Mobile/wireless computing

31
Wireless and mobile computing: pedagogy and liberal education NITLE workshops 2007

description

Updated slightly since April.

Transcript of Mobile/wireless computing

Page 1: Mobile/wireless computing

Wireless and mobile computing:pedagogy and liberal education

NITLE workshops

2007

Page 2: Mobile/wireless computing

Plan of the session

1. Hardware

2. Infrastructure

3. Case studies

4. Pedagogies emergent

http://www.phonebashing.com/, 2003(previous image: “Telezonia”)

Page 3: Mobile/wireless computing

One way of looking at it

All of Web 2.0, just more so• Ambient

• Accelerating

• Annotating

Funeral of John Paul, AP

Page 4: Mobile/wireless computing

I. Hardware

Wireless computing uses the radio spectrum, rather than telephone or ethernet cables, to send digital information. The name hearkens back to the earliest days of radio, and appropriately, since wireless computing is very much a young field.

Page 5: Mobile/wireless computing

I. Hardware

(Mandatory mobile device slide)

Page 6: Mobile/wireless computing

I. Hardware

(Yet another mandatory mobile device slide)

Long., MPH, ksmichel

Page 7: Mobile/wireless computing

I. Hardware

(Still another mandatory mobile device slide) Tnkgrl

Page 8: Mobile/wireless computing

I. Hardware

(How many mandatory mobile device slides can there be?)

Carl Berger, Wei Su

Page 9: Mobile/wireless computing

II. Infrastructure

• 802.11x and Wi-Fi (IEEE)

• Proprietary Cellular-Wireless Networks

• WiMax

Page 10: Mobile/wireless computing

II. Infrastructure

• PAN: Personal Area Networks

• Bluetooth: short-range wireless specification

• Infrared (IR) ports for beaming

Page 11: Mobile/wireless computing

II. Infrastructure

(Found on BBC site, June 2005)

American unilateralism

Page 12: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Case studies

Pedagogies: new forms

John Schott, Carleton College, 2006

Page 13: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

Handhelds in class: Stanford Medical classes, East Carolina University's Center for Wireless and Mobile Computing, medical school, OWLS, UM Duluth's handheld pilot, Western Carolina University - Wireless Palm (TLT report), Pittsburgh Pebbles Project; University of South Dakota.

Page 14: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

Handhelds out of class• Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and

Amsterdam Real Time: SPINlab's GIPSY project

• St. Olaf's Japanese language Clie pilot (http://www.stolaf.edu/depts/asian-studies/japanese/handheldarticle.html)

• Jokkmokk 2004 (HUMlab)

Page 15: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

Handhelds and libraries: University of Connecticut Medical Library, Virginia Commonwealth Libraries, British libraries.

Page 16: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

• Campus clouds: American University's wireless campus, Carnegie Mellon's Wireless Andrew, Dartmouth's wireless campus, Seton Hall University

(http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.10/dartmouth.html, http://www.wired.com/gadgets/wireless/news/2002/05/52234, http://www.cmu.edu/computing/wireless/)

Page 17: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

Students researching

• SUNY Cortland's nature research.

• Tremont Consolidated's clam research with Palms (http://www.wired.com/culture/education/news/2002/11/56102)

Page 18: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

Students researching• Experience has shown that portable and

wireless computing facilitates data collection, which has certain pedagogical implications. Students have greater facilities for gathering information from the field, thereby. Field researchers can be better integrated with classes (with each other, instructors, experts) through wireless communication:

Page 19: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

Cell phone information on the run:

• bioinformatics (BioWAP and WiGiD, Sweden)

• Russian Bible class (Pravda 2004-12, http://english.pravda.ru/main/18/90/363/11765_phone.html)

Page 20: Mobile/wireless computing

III. Cases

iPaqs, University of Minnesota Duluth, 2002

• uses in class: notetaking, .ppt slides, exercises, polling, reference

• uses outside of class: browsing, email, software– (http://www.d.umn.edu/itss/computing/

ipaq/)

Page 21: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies

Emergent pedagogies• Information on

demand• Time usage

changes• Class/world barrier

reduction

• Personal intimacy with units

• Spatial mapping • Mobile, multimedia,

social research

Page 22: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies

Students researching• Googling on

demand• Local digital

resources

• Queries to colleagues, experts, dbs, faculty, librarians

• Spatial mapping

Page 23: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies

Pedagogy: learning spaces

classroom • one leading pilot space for wireless• arrangements• mode: lecture/lab

campus• other sites: library, residence hall• new learning spaces• chunks of campus

Page 24: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies

Pedagogy: learning spaces

external world• increasingly reachable, present• world as syllabus, research field

annotated space• writing to removed units• writing to space, augmenting reality (classic:

Spohrer's "Information in Places")• spatial information: (34 North 118 West /, )

Page 25: Mobile/wireless computing

• Pedagogy: learning spaces, example

Volokh Conspiracy, April 2007

Page 26: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies emergent

Publishing• Synching MP3 player, Palm, PocketPC, etc.

user to copy materials from a desktop or laptop to their handhelds (AvantGo, Mazingo, PalmReader, Acrobat for Palm, Fictionwise (free ebooks), Microtitles, Peanut Press, SciFi.com, Writing on Your Palm)

• USB drives allow easy, person-to-person file trading. Their low price and good size makes them a publishing option.

Page 27: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies emergent

Publishing applications

• Palm Education offers more than one hundred educational applications. Nearspace has released several campus life applications. (http://www.nearspace.com/)

• One can roll one's own, as well. For example, UMDuluth wrote applications for its Pocket PC pilot.

• K-12 applications: Cooties, Geney

Page 28: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies emergent

Multitasking

• threats: distraction, wandering (NYT article abstract)

• index/stimulus (ECAR study, Slashdot discussion)

• generational issue

• practice: shells down, machines open

Page 29: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies emergent

Structural pressures

• IT: support, pedagogy

• Faculty: pedagogy, development, reward

• Students: class participation

• Library: information literacy, db access

• Administration: planning

Page 30: Mobile/wireless computing

IV. Pedagogies

Social changes• Swarming: John Arquilla,

David Ronfeldt Networks and Netwars: The Future of Terror, Crime, and Militancy (2001)

• Smartmobs (Howard Rheingold, 2001)

Page 31: Mobile/wireless computing

NITLE Research

http://nitle.org/

http://b2e.nitle.org/