TY - GEN
T1 - To ipadise or to ipedise higher education : new learning and the challenge of diversity in users, space, time, devices and formats
AU - Novoa, Mauricio
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - ![CDATA[Higher education institutions started studies on how to use iPads as soon as Apple released them back on 2010. That was a breakthrough technology “poised to change the learning landscape.” Its capacity to carry content and thousands of inexpensive apps made it a perfect choice. Interfacing through a multi-touch screen was intuitive and inspiring of creativity and hands-on learning. Its small size was unobtrusive and portable. iPads quickly became appreciated commodity and dominated a newly created market with no rival for a couple of years. It was timely as technology used in classrooms was often inappropriate or dated while the new students were digital natives. It seemed they were more familiar with technology than many academics and had easier access to new devices. iPad implementation brought about puzzling challenges to institutions as better infrastructure, methods and curriculum were needed to house the new thinking and doing. Fast forward to 2013, the learning technology landscape is changing quickly. Apple paved the way so now new competitors (i.e. Windows, Samsung, Asus, Sony and others) are gaining pieces of the market. Complications created by industry and manufacturers competition added on to the upheaval on how to still figure out and deliver discipline specific education; core curriculum and who are our new learners. Extra pressure is amounting as the author’s university just started a new strong blended learning strategy by giving away 11,000 new iPads to each first year freshman and woman entering the institution in 2013. This move to action created a dramatic shift in paradigms intending to enhance students learning experience who appear to want everything faster and easier than in previous generations. Relevance of teaching, learning and creative inquiry can only be achieved thanks to a process of authenticity that caters for all diversity in users, devices and formats. The new way of learning will depend on how successful the conversion is from iPadisation to iPedagogy through bringing your own devices (BYOD) to the party. Technology is finally catching up with Weiser’s (1993) [1] vision of a third wave of many to one relationship between computer and human immersion in the learning process through ubiquitous learning.]]
AB - ![CDATA[Higher education institutions started studies on how to use iPads as soon as Apple released them back on 2010. That was a breakthrough technology “poised to change the learning landscape.” Its capacity to carry content and thousands of inexpensive apps made it a perfect choice. Interfacing through a multi-touch screen was intuitive and inspiring of creativity and hands-on learning. Its small size was unobtrusive and portable. iPads quickly became appreciated commodity and dominated a newly created market with no rival for a couple of years. It was timely as technology used in classrooms was often inappropriate or dated while the new students were digital natives. It seemed they were more familiar with technology than many academics and had easier access to new devices. iPad implementation brought about puzzling challenges to institutions as better infrastructure, methods and curriculum were needed to house the new thinking and doing. Fast forward to 2013, the learning technology landscape is changing quickly. Apple paved the way so now new competitors (i.e. Windows, Samsung, Asus, Sony and others) are gaining pieces of the market. Complications created by industry and manufacturers competition added on to the upheaval on how to still figure out and deliver discipline specific education; core curriculum and who are our new learners. Extra pressure is amounting as the author’s university just started a new strong blended learning strategy by giving away 11,000 new iPads to each first year freshman and woman entering the institution in 2013. This move to action created a dramatic shift in paradigms intending to enhance students learning experience who appear to want everything faster and easier than in previous generations. Relevance of teaching, learning and creative inquiry can only be achieved thanks to a process of authenticity that caters for all diversity in users, devices and formats. The new way of learning will depend on how successful the conversion is from iPadisation to iPedagogy through bringing your own devices (BYOD) to the party. Technology is finally catching up with Weiser’s (1993) [1] vision of a third wave of many to one relationship between computer and human immersion in the learning process through ubiquitous learning.]]
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/542600
M3 - Conference Paper
SN - 9788461638475
SP - 1800
EP - 1808
BT - 6th International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation (ICERI2013): Conference Proceedings, Seville, Spain, 18-20 November 2013
PB - International Association of Technology, Education and Development
T2 - International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation
Y2 - 18 November 2013
ER -