article thumbnail

20 Years of Student Feedback Drives Digital Learning

edWeb.net

Watch the Recording Listen to the Podcast Can you guess what students said was their most-used mobile device in 2003? Today, 95% of high school students access schoolwork on their smartphones whenever and wherever they need it. So, what was students’ most-used mobile device in 2003? Hint: It burned.

article thumbnail

Smartphone Learning

IT Bill

For the past several years the Horizon Report has listed mobile learning, in one form or another, as an emerging educational technology (e.g. mobile computing, mobile apps, social media, BYOD, mobile learning). Undergraduate Smartphone Ownership. What would we then need to do differently?

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

It’s A Smartphone Life: More Than Half Of U.S. Children Now Have One

MindShift

Just over half of children in the United States — 53 percent — now own a smartphone by the age of 11. These stats come from a new, nationally representative survey of media use among children ages 8-18, by Common Sense Media, which has been tracking this since 2003. It’s also an equity issue.

article thumbnail

Top 12 apps for law students and the bar exam

Brainscape

Get Black’s Law Dictionary: App Store Law school app # 2: Brainscape’s web & mobile flashcards A virtually indispensable study app for law school is Brainscape, the world’s smartest study and flashcards app. You’ll be fluent in Latin before you’re through with law school!

Kaplan 52
article thumbnail

Nearly 60% of Teens Use Their Own Mobile Devices in School for Learning

The Innovative Educator

The ultimate learning experience for students is both highly collaborative and extremely personalized, supported by mobile devices and digital content, reports Project Tomorrow in their latest Speak Up report. This year, nearly half of teachers (47 percent) said their students have regular access to mobile devices in their classrooms.

article thumbnail

Human 2.0

Learning with 'e's

Some would argue that the transient phase leading to post-humanism is the non-invasive but just as powerful welding together of human and computer, as seen in the addictive video game playing of geeks, or the smartphone ultra-dependency of our current youth generation. So are we now on the verge of a phase of human development? iThink not.