A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)

With announcements such as «more than half the world own a cell phone» (Lefkowitz, 2010) plus the convergence of multi-media elements in handsets, it is perhaps not surprising that education is calling for an increased use of mobile phones to support learning (Hartnell-Young & Heym, 2008). Phon...

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Main Author: Adele Cushing
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: MedienPädagogik 2011-06-01
Series:MedienPädagogik: Zeitschrift für Theorie und Praxis der Medienbildung
Online Access:https://www.medienpaed.com/article/view/135
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spelling doaj-144f6f0d550542ffb2cbe36708939b712021-06-21T12:11:59ZdeuMedienPädagogikMedienPädagogik: Zeitschrift für Theorie und Praxis der Medienbildung1424-36362011-06-0119Mobile Learning10.21240/mpaed/19/2011.06.06.X135A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)Adele Cushing With announcements such as «more than half the world own a cell phone» (Lefkowitz, 2010) plus the convergence of multi-media elements in handsets, it is perhaps not surprising that education is calling for an increased use of mobile phones to support learning (Hartnell-Young & Heym, 2008). Phone use will contribute to cost efficiencies by subsidising IT budgets (Yorston, 2010) and support personalised learning and students’ underpinning knowledge. However, the reality is often ‹blanket bans› on mobiles in schools (Hartnell-Young & Heym, 2008) due to teaching staff who are nervous of possible disruption and uncertain of pedagogic application. MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring) was a pilot project with 20 teacher training students at Barnet College, North London. The limited time available to mentors and trainee teachers to engage in mentoring was solved by providing all students and mentors with email-activated mobile phones for ease of communication and support, facilitating situated learning (Naismith et al., 2004). Face-to-face meetings were partially replaced by capturing students’ formal and informal learning with mobile functionality. This was shared with peers, tutors, mentors and lesson observers to further improve the mentoring and teaching experience. Self-reflection, peer assessment, peer support and idea-sharing contributed to improving trainees’ practice and employability. In addition, teachers’ confidence and ability in using technology improved, particularly in supporting learning and underpinning knowledge. The success of this project has influenced the organisation to adopt mobile learning across the curriculum by facilitating student use of personal devices. https://www.medienpaed.com/article/view/135
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adele Cushing
spellingShingle Adele Cushing
A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)
MedienPädagogik: Zeitschrift für Theorie und Praxis der Medienbildung
author_facet Adele Cushing
author_sort Adele Cushing
title A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)
title_short A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)
title_full A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)
title_fullStr A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)
title_full_unstemmed A case study of mobile learning in teacher training - MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring)
title_sort case study of mobile learning in teacher training - mentor me (mobile enhanced mentoring)
publisher MedienPädagogik
series MedienPädagogik: Zeitschrift für Theorie und Praxis der Medienbildung
issn 1424-3636
publishDate 2011-06-01
description With announcements such as «more than half the world own a cell phone» (Lefkowitz, 2010) plus the convergence of multi-media elements in handsets, it is perhaps not surprising that education is calling for an increased use of mobile phones to support learning (Hartnell-Young & Heym, 2008). Phone use will contribute to cost efficiencies by subsidising IT budgets (Yorston, 2010) and support personalised learning and students’ underpinning knowledge. However, the reality is often ‹blanket bans› on mobiles in schools (Hartnell-Young & Heym, 2008) due to teaching staff who are nervous of possible disruption and uncertain of pedagogic application. MENTOR ME (Mobile Enhanced Mentoring) was a pilot project with 20 teacher training students at Barnet College, North London. The limited time available to mentors and trainee teachers to engage in mentoring was solved by providing all students and mentors with email-activated mobile phones for ease of communication and support, facilitating situated learning (Naismith et al., 2004). Face-to-face meetings were partially replaced by capturing students’ formal and informal learning with mobile functionality. This was shared with peers, tutors, mentors and lesson observers to further improve the mentoring and teaching experience. Self-reflection, peer assessment, peer support and idea-sharing contributed to improving trainees’ practice and employability. In addition, teachers’ confidence and ability in using technology improved, particularly in supporting learning and underpinning knowledge. The success of this project has influenced the organisation to adopt mobile learning across the curriculum by facilitating student use of personal devices.
url https://www.medienpaed.com/article/view/135
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