| Exploring the potential of mobile phones for active learning in the classroom |
| Full text |
Pdf
(2.13 MB)
|
| Source
|
Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education
archive
Proceedings of the 38th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education
table of contents
Covington, Kentucky, USA
SESSION: Emerging instructional technologies
table of contents
Pages: 384 - 388
Year of Publication: 2007
ISBN:1-59593-361-1
Also published in ...
|
|
Authors
|
|
David Lindquist
|
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA
|
|
Tamara Denning
|
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA
|
|
Michael Kelly
|
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA
|
|
Roshni Malani
|
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA
|
|
William G. Griswold
|
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA
|
|
Beth Simon
|
University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA
|
|
| Sponsors |
|
| Publisher |
|
| Bibliometrics |
Downloads (6 Weeks): 29, Downloads (12 Months): 233, Citation Count: 4
|
|
|
ABSTRACT
Research has shown that educational technology can broaden and enhance the use of active learning in large classrooms. An educational technology platform often relies on students to bring laptops or specialized wireless devices like clickers to interact through the system. Mobile phones are an attractive alternative, as most students already possess them, they have more capabilities than dedicated clickers, and yet are small enough to minimize interference with note taking on a classroom desk.This paper presents the design and use of a mobile phone extension to Ubiquitous Presenter, which allows students to submit solutions to active learning exercises in the form of text or photo messages. In an exploratory study, students found that text messaging worked well for exercises with multiple choice or short answers. Entering symbols common to computer science was difficult. Many problems were more suitable to photo messaging of a handwritten answer, although image quality must be managed. The phone's small size left space for the use of a notebook. The students had concerns about the message charges that would accrue in use. In conclusion, we offer recommendations to instructors and system designers interested in leveraging mobile phones to increase communication in the classroom.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
 |
1
|
Richard Anderson , Ruth Anderson , Beth Simon , Steven A. Wolfman , Tammy VanDeGrift , Ken Yasuhara, Experiences with a tablet PC based lecture presentation system in computer science courses, Proceedings of the 35th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, March 03-07, 2004, Norfolk, Virginia, USA
|
 |
2
|
|
 |
3
|
Tamara Denning , William G. Griswold , Beth Simon , Michelle Wilkerson, Multimodal communication in the classroom: what does it mean for us?, Proceedings of the 37th SIGCSE technical symposium on Computer science education, March 03-05, 2006, Houston, Texas, USA
|
| |
4
|
D. Duncan. Clickers in the Classroom. Pearson Education, 2005.
|
| |
5
|
R. Dufresne, W. Gerace, W. Leonard, J. Mestre, and L. Wenk. Classtalk: A Classroom Communication System for Active Learning. Journal of Computing in Higher Education, v.7, pp. 3--47, 1996.
|
| |
6
|
William G. Griswold , Patricia Shanahan , Steven W. Brown , Robert Boyer , Matt Ratto , R. Benjamin Shapiro , Tan Minh Truong, ActiveCampus: Experiments in Community-Oriented Ubiquitous Computing, Computer, v.37 n.10, p.73-81, October 2004
[doi> 10.1109/MC.2004.149]
|
 |
7
|
Matthew Kam , Jingtao Wang , Alastair Iles , Eric Tse , Jane Chiu , Daniel Glaser , Orna Tarshish , John Canny, Livenotes: a system for cooperative and augmented note-taking in lectures, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, April 02-07, 2005, Portland, Oregon, USA
[doi> 10.1145/1054972.1055046]
|
| |
8
|
|
|