Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate Learning

In this paper we discuss a case study investigating how the academic and personal development of first year students on an undergraduate sports education degree can be supported and enhanced with mobile SMS communication. SMS-based technologies were introduced in response to students’ particular nee...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Geraldine Jones, G. Edwards
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association of Online Engineering (IAOE) 2009-04-01
Series:International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies
Subjects:
sms
Online Access:http://online-journals.org/i-jim/article/view/744
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spelling doaj-3547419c6e1843658ac5b647575f3bcb2021-09-02T15:18:42ZengInternational Association of Online Engineering (IAOE)International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies1865-79232009-04-013261110.3991/ijim.v3i2.744Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate LearningGeraldine JonesG. EdwardsIn this paper we discuss a case study investigating how the academic and personal development of first year students on an undergraduate sports education degree can be supported and enhanced with mobile SMS communication. SMS-based technologies were introduced in response to students’ particular needs (in transition to Higher Education) and characteristics (‘digital natives’). Despite being unaccustomed to using their mobile phones for academic study, students willingly participated in SMS communication with their tutor via a texting management service. Drawing on evidence from two student surveys, focus groups and a tutor’s journal, we illustrate the potential that mobile SMS communication has to link and establish continuity between face to face teaching sessions and online learning activities in the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). Many students perceived the SMS communication to have had a positive impact on their management of study time. We link our findings with the existing literature and argue that mobile text based communication has the potential to support the development of time management skills, an important component of self regulatory learning, a skill which has been shown to be key in making a successful transition. http://online-journals.org/i-jim/article/view/744smsmobilephonestransitiontimemanagementtextmanagementservice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geraldine Jones
G. Edwards
spellingShingle Geraldine Jones
G. Edwards
Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate Learning
International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies
sms
mobile
phones
transition
time
management
text
management
service
author_facet Geraldine Jones
G. Edwards
author_sort Geraldine Jones
title Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate Learning
title_short Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate Learning
title_full Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate Learning
title_fullStr Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate Learning
title_full_unstemmed Time to Engage? Texting to Support and Enhance First Year Undergraduate Learning
title_sort time to engage? texting to support and enhance first year undergraduate learning
publisher International Association of Online Engineering (IAOE)
series International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies
issn 1865-7923
publishDate 2009-04-01
description In this paper we discuss a case study investigating how the academic and personal development of first year students on an undergraduate sports education degree can be supported and enhanced with mobile SMS communication. SMS-based technologies were introduced in response to students’ particular needs (in transition to Higher Education) and characteristics (‘digital natives’). Despite being unaccustomed to using their mobile phones for academic study, students willingly participated in SMS communication with their tutor via a texting management service. Drawing on evidence from two student surveys, focus groups and a tutor’s journal, we illustrate the potential that mobile SMS communication has to link and establish continuity between face to face teaching sessions and online learning activities in the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). Many students perceived the SMS communication to have had a positive impact on their management of study time. We link our findings with the existing literature and argue that mobile text based communication has the potential to support the development of time management skills, an important component of self regulatory learning, a skill which has been shown to be key in making a successful transition.
topic sms
mobile
phones
transition
time
management
text
management
service
url http://online-journals.org/i-jim/article/view/744
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