Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Why Not Use Free! Mobile Resources


One the reasons I became involved with mobile teaching and learning was because of the pervasiveness of mobile devices (namely the cell phone) with my students. I would see them text messaging before, during (to my dismay) and after my class. As soon as they had a free minute, they were checking for text messages. So as teachers, how do we use this to our advantage? After all, a cell phone is just a handheld computer with wireless connectivity….

The Service

Textmarks.com is a web site that provides (free and for a fee) SMS gateway services. This is a fancy name for a service that provides the ability for you to broadcast text message alerts or provide a send and query function via a cell phone. An alert is a text message that goes to all of the cell phones subscribed to your Textmarks.com keyword. A send and query task allows someone to send a message to a keyword and have a response returned. Maybe a message is sent to the MyLibrary keyword and a book title and the send and query keyword would return the books available (like a database lookup up except with text messages instead). Testmarks.com also provides a for fee service which goes far beyond alerts and send to query text messages. The most important thing for us is that they have a free service that lets you try their services out.

The Experiment

I have a class on online Visual Basic students who I "see" only via BlackBoard and the Internet. One of the biggest challenges in retaining students in an online class is not the computer or the material covered but instead procrastination. Putting off today turns into tomorrow and then a week passes. The first test arrives and the student panics and drops the class. I try to keep my students engaged with emails and the Bb Announcements page but I could still use some more help. In comes Textmarks.com and the experiment…. I have registered a keyword with Textmarks.com and have told my students to subscribe to my keyword if they would like text message alert announcement (the same announcement I would put on Bb). Now time will tell but I think it might work. Textmarks.com has an easy to use management interface and you can look at the phones which have subscribed to the alert.

Will it work on you also….

I have also set up a keyword for you to try. If you send a text message to 41411 (cell phone message charges will apply) and use the keyword mobileDot, you will receive info on my webpage if reply to my message with a "y", you will automatically be added to my alert list. Easy as one, two, three


 

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Creating Mobile Flashcards

One very practical learning application for a mobile device (Cell phone) is flashcards. I created an application that has a small number of questions (almost like a quiz) using MLEX (a mobile page tool I created) so my page will display on both a cell phone or a PC.

One of the design limitations with mobile pages is the lack of JavaScript support. My flashcard application contains no Javascript and uses a linear layout to also work more effectively on a mobile display. Finally, no tables or frames are used because they will also cause problems in mobile browsers.

Graphics have been kept to a minimum and when there is a graphic is is less then
100 pixels so that it fits within the display. Click here to see the web page and use a PC browser to look at the source code. Go to this link on your cell phone and you can run the page and flashcards in its mobile format. Note: you will see tags like

which are used by my MLEX tool to format data.
  1. Display the Page
  2. Think of an answer and select answer
  3. See the answer and the next question
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As always, send me questions via a comment.





Monday, February 16, 2009

mlearnopedia - A Great Mobile Learning Site


Mobile Learning
mlearnopedia has aways been a great Internet site for mobile learning but now it has gotten even better.  mlearnopedia now has a new learning community section of its site that will include many blogs and resources which focus on mobile learning (this one included).



Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Practicing what you preach..

It has been a month or so since I last posted. Now that I am back to teaching full time, my time to spent on mobile technology is limited.

However, I am committed to seeing mobile tech grow in teaching and learning and I am continuing to work towards that end although it will be on my own time and not as part of my sabbatical.

Now that the sabbatical is complete. What I have been working on is using MLEX to create web pages for my students to access on a mobile device. I have also upgrading my cell phone with an Internet connection so that has helped my testing.





Some links you might be interested in seeing are:

All of these pages were created by MLEX

I continue to put together a list of improvement in MLEX and would invite anyone who would like to try the beta version of the product to let me know via email.