS FEED
andrewcerniglia.com
- Sunday, December 27, 2009
You are Never Alone » Mobile phones - powerful learning aids?
In 2008 education researchers at The University of Nottingham said they believe it is time that phone bans were reassessed — because mobile phones can be a powerful learning aid. Introduced and used constructively (and creatively?) 8221; Post a Comment « Home Pages About Categories 2020 Summit 21C Learning You are Never Alone communicate and collaborate in an online world Skip navigation About « Digital Diversity: ACEC2010 in Melbourne Blog Action Day 09 - Climate Change » Mobile phones - powerful learning aids? This concept is certainly not new, but an article I saw earlier this week has prompted me to revisit it.
blogs.educationau.edu.au
- Thursday, October 15, 2009
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The Best from Mobile Learning
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Celtx a free and open source software for developing eLearning storyboards
This software is also useful if you want to construct a podcast which is in high need of a good narrative structure. If an eLearning course will be build with audiovisual aids, in most cases you will draw up or write a storyboard . The storyboard is useful to: make sure you cover all the learning objectives, test the continuity of the story/narrative you use to enlighten your learners keep the team of developers informed of their expected input and when their input is due. Celtx is a great storyboard software.
Ignatia Webs
- Monday, June 9, 2008
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My top 5 list of agonising eLearning Myths
Well-constructed eLearning is about human interaction (discussions, group work...) Through the last decade some myths got their paws on eLearning. And although a lot of us try to get these myths banned, they keep popping-up whenever I have an introduction talk on eLearning. Because these myths keep on roaring their ugly heads, I have written down my top 5 list of agonising eLearning myths to use them in a small booklet I am working on.
Ignatia Webs
- Monday, August 18, 2008
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BlogPhilosophy: what if all the learning in the world, does not save it from itself?
It would give people the power to gather knowledge, not only that but they would construct knowledge and it would be taken up. This will be more of a grim post. The biggest aha-moment on eLearning I got this year came when I talked to Nicola Avery last week. We both attended Online Educa Berlin and started venting our frustrations afterwards.
Ignatia Webs
- Friday, December 5, 2008
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Obama Mobile is Going to Get Out the Vote
The Obama Campaign realized this and constructed the VP announcement to help them build critical mass with their mobile list.
There’s been good coverage of Obama’s Vice Presidential announcement all over the web (particularly GigaOM and the NY Times ). While there has been some grumbling about the announcement coming a little late because CNN got the scoop, overall the Obama campaign is being lauded for their marketing savvy.
Mobile Commons
- Monday, August 25, 2008
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CCK08 - what is knowledge, where is the ethics and can it keep humanity together?
would like that type of profession J Now for the second article by Dave Cormier that can be downloaded for free (you need to register for the journal, but registering is also for free) and talks about the rhizomatic knowledge . Cormier concludes “The rhizomatic viewpoint (…) suggests that a distributed negotiation of knowledge can allow a community of people to legitimize the work they are doing among themselves and for each member of the group, the rhizomatic model dispenses with the need for external validation of knowledge, either by an expert or by a constructed
Ignatia Webs
- Tuesday, September 16, 2008
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my journey into social media and why I became an evangelist
but I still find it very useful to construct my own knowledge, engage in lifelong learning, keeping in contact with brainy people, getting ideas analysed and commented on. Karyn Romeis is working on a dissertation exploring the impact of the use of social media on the professional practice of learning professionals. Karyn would like to know your story as well, so add to her blogpost .
Ignatia Webs
- Thursday, May 22, 2008
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Questions about informal learning and the need for a global brain
Informal learning can only be done within the constraints of the knowledge it is accessing. With informal learning you look at/find static knowledge and you construct your own knowledge in a dynamic way. Let me take you on a quest for learning affordance s and on a loop in which I will suggest that future informal learning will not differ from 19 th century teacher top-down learning. Two topics which I find are a bit intertwined or at least connected. Anol (author of Soulsoup ) wrote an excellent blogpost on guidelines for effective corporate elearning .
Ignatia Webs
- Friday, March 14, 2008
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Andy Ramsden: Are QR Codes the Future of Mobile Learning?
Text-recognition will also be far more flexible than QR Codes; potentially, semantic constructs could be used to allow the recognition of an infinite variety of different types of data, the same way that OCR currently works on desktop computers.
I posted the following response to Andy Ramsden’s blog post on this topic:
I’ve been researching the use of 2D barcodes (and particularly QR Codes) in education for over two years now.ÂÂ
Mobile Learning
- Wednesday, March 26, 2008
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Interesting Design and Construction Techniques
This article is somewhat related to mobile learning in that it talks about the form factor of mobile devices of the future. Looks like we may be carrying mobile devices made of organic materials, which would allow for a more sustainable and greener manufacturing environmen
mLearning is Good
- Thursday, May 1, 2008
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mobile learning and QRcodes: my session and the audience's ideas
from bus stops, train stations...); linking it to audio samples to construct a bigger sound landscape; using it to guide learners to sights and learning spaces; making a mobile tour and in that tour linking certain spots to the Basque language (or any other language, but I liked the idea of linking it to a language that is not mainstream yet very rich). The OEB08 session in which I spoke was amazingly rich in content (talking about the other participants). They all had great applications making use of language technology, sms, multimedia and all combining it in mobile examples.
Ignatia Webs
- Thursday, December 4, 2008
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