TY - CHAP
T1 - Service-learning application in an M-learning course
AU - Sass, Margaret
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2015. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/9/18
Y1 - 2015/9/18
N2 - With the increasing popularity of smartphones, tablets, and laptops among college students, higher education institutions are beginning to implement these devices into the college curriculum. The academic community has realized that using mobile devices may encourage and increase academic intelligence. This troika relationship between the student, the mobile device, and the course is a form of m-learning, a method of teaching that is being practiced more and more throughout national and international campuses. Sharples et al. (Mobile learning. Springer, pp 233-249, 2009) state that "exploration is essentially mobile in that it either involves physical movement or movement through conceptual space, linking experiences and concepts into new knowledge" (p. 4). Education should be exploratory to the student, kindling a desire to learn more and do more. This chapter examines the pedagogy behind m-learning and discusses the relationship of m-learning with service-learning curriculum. The challenges of m-learning are discussed, as well as the ways to successfully implement social media tools into the college classroom that includes a service-learning project or focus. This discussion's purpose is to encourage instructors to consider using a form of m-learning in the classroom in collaboration with service learning as a way to engage the student in a familiar platform.
AB - With the increasing popularity of smartphones, tablets, and laptops among college students, higher education institutions are beginning to implement these devices into the college curriculum. The academic community has realized that using mobile devices may encourage and increase academic intelligence. This troika relationship between the student, the mobile device, and the course is a form of m-learning, a method of teaching that is being practiced more and more throughout national and international campuses. Sharples et al. (Mobile learning. Springer, pp 233-249, 2009) state that "exploration is essentially mobile in that it either involves physical movement or movement through conceptual space, linking experiences and concepts into new knowledge" (p. 4). Education should be exploratory to the student, kindling a desire to learn more and do more. This chapter examines the pedagogy behind m-learning and discusses the relationship of m-learning with service-learning curriculum. The challenges of m-learning are discussed, as well as the ways to successfully implement social media tools into the college classroom that includes a service-learning project or focus. This discussion's purpose is to encourage instructors to consider using a form of m-learning in the classroom in collaboration with service learning as a way to engage the student in a familiar platform.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84956544222&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-642-54146-9_86
DO - 10.1007/978-3-642-54146-9_86
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:84956544222
SN - 9783642541452
SP - 753
EP - 767
BT - Handbook of Mobile Teaching and Learning
ER -