One thing Mobile learning is not: "It is not about shrinking a course down to a little screen". In Brown's definition it is learning done on a device which fulfils these criteria:
- Full battery for the day
- Instant on
- You're used to using it
All mobile results so far (there were examples of a Merrill Lynch study - more on this below - and a Morgan Stanley Oct 20 presentation) point towards the future of mobile learning being bigger than we expect. Everything from mobile ESL classes which as you can imagine are very accessible for a taxi driver with spare time during the day, classes on culture shock developed by a newcomer to the UK shocked by cultural differences (port.c-shock.com), and augmented reality role play environments for work experience.
The Merrill Lynch study mentioned has been an eye-opener. They deployed three pilot compliance courses and the results showed:
- Scores were higher on mobile
- Courses were completed in 45% less time
- 100% of the participants wanted more
DevLearn Mobile Jam- log on to mlj.mlearning.com and download the app to stay tuned to mobile learning info at DevLearn
@Schnicker
