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Journal ArticleDOI

The use of mobile learning in PK-12 education

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TLDR
The findings reveal that 40% of the time researchers designed mobile learning activities aligning with the behaviorist approach to learning, which has the students consuming knowledge and not using the full potential of the mobile devices to have students become producers, collaborators, and creators of knowledge.
Abstract
With the increase in mobile device affordances, there has been a concomitant rise in the level of interest in investigating the breadth, purpose and extent of mobile learning in education. This systematic review provides a current synthesis of mobile learning research across 20102015 in PK-12 education. This includes a aggregated quantitative and qualitative analysis of the specific mobile learning activities as they connect to learning theories, specifically behaviorist, constructivist, situated, and collaborative learning. Major findings include that the majority of the studies focused on student learning followed by designing systems. Science was the most common subject researched and elementary schools was the most often studies setting. The findings reveal that 40% of the time researchers designed mobile learning activities aligning with the behaviorist approach to learning. This has the students consuming knowledge and not using the full potential of the mobile devices to have students become producers, collaborators, and creators of knowledge. Qualitative coding show 40% of researchers designed mobile activities that fit with the behaviorist approach to learning.Science was the most common subject researched at 53%.Elementary schools were the most often studied setting comprising 56% of the studies.63% of the studies focused on the student learning rather than the device.The majority of the studies took place in formal educational contexts at 50%.

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Social Discourse Influencing Elementary Teachers' Cognition and Metacognition for Problem Solving in Open-Ended Professional Development.

Hui-Chen K. Durley, +1 more
Abstract: This study explored teachers’ problem solving during technology-mediated professional development (PD) in the topic related to teaching English Learners (ELs, i.e. students whose home languages are not English). Open-ended PD provided authentic, situated contexts using videos of scenario to engage six elementary teachers to participate in small group, social discourse and collaboration for problem solving. Group social discourse was video recorded to observe participants’ cognitive and metacognitive development during PD. Post-PD interviews were also conducted to explore the influence of social discourse upon individual thinking for problem solving. PD artifacts for problem solving were also collected. Data analysis revealed three themes characterizing teachers’ cognition and metacognition including conceptual understanding of PD content, application of professional learning for classroom practice, and authentic discernment of activities in classroom situations. The findings suggested that when teachers developed group thinking that helped them to generalize their own classroom experience to explain problem scenarios social discourse facilitated the development of collective intelligence and enabled peers to scaffold thinking for problem solving. Lacking cohesiveness as a group, teachers’ thoughts manifested individualistic interpretations and unrealistic suggestions to deal with classroom issues. Study implications include incorporating open, interactive, authentic problem-based activities that facilitate meaningful discussions and collaboration to elicit dialogical connections of minds.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Towards a Framework of Mobile Learning User Interface Design

TL;DR: There are four dimensions of user interface that characterized mobile learning application, i.e. (a) design principles, (b) usage context, (c) hardware specifications, and (d) modelling language.
Dissertation

Maths and mobile technologies : effects on students' attitudes, engagement and achievement

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effects of using mobile technologies on students' attitudes, engagement and achievement in mathematics and found that the success of a mobile learning intervention is dependent on various factors, such as student and teacher characteristics, stability of the technology and content compatibility, among other factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing Students’ Awareness of 4Cs Skills after Mobile-Technology-Supported Inquiry-Based Learning

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors assessed the 9th grade students' awareness of 4Cs skills (Collaboration, Communication, Critical thinking and problem solving, and Creativity) after participating in mobile-technology-supported inquiry-based Teaching Learning Sequence (TLS).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate healthcare interventions: explanation and elaboration

TL;DR: The meaning and rationale for each checklist item is explained, and an example of good reporting is included and, where possible, references to relevant empirical studies and methodological literature are included.
Journal ArticleDOI

The PRISMA Statement for Reporting Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses of Studies That Evaluate Health Care Interventions: Explanation and ElaborationPRISMA: Explanation and Elaboration

TL;DR: The updating of the QUOROM Statement is described, to ensure clear presentation of what was planned, done, and found in a systematic review, and the name of the reporting guidance was changed to PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses).
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