scholarly journals Instructors Age and Gender Differences in the Acceptance of Mobile Learning

Author(s):  
Ahmed Al-Hunaiyyan ◽  
Rana Alhajri ◽  
Salah Al-Sharhan

<strong>Mobile learning is a new learning</strong> <strong>landscape that offers opportunity for collaborative, personal, informal, and students’ centered learning environment. In implementing any learning system such as mobile learning environment, it is important to understand challenges that affect its implementations in a particular culture. Additionally, learners’ and instructors’ expectations are deemed necessary for consideration. However, there is a lack of studies on this aspect, particularly in the context of Kuwait HE institutions. This research presents opportunities and prospects of m-learning, and discusses challenges and implications facing its implementation. The authors of this paper conducted a study in Kuwait HE to examine both students’ and instructors’ perceptions and attitudes toward this trend of learning, to evaluate its effectiveness, and to investigate cultural and social challenges that affect the implementation of m-learning in Kuwait HE. A questionnaire was administered to 499 students and 110 Instructors from different higher educational institutions in Kuwait. The results reveal that students and instructors have positive perceptions of m-learning, and believe that m-learning enhances the teaching and the learning process. The study reports some social and cultural issues that may act as barriers to m-learning implementation.</strong>

Author(s):  
Maria Lydia Fioravanti ◽  
Nemésio Freitas Duarte Filho ◽  
Lucas Bortolini Fronza ◽  
Ellen Francine Barbosa

Author(s):  
Graham Attwell

This paper examines the idea of a Work Oriented Mobile Learning Environment (WOMBLE) and considers the potential affordances of mobile devices for supporting developmental and informal learning in the workplace. The authors look at the nature and pedagogy of work-based learning and how technologies are being used in the workplace for informal learning. The paper examines the nature of Work Process Knowledge and how individuals are shaping or appropriating technologies, often developed or designed for different purposes, for social learning at work. The paper goes on to describe three different use cases for a Work Oriented Mobile Learning Environment. The final section of the paper considers how the idea of the WOMBLE can contribute to a socio-cultural ecology for learning, and the interplay of agency, cultural practices, and structures within mobile work-based learning.


2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 718-728 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Sha ◽  
Chee-Kit Looi ◽  
Wenli Chen ◽  
Peter Seow ◽  
Lung-Hsiang Wong

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