Why M-Learning Is Cheap.

29 09 2006

Many people I’ve talked to at various conferences, online events, and around my own institute have expressed concerns about m-learning being a rather expensive thing for institutions and learners to participate in. The issues I’m most commonly asked about are generally associated with either the cost of hardware (e.g. mobile phone handset, or PDA) or the cost of connectivity (e.g. SMS messages, mobile web data costs, etc.).

People are inevitably surprised when I tell them that m-learning is actually cheap! It depends on the m-learning approach being used, of course… but there are a number of factors that make m-learning potentially quite affordable for both institutions and learners.

For example – if mobile phones are used as the platform for an activity, then it’s possible that the cost of hardware will be zero. Current Australian telecommunications industry statistics are that over 8 million mobile phone handsets were sold in Australia in 2005, 98% of Australia’s population has mobile phone coverage, and around 20 million Australians (95%) own a mobile phone, with penetration among young people even higher.

I also think that the convergence of tools in mobile digital devices is providing us with tools in our pockets that would previously have cost us quite a lot of money. The vast majority of mobile phones these days come with a built in camera, for example; how much did a stand-alone camera cost a decade ago, before the advent of m-learning? How about adding in the cost of a video camera as well?

And then there are the savings on consumables. When I was at school, I studied photography and was also required to take photographs for various class assignments and my visual arts journal. All of this was before digital photography, mind you – it was, and still is, quite expensive to have camera film processed – this current Australian price list quotes $21 for developing 36 colour exposures from 35mm film…. and the roll of film itself costs an additional $9 as well, a total of $30. Now, with digital photgraphy, not only does our hardware for photography and videography come in a handy format, integrated with our phones and PDAs, but can we create photographic and video visual records for free.

As a comparison, for half the price of buying and developing 36 colour prints, I can get a month’s access to a mobile phone, with $15 included calls, text messages and a built in digital camera, voice recorder, and mp3 player which I can use for listening to podcasts… oh, and I can take as many photos (and videos) as I want. What I’m getting at is that the cost of data and voice connectivity is significantly cheaper than the consumables we had to pay for a decade ago to support our learning. Even if a basic $30 pre-paid SIM card was charged to a student as a materials fee, it is a pittance compared with the cost of university course fees and textbooks.

As for more expensive hardware, which might require loaning out to students… when I studied photography at school, we were loaned an SLR camera for us to practice with, and I remember treating it with the utmost care – we felt responsible and didn’t want to get in trouble for losing or breaking the equipment. Similarly, in situations where higher-spec, higher-cost devices are loaned to students for more advanced m-learning activities, I see them (mostly!) being quite careful with them.

Another example – this time from here at CIT. A number of faculties have started using the internet-based messaging service, BulkSMS.com, to send messages out to students to advise them if classes are cancelled due to sick teachers etc. The whole process of SMS-messaging an entire class takes less than three minutes and each message costs just cents.

The “old” way of doing it was to individually call up each student; if they didn’t answer the phone, admin staff would have to try again later, and the multiple voice calls to mobile and fixed-line phones were quite expensive – not to mention the time it took to do all the calls each day.

In conclusion, if the right approaches are taken to m-learning and learner administration, m-learning might just turn out to be the cheap option!

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ACT Board of Studies Workshop on M-Learning: M-Learning with Mobiles

29 09 2006

Some videos from our workshop on m-learning using mobile phones in February this year. The game, designed and run by myself, Margaret O’Connell, and Stephan Schmidt, immersed participants in the m-learning experience using an interactive treasure hunt game. Participants had to find resources on m-learning and try out m-learning activities for themselves – such as gathering photos, audio and video, and communicating with other “teams” to increase their team points and resources.

The idea of using teams was to get participants talking about the various activities in their small groups, as well as ensuring all teams had access to a minimal level of digital mobile tools (e.g. camera phone). Teams were coordinated using BulkSMS.com, a web-based SMS service. A fun time was had by all!

Incidentally, I’ve posted these videos using Blip.tv – which can publish uploaded video files in a number of different file formats, including mp4… which is a much better format for mobile devices than the Flash Video (flv) format used by Google Video and YouTube.

Other workshops held on the day included creating and publishing podcasts (with Colin Simpson and Rebecca Trynes), GPS-based m-learning, and Powerpoint for PDAs (with Marcus Ragus).

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Flickr for Location-based Learning

29 09 2006

The recent addition of geotagging (the ability to add geographic location data to each photo you upload) in Flickr may enable Flickr to be used for situated, location-based, socially connected mobile learning approaches.

The Flickr maps support display of individual accounts, Flickr groups, particular dates, or even custom filters; or alternatively, a learner might choose to zoom in on a particular area to explore the all of the images associated with a particular place.

If you’d like to try it out, why not join and contribute to our “mlearning” Flickr group, then add geotags to your images and view them on the mlearning Flickr map!

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Access your PC from your mobile

28 09 2006

ajax menu selectionA new free service called SoonR allows mobile phones equipped with the Opera Mobile web browser to securely access PC files, Outlook data (including emails), and talk using VOIP.

Happily, because the service can be used from a mobile web browser, it doesn’t require any additional software to be installed on mobile phones, avoiding problems with phone hardware or carrier incompatibilities.

A product like this could be used to access a learner’s own “Personal Learning Environment” (PLE) of files and data on their own PC – like a mobile portfolio of learning.  Its built-in VOIP and chat tools could also provide a means of communicating with peers.

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Learner-Centric Design of Digital Mobile Learning

27 09 2006

Learner Centric Design of Digital Mobile Learning,” [doc] [pdf] (which I co-authored with my colleague Margaret O’Connell), received the Best Paper Award at Queensland University of Technology’s “Learning on the Move” conference which I attended yesterday (despite a raging flu!).

This paper provides a model for digital mobile learning approaches that are underpinned by sound educational design, developed using a learner-centric activity model of mobile learning, and implemented through best-practice considerations that are informed by our experience of delivering computer-based learning.

Many thanks to my co-author Margaret for her educational design expertise; our peer reviewers, for helping us polish the paper, and the conference organisers, for putting together a fantastic event and recognising our paper amongst so many excellent contributions.

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Don’t Panic

18 09 2006

external image guide.jpgI’m writing a brief presentation on mobile learning – here, on my M-Learning WikiSpace.

It’s intended as an introduction to m-learning, and is entitled “Don’t Panic” - a reference to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, to which I make reference with regards to m-learning (as, written in 1979, it envisaged many of the issues of mobile learning “hitchhikers” of today).

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Mobile Gradebook

18 09 2006

This post is more on the Mobile Learning Administration side of things, but may interest some educators: Excelsior Software have released Pinnacle PDA, a new gradebook product out for PPCs, and you can download a copy for free. The functionality looks pretty good, and Pinnacle also offer a range of “add on” tools for the gradebook tool that allow it to do other things too, like web display of student progress.

(via Mobile Musings)

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Total Control! Mwahaha…

18 09 2006

I don’t usually blog commercial mobile applications, but this one stands out from the usual offerings. Clicker is a neat application for most mobile platforms – PDAs, mobile phones and converged devices – that allow you to control many applications on your desktop PC using the wireless capabilities of your mobile device.

For example, the software allows you to wirelessly control a PowerPoint presentation using your cellphone or PDA, so you can free yourself from the lectern; or use your PC as a jukebox, with your mobile phone or PDA working as a “remote”. It supports iTunes and Windows Media Player out of the box, and is apparently extensible using JScript or VBScript.


As it works with both Bluetooth and Wireless LAN, it has the potential to be used on the widest range of mobile wireless devices.

(via Mobile Musings)

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The DataMatrix Strikes Back

14 09 2006

It seems that Western countries are finally catching on to 2D Barcodes (which can be read with ordinary camera phones to access digital data – for example, point a learner at a URL with learning resources for a real-life context or situation). However, unlike Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and China, who all favour the QR-Code symbology, Western countries seem to be deploying applications that use the DataMatrix barcode format.

Yesterday, my colleague Colin published this article on our department’s blog, which highlights a service based in the USA called SmartPox – which is more focussed on pop culture as a market for their DataMatrix tags. And today I received Newsletter #2 from MobileTag, a European company focussing on mainstream channels such as the Yellow Pages and information directories as places to deploy DataMatrix codes.

For Australia to catch up with Japan, however (over 80% of Japanese mobile phones have built-in 2D Barcode readers), we need to get the major mobile phone carriers on board to decide a standard for Australia, and incorporate software seamlessly into Australian handsets. Only then will 2D barcodes really take off as a realistic conduit to use mobile data services, and learning materials.

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RSS Tools at XFruits

12 09 2006

I’ve just found a new Web 2.0 application that allows users to manipulate RSS feeds in a number of very useful ways.

XFruits allows users to aggregate a number of feeds into a single RSS feed; convert an RSS feed to an XHTML 1.0 Strict web page; create a mobile browser version of an RSS feed; convert emails to an xfruits email address to an RSS feed; and convert an RSS feed to a PDF file – which can be read on a mobile device. The tool is easy to use and very well polished.

I’ve used XFruits to create a mobile web version of this blog, as well as a downloadable PDF version of this blog. Both are accessible on a new page, http://mlearning.edublogs.org/mobile/.

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