Mobile learning in a large blended computer science classroom: System function, pedagogies, and their impact on learning

Ruimin SHEN, Minjuan WANG, Wanping GAO, Daniel NOVAK, Lin TANG

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlespeer-review

69 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The computer science classes in China's institutions of higher education often have large numbers of students. In addition, many institutions offer blended classes that include both on-campus and online students. These large blended classrooms have long suffered from a lack of interactivity. Many online classes simply provide recorded instructor lectures to which distance students listen after downloading. This format only reinforces the negative effects of passive nonparticipatory learning. At a major university in Shanghai, researchers and developers actively seek technological interventions that can greatly increase interactivity in blended classes. They have developed a cutting-edge mobile learning system that can deliver live broadcasts of real-time classroom teaching to online students with mobile devices. Their system allows students to customize their means of content-reception, based on when and where the students are tuning into the broadcast. The system also supports short text-messaging and instant polls. Through these features, students can ask questions and make suggestions in real time, and the instructor can respond immediately. This paper describes this system in detail and also reports results from a formal implementation of the system with a blended classroom of 562 students (of whom 90% were online). Copyright © 2006 IEEE.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)538-546
JournalIEEE Transactions on Education
Volume52
Issue number4
Early online dateAug 2009
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2009

Citation

Shen, R., Wang, M., Gao, W., Novak, D., & Tang, L. (2009). Mobile learning in a large blended computer science classroom: System function, pedagogies, and their impact on learning. IEEE Transactions on Education, 52(4), 538-546. https://doi.org/10.1109/TE.2008.930794

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