Vocational Training Using Mobile Technologies


                 

 

Mobile Learning

 

To better appreciate the merits of vocational training using mobile technologies, one should understand the concept and practice of mobile learning. According to eLearning Guild, mobile learning “is any activity that allows individuals to be more productive when consuming, interacting with, or creating information, mediated through a compact digital portable device that the individual carries on a regular basis, has reliable connectivity, and fits in a pocket or purse" (Wexler, 2007). It is particularly useful in:

 

Delivering learning content and experiences to learners when and where they need it. It is instruction that can be accessed at any time and any place to support performance. Typically M-learning is accessed via a mobile device that facilitates just-in-time learning and on-demand learning. M-learning can be formal or informal, structured or unstructured. It is flexible, self-paced and self-directed. M-learning is driven by the learner, rather than the technology learners use to access it (Turner, 2012).

      

 

 

 

Vocational Training Through Mobile Devices

 

 


 

 

Vocational education is training that prepares individual adults for a specific trade, job or vocation. When mobile technology is used in vocational education its application can be extended to professional or on-the-job training and development. Whether one is being trained in a classroom, office, factory or in the natural environment, those who receive instruction are considered learners.

 

Increasingly, today’s learners (and newly trained workforce) are members of the so-called “Millennial” (formerly called generation Y in the 90's) and “Generation Z” cohorts. Many millennials and all members of generation Z are ‘digital natives’. Many "so called or self-proclaimed" experts believe that our current educational system was not designed to teach digital natives. Although this paradigm is slowly shifting in the public education system, much of the private sector has embraced the new digital paradigm—especially as it relates to mobile learning (M-Learning) for vocational training.

 

Learning is a phenomenon that cannot be isolated from the activity, culture, context, and environment in which it takes place ( Bogdan, 2013). Another excellent benefit of M-Learning is that “knowledge and capacities for decision-making and responsibility can be acquired directly at the real workplace and with familiar learning media and the acquired skills can be applied immediately following the learning periods ( Martin, 2009).”

 

 

 

 

Benefits of Mobile Learning/Vocational Training (Horton, 2011, Chapter 9)

 

Convenience

 

 

 

Cost

 

 

 

Real World

 

 

 

 

Health/Wellness

 

 

 

 

 

Instant Access to Mobile Tools/Tech

 

 

 

More Benefits of M-Learning in Vocational Education 

 

  

 

According to the factual statistics in this video, it is apparent that Mobile Learning is changing the face of education and the social networks connected through it.  The United States is at the forefront in modernizing education and bringing the Millennial generation greater access to pedagogical methods on small and mobile devices. The overall advantage and the reason why society will continue to proceed in this direction of digital education is due to cost-effective and "going Green" motives.  Also Mobile Learning proves to be a success for this generation that is always 'on the go', therefore the flexibility allowed in M-Learning acts as another advantage.  

 

 

Evidence

 

 

Extensive research derived from Towards Maturity's 2013 Benchmark Study, reveals key findings based on the responses received from 481 organizations, across 44 countries, spanning a range of industries, sectors, types and sizes.

 

Key findings (Overton, 2014):

  

 

When compared with the 2013 Benchmark average values, those that specifically enable their content for mobile devices have gained:

 

 

*Notably, those using mobile learning are at least twice as likely as non-users to exceed benchmark values and be in the top quartile for Towards Maturity Index.

 

Mobile learning Infographics

 

 

Design Considerations

 

 

 

 

 

 

Although the positive implications of M-Learning are compelling,“creating mobile learning can be expensive, difficult and risky. Before you dive into a detailed design, ensure that the rewards justify the likely costs—for  you and your sponsor (Horton, 2011).” For the most part, the effectiveness of any respective M-Learning efforts will hinge upon the design. Planning, knowing the target audience and thoughtful execution will be pivotal.

 

Do

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Don’t

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Being an effective designer for M-Learning projects is difficult. There is no substitute for practice—a designer will learn much through trial and error. Although nobody can predict the future, it seems reasonable to say that people will continue to value and use mobile devices for many decades to come—until they are replaced by something else. It is important for the instructional designer/technologist to ‘meet the learners where they are.’ A majority of learners daily spend time on mobile devices. The challenge is to cultivate that time into productive learning that makes our society better. This perhaps is no easy task, however it appears to be safe to say the benefits outweigh the cost of that challenge.

  

References

 

Bogdan, P. (2013). Social media and the new academic environment: pedagogical challenges: Pedagogical Challenges. IGI

 

     Global.

 

Horton, W. (2011). e-Learning by Design. John Wiley & Sons.

 

Martin, E. (2009). Looking Toward the Future of Technology-Enhanced Education: Ubiquitous Learning and the Digital Native:

 

     Ubiquitous Learning and the Digital Native. IGI Global.

 

Mobile Learning and Global Models - iXtentia and Extentia. (2012). Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?

 

     v=y_WtfMvkJLg&feature=youtube_gdata_player

 

Overton, L. (2014). In-Focus: mobile learning at work. Retrieved from http://www.towardsmaturity.org/

 

Turner, N. (2012, March 21). What is mlearning?. Retrieved from http://www.slideshare.net

 

Wexler, S. (2007, August 7). Mobile learning : research library. Retrieved from http://www.elearningguild.com