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International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning | 2012

Merging MOOC and mLearning for Increased Learner Interactions

Inge de Waard; Apostolos Koutropoulos; Rebecca J. Hogue; Sean C. Abajian; Nilgün Özdamar Keskin; C. Osvaldo Rodriguez; Michael Sean Gallagher

In this paper, the authors suggest the merger of the Massively Open Online Course MOOC format and mobile learning mLearning based on mutual affordances of both contemporary learning/teaching formats to investigate learner interactions and dialogues in an open online course. The paper presents a case study of how MobiMOOC, a course created using the MOOC format, demonstrates the synergistic characteristics between the MOOC format and mLearning, making a combination of both fields ideal for contemporary, digital, collaborative learning, and knowledge construction based on learner interactions and dialogue. MobiMOOC was a six-week online course focusing on mLearning that ran in April and May 2011. An end-of-course survey provides insight that supports the synergies between MOOCs and mLearning: collaboration, informal and lifelong learning, and dialogue.


BMC Medical Education | 2014

Residents' and preceptors' perceptions of the use of the iPad for clinical teaching in a family medicine residency program.

Douglas Archibald; Colla J. MacDonald; Judith Plante; Rebecca J. Hogue; Javier Fiallos

BackgroundAs Family Medicine programs across Canada are transitioning into a competency-based curriculum, medical students and clinical teachers are increasingly incorporating tablet computers in their work and educational activities. The purpose of this pilot study was to identify how preceptors and residents use tablet computers to implement and adopt a new family medicine curriculum and to evaluate how they access applications (apps) through their tablet in an effort to support and enhance effective teaching and learning.MethodsResidents and preceptors (n = 25) from the Family Medicine program working at the Pembroke Regional Hospital in Ontario, Canada, were given iPads and training on how to use the device in clinical teaching and learning activities and how to access the online curriculum. Data regarding the use and perceived contribution of the iPads were collected through surveys and focus groups. This mixed methods research used analysis of survey responses to support the selection of questions for focus groups.ResultsReported results were categorized into: curriculum and assessment; ease of use; portability; apps and resources; and perceptions about the use of the iPad in teaching/learning setting. Most participants agreed on the importance of accessing curriculum resources through the iPad but recognized that these required enhancements to facilitate use. The iPad was considered to be more useful for activities involving output of information than for input. Participants’ responses regarding the ease of use of mobile technology were heterogeneous due to the diversity of computer proficiency across users. Residents had a slightly more favorable opinion regarding the iPad’s contribution to teaching/learning compared to preceptors.ConclusionsiPad’s interface should be fully enhanced to allow easy access to online curriculum and its built-in resources. The differences in computer proficiency level among users should be reduced by sharing knowledge through workshops led by more skillful iPad users. To facilitate collection of information through the iPad, the design of electronic data-input forms should consider the participants’ reported negative perceptions towards typing data through mobile devices. Technology deployment projects should gather sufficient evidence from pilot studies in order to guide efforts to adapt resources and infrastructure to relevant needs of Family Medicine teachers and learners.


Medical Teacher | 2016

Mobile technologies in medical education: AMEE Guide No. 105.

Ken Masters; Rachel H. Ellaway; David Topps; Douglas Archibald; Rebecca J. Hogue

Abstract Mobile technologies (including handheld and wearable devices) have the potential to enhance learning activities from basic medical undergraduate education through residency and beyond. In order to use these technologies successfully, medical educators need to be aware of the underpinning socio-theoretical concepts that influence their usage, the pre-clinical and clinical educational environment in which the educational activities occur, and the practical possibilities and limitations of their usage. This Guide builds upon the previous AMEE Guide to e-Learning in medical education by providing medical teachers with conceptual frameworks and practical examples of using mobile technologies in medical education. The goal is to help medical teachers to use these concepts and technologies at all levels of medical education to improve the education of medical and healthcare personnel, and ultimately contribute to improved patient healthcare. This Guide begins by reviewing some of the technological changes that have occurred in recent years, and then examines the theoretical basis (both social and educational) for understanding mobile technology usage. From there, the Guide progresses through a hierarchy of institutional, teacher and learner needs, identifying issues, problems and solutions for the effective use of mobile technology in medical education. This Guide ends with a brief look to the future.


The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning | 2011

Using mLearning and MOOCs to understand chaos, emergence, and complexity in education

Inge de Waard; Sean C. Abajian; Michael Gallagher; Rebecca J. Hogue; Nilgün Özdamar Keskin; Apostolos Koutropoulos; Osvaldo C. Rodriguez


The European Journal of Open, Distance and E-Learning | 2012

Emotive Vocabulary in MOOCs: Context & Participant Retention

Apostolos Koutropoulos; Michael Gallagher; Sean C. Abajian; Inge de Waard; Rebecca J. Hogue; Nilgün Özdamar Keskin; C. Osvaldo Rodriguez


International Journal of Emerging Technologies in Learning (ijet) | 2014

What Tweets Tell us About MOOC Participation

Apostolos Koutropoulos; Sean C. Abajian; Inge deWaard; Rebecca J. Hogue; Nilgün Özdamar Keskin; C. Osvaldo Rodriguez


Current Issues in Emerging eLearning | 2016

What is it Like to Learn and Participate in Rhizomatic MOOCs? A Collaborative Autoethnography of #RHIZO14

Maha Bali; Sarah Honeychurch; Keith Hamon; Rebecca J. Hogue; Apostolos Koutropoulos; Scott Johnson; Ronald Leunissen; Lenandlar Singh


International Journal of Medical Education | 2013

The design, delivery and evaluation of an essential teaching skills course for preceptors in family medicine

Colla J. MacDonald; Douglas Archibald; Madeleine Montpetit; Martha McKeen; Donna Leith-Gudbranson; Rebecca J. Hogue; Christine Rivet


Current Issues in Emerging eLearning | 2016

How the Community Became More Than the Curriculum: Participant Experiences In #RHIZO14

Sarah Honeychurch; Bonnie Stewart; Maha Bali; Rebecca J. Hogue; Dave Cormier


Hybrid Pedagogy | 2015

Writing the Unreadable Untext: a Collaborative Autoethnography of #rhizo14

Keith Hamon; Rebecca J. Hogue; Sarah Honeychurch; Scott Johnson; Apostolos Koutropoulos; Simon Ensor; Sandra Sinfeld; Maha Balie

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Apostolos Koutropoulos

University of Massachusetts Boston

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Maha Bali

American University in Cairo

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Sean C. Abajian

California State University

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C. Osvaldo Rodriguez

National University of La Plata

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