{"id":2432,"date":"2012-05-16T09:30:22","date_gmt":"2012-05-16T13:30:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/edutechdebate.org\/?p=2432"},"modified":"2012-09-27T10:39:00","modified_gmt":"2012-09-27T14:39:00","slug":"unesco-working-paper-series-on-mobile-learning-africa-and-the-middle-east","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/edutechdebate.org\/mobile-learning-initiatives\/unesco-working-paper-series-on-mobile-learning-africa-and-the-middle-east\/","title":{"rendered":"UNESCO Working Paper Series on Mobile Learning: Africa and the Middle East"},"content":{"rendered":"
The ninth and tenth papers in the UNESCO Series<\/a> (introduced on EduTechDebate here<\/a>) examine mobile learning in Africa and the Middle East.<\/p>\n <\/a>Mobile and policies<\/strong><\/p>\n The first paper, Turning On Mobile Learning in Africa and the Middle East: Illustrative Initiatives and Policy Implications<\/em><\/a>, describes a range of mobile learning programs and explores how these programs address educational needs in the region. It also surveys national and local policies related to mobile learning and analyzes their impact.<\/p>\n The number of mobile phone users in Africa and the Middle East has exploded in the past decade and a half.\u00a0 Africa, the continent facing the most urgent educational challenges, is expected to have over 735 million active mobile phone subscriptions by the end of 2012.\u00a0 In 1995 there were only 600,000 subscriptions.<\/p>\n For the first time in history, a majority of Africans have individual access to interactive information and communication technology. In the Middle East an even higher percentage of people own and use mobile technologies. And since the 2011 Arab Spring no one questions their potential to connect and empower average citizens.<\/p>\n According to the UNESCO published paper, Africa and the Middle East are \u201cleapfrogging\u201d the earlier PC revolution and enthusiastically embracing the more recent mobile revolution. Unlike countries in Latin America for example, African countries (and many in the Middle East as well) have not made substantial investments in filling schools with computers or providing laptops to students. At some level, Africa is (for lack of a better phrase) a \u201cclean slate\u201d when it comes to ICT use in education. Because so many Africans have mobile phones, many educators are eager to leverage these devices to improve and provide greater access to education.<\/p>\n One model of accomplishing this is called Bring Your Own Device (BYOD). The name is sufficiently descriptive: according to this model students simply use the mobile phones they already own for educative purposes, and sometimes for purposes recommended or required by schools and teachers. The approach has gained traction in many developed countries (most notably in the United States) due to its affordability and flexibility.\u00a0 Other models require schools to purchase mobile devices for students which dramatically increases costs.<\/p>\n The obvious disadvantage of BYOD programs is that not every learner has the same device or even a device at all.\u00a0 Also, managing different types and models of devices on a school network can be difficult, and incorporating mobile learning into curricular activities is much easier when the same devices are being used by all learners. Yet in Africa and the Middle East cost is paramount, as illustrated in the paper. Schools often have difficulty providing basic infrastructure for students let alone personal technology.<\/p>\n What do you think?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n