The purpose of this paper is to compare and contrast characteristics of use and adoption of mobile learning in higher education in developed and developing countries. A comparative case study based on a survey questionnaire was conducted with 189 students (undergraduate and postgraduate) from Makerere University in Uganda and the University of Adelaide in Australia. The Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) was employed as the theoretical framework. The results indicated that higher education students in developed and developing countries use a range of technologies for learning, with major differences between Uganda and Australia. The study concludes that mobile learning in higher education in developed and developing country contexts is still at an experimental stage with students using mobile devices in pedagogically limited ways.
This paper reports the experiences of university lecturers towards mobile learning from two points of view: (i) lecturers’ needs and experiences in relation to mobile learning design and implementation, and (ii) possible barriers to their adoption in higher education classrooms.
The findings from a qualitative case study that conducted semi-structured interviews with 12 lecturers from a developed and developing country contexts revealed; the need for strong commitment from institutional leadership, presence of an institutional and national mobile learning policy,
a culture of innovation and willingness to revise the traditional curriculum to incorporate the new mobile pedagogies.
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