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Unblinking in Mobile Learning
J.-S. Hsu, C. Daniels, C.-E. Montgomery, P. Mackinney, A. A. Gieringer and A. M. Agogino
College of Engineering, University of California at Berkeley
The increases in
capabilities of mobile devices have allowed individuals to gain a new degree of
freedom in the exchange of media-rich information. The individual is able to
access knowledge in text, audio, video, and real-time formats and provide such
information to other individuals, privately or publicly. This freedom, of
course, is available to K-12 students as well. In a previous study [Hey et al.
2006], we have found that peer learning through sharing – whether as a
written observation, photograph or video – is crucial to a student's
learning experience. Mobile technologies – photo phones, wireless gaming
devices, PDAs, video IPODs, etc. – have constructed another arena for
sharing for the students that promises to achieve the learning "anytime,
anywhere" goal of mobile learning. However, for mobile learning to become
truly accessible to students, parents and teachers have to be able to entrust
the students with these technologies without fear for their well-being when
they participate in the different types of spaces the Internet provides.
Posting and sharing of images and videos of classroom exercises or field trips
raises questions of the acceptable degrees of accessibility of media-rich infromation.
Context-sensitive educational applications that utilize location technologies
available on mobile devices, such as those that use GPS technology to identify
location for animal sightings [CyberTracker 2005], raise questions about who
can monitor and locate a student's location.
As student access and
share information that are enabled by mobile devices, we highlight the
opportunities and challenges associated with mobile learning and safety of K-12
students in an "unblinking" cyberspace. What types of information are shared or
have the potential to be shared in mobile learning applications? What
technological, physical or virtual, barriers are needed to create spaces that
ensure students' safety? What are the tensions betweens the different stakeholders'
(students, parents, teachers) perspective of their respective privacy rights
and responsibilities? What tools and safeguards should be built into educational digital libraries that aim to provide access and support for mobile learning, such as the
National Engineering Education Digital Library system (NEEDS) at
www.needs.org or the Science, Mathematics, Engineering and Technology educational library at
www.smete.org?
In the construction of
a virtual barrier, we can review its physical congruence which has been widely
studied by city planners, sociologists, and alike. As students share
information the Internet via mobile devices, they are allowing themselves to be
seen by other individuals of that space. This relationship is similar to one's
action in entering a public sphere where they are visible to random individuals.
Philosopher Michel Foucault reflects that "visibility assures the hold of power
that is exercised over" the one that is seen. Thus when students are completely
visible at any time anywhere to anyone on the Internet, how can this visibility
be used strictly for the benefit of education without the drawback of exposing
students to privacy and safety vulnerability? Of course, visibility is taken
away when there are barriers between the individuals that are seen and the
individuals that are seeing. Properly constructed barriers will be able to
retain the integrity of learning from the sharing method and keep out the
potential abuser of space.
According to one study [M. Duneier, 1999], social order is maintained
through "public characters" where individuals entering the space need to meet
some normative standard to avoid scrutiny. Thus virtual public characters, a form of barrier as well
participant, need to be explored while we define these spaces that will contain
individuals that will ultimately interact with the minor user.
In order to develop
and formalize our understanding of possible technological barriers to ensure
minor users of mobile technology, we conducted a study to understand a range of
media-rich information exchange possible in science and engineering learning
for K-12 students. We reviewed the studies on public and private space planning
for children in physical spaces and translated to parallels in virtual spaces.
The two sets of information will allow us to recommend technological barriers
for a safe "unblinking" cyberspace for K-12 students.
Study Context
Our study of K-12
students was conducted in public schools and informal learning settings within
the greater Bay Area in California. In this aspect of research, we examined the
stakes of safety from a user-centered perspective. We observed the behaviors of
the stakeholders while they were using mobile devices and examined the science
and engineering materials that were employed in the student's education.
Methods
We chose two qualitative
research strategies to enhance our understanding in the type of information
content and flow that the students encountered from using Internet resources as
well as mobile devices while learning.
1. We designed student
workshops that were geared towards science and education learning and conducted
with students within the study context. The sessions covered the educational
material and employed PDAs and other mobile devices to enhance the student's
experience by allowing them to explore engineering outside of classroom without
constant adult supervision in the classroom. The sessions ended with a
debriefing activity that solicited the student's opinions on the educational
experience as well as the mobile device.
2. Formal, semi-constructed
interviews with educators in different elementary schools were conducted. Each
ranged from 40 to 90 minutes. Interview topics included teachers' concerns
regarding the use of mobile applications as well as the types of science and
engineering lessons they conduct in their classroom.
We also include a
literature survey on construction of public and private spaces and the related
safety concerns associated with children's use of mobile devices.
Analysis
The workshops and
interviews were captured in either audio or video form and transcribed. Each
text document was coded by two researchers; then the data codes and quotes were
distilled and discussed. Key findings were identified and analyzed in
relationship to the literature finding of safety barrier construction. Technological
barrier needs are then identified, which allow the design team to make
recommendations for mobile device infrastructure that cater to the safe use of
mobile devices by K-12 students.
References
1.
CyberTracker (2005), http://www.cybertracker.co.za/.
2.
Duneier, M. (1999), Sidewalk.
(New York: Farrar, Straus, and
Giroux).
3.
Hey J., J. S. Sandhu, C.
Newman, J.-S. Hsu, C. Daniels, E.
Datta and A.M. Agogino (2006), "Designing Mobile Digital Library Services for
Pre-engineering and Technology Literacy", The International Journal of
Engineering Education - Mobile Technologies for Engineering Education.
4.
Merdich, E.A., Roizen,
J., Rubin V., & Buckley, S. (1997). The serious business of growing up, (Berkeley: University of California Press).
Alice M. Agogino is the Roscoe and Elizabeth Hughes Distinguished
Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Chair of UC Berkeley's Academic
Senate. She has served in a number
of administrative positions at UC Berkeley, including Associate Dean of
Engineering and Faculty Assistant to the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost
in Educational Development and Technology. She also served as Director for
Synthesis, an NSF-sponsored coalition of eight universities with the goal of
reforming undergraduate engineering education, and continues as PI for the
NEEDS (
www.needs.org) and
smete.org
educational digital libraries. Agogino leads a number of research projects in
the areas of computational design, learning sciences, wireless micro-sensors
MEMS, green design and diagnostics and monitoring. Agogino received a B.S. in
Mechanical Engineering from the University of New Mexico (1975), M.S. degree in
Mechanical Engineering (1978) from
the University of California at Berkeley and Ph.D. from the Department of
Engineering-Economic Systems at Stanford University (1984). She has authored
over 150 scholarly publications; has won 3 teaching and 9 best paper awards; is
a member of the National Academy of Engineering and a recipient of the NSF
Director's Award for Distinguished Teaching Scholars. She has supervised 67 MS projects/theses, 27 doctoral
dissertations and numerous undergraduate researchers.
Charlotte Daniels is an incoming third year Mechanical Engineering undergraduate student at University of California –
Berkeley and has worked for Prof. Alice Agogino on the Mobile Learning Project
in the Berkeley Expert Systems Technology Lab since summer 2005.
Arianne Agogino Gieringer is a senior at the College Preparatory School in Oakland, California. She is a summer researcher for the Berkeley Expert
Systems Technology (BEST) Laboratory .
Jui-Shan Hsu is an entering graduate student in Mechanical
Engineering at University of California – Berkeley, where she received
her B.S in Mechanical Engineering and Material Science. Ms. Hsu has worked for
Prof. Alice Agogino on the Mobile Learning Project in the
Berkeley Expert
Systems Technology (BEST) Laboratory since summer 2005. Her research interest is on user
interface, qualitative research methods, and technical communication.
Paul Mackinney is a staff programmer/analyst for the
Berkeley Expert Systems Technology (BEST) Laboratory. He received a B.A. in Mathematics from the University of California at Santa Cruz (1984), and is studying for a Master of Arts in Interdisciplinery Computer Science at Mills College. Professionally he has worked as a Software Quality Assurance Manager and as an IT specialist.
Chad-Eric Montgomery is an undergraduate researcher at the University of California at Berkeley. He is an incoming third year student in Applied Mathematics and Senior Vice President,
Black Engineering & Science Student Association (BESSA). Selected for the Initiative for Diversity in Educational Leadership (IDEAL) Scholarship, he provides leadership and community services at UC Berkeley and in the City of Berkeley community.
* Left image: Children using PDA at an interactive science Use and location are recorded on a central server through their wireless network. Center image: PDA used for capture and annotation during class field trip. Images are transferred to central server accessible to all students in the class. Right image: Classroom activity on tablet PCs using images captured during field trip. Copyright: Alice M. Agogino.