Mobile ‘Comfort’ Zones: Overcoming Barriers to Enable Facilitated Learning in the Workplace

Authors

  • Debbie Holley Deputy Head Centre of Excellence for Learning Associate Professor and National Teaching Fellow (NTF) Bournemouth University Executive Business Centre 89 Holdenhurst Road Bournemouth BH8 8EB
  • Sue Sentance Department of Education and Professional Studies, Kings College London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5334/jime.av

Keywords:

Mobile learning, Comfort, Trainee Teacher, School

Abstract

The affordances of mobile technologies are well documented (Vavoula (2004); Wali (2008); Pachler et al (2010); Cook (2011); Sharples (2013). Linked with the rapid expansion of the ‘SMART’ phones, where users access fast/high quality information, new opportunities are offered to engage students at a time/place of their own choosing. Our small-scale study is located within the dominant discourse of mobile learning literature of context specific learning; it explores the attitudes and habits of trainee teachers using their own mobile devices when working full time in a school setting. Our findings indicate that students have complex/interwoven narratives that relate to issues of identity, personal/private space and their involvement in an emergent community of practice. We map these key themes into a framework for looking strategically at mobile learners in different personal/ professional contexts, and identify of the design barriers to be overcome before the full potential of mobile learning can be successful with our own students when isolated on placement and juggling busy, complex lives.

Author Biographies

  • Debbie Holley, Deputy Head Centre of Excellence for Learning Associate Professor and National Teaching Fellow (NTF) Bournemouth University Executive Business Centre 89 Holdenhurst Road Bournemouth BH8 8EB

    Deputy Head
    Centre of Excellence for Learning
    Associate Professor and National Teaching Fellow (NTF)
    Bournemouth University
    Executive Business Centre
    89 Holdenhurst Road
    Bournemouth BH8 8EB

  • Sue Sentance, Department of Education and Professional Studies, Kings College London
    Sue Sentance is a Lecturer and Researcher at Kings College London, and a key contributor to the Computing at School initiative.

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Published

2015-08-28

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