2016
DOI: 10.3402/rlt.v24.31372
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Inclusion in an age of mobility

Abstract: Learning with mobiles in UK universities is not new and is not novel. It is, in fact, at least 10 years old, well-documented and comparable to activity in universities elsewhere in Western Europe, America and Asia Pacific. Continued and dramatic changes in the ownership, access and expectations of mobiles amongst university students and equally across UK society have suddenly propelled learning with mobiles to centre-stage as a feasible proposition but, it is now argued, only if students can bring-your-own-dev… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
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“…Devices are important, but the associated systems and networks are equally significant (Traxler, 2016).…”
Section: Growth Of Bring-your-own-device (Byod) and Multiple Devicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Devices are important, but the associated systems and networks are equally significant (Traxler, 2016).…”
Section: Growth Of Bring-your-own-device (Byod) and Multiple Devicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Increasingly, advanced mobile technologies have become integrated into society, but despite the potential, have not yet been "fully and formally integrated into higher education" (Traxler, 2016, "Looking backward", para. 3).…”
Section: Focus On Sustainability and Mainstreaming Of Mobile Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There is evidence that learning is affected by the tools used and that the design of education has in turn been influenced by available tools, especially those associated with social networking (Ravenscroft et al 2012). Traxler (2016) notes the impact of mobile technologies on society and culture and in personal interactions, where smartphones give access to everyday activities and interactions. Traxler also explains the potential to remove barriers to learning with access to using and creating learning materials.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In another paper (Traxler, 2008b) we have tried to make the case that the universal mobility and connectedness afforded by mobile technology, played out in different ways at different rates in different cultures and different countries, challenges the established or mainstream modernity of European culture and its global off-spring, and in its place we see something akin to a crude postmodernity characterised by the transience, fragmentation, subjectivity and untrustworthiness of knowledge, communities, affiliations and identities, maybe representing the liquid modernity of Bauman (2000). This is not a novel position and probably represents a specifically mobile but cautious position somewhere between the quotidian and prosaic analysis (eg Ling 2004) and the more speculative and sensational (eg Geser 2004, Fortunati, 2002.…”
Section: Mobiles and The Next Epistemicidementioning
confidence: 99%