Abstract

Researchers emphasize the importance of maintaining learning communities and environments. This article describes the building and nourishment of a learning community, one comprised of middle school students who learned mathematics out-of-class using the cellular phone. The building of the learning community was led by three third year pre-service teachers majoring in mathematics and computers. The pre-service teachers selected thirty 8th grade students to learn mathematics with the cellular phone and be part of a learning community experimenting with this learning. To analyze the building and development stages of the cellular phone learning community, two models of community building stages were used; first the team development model developed by Tuckman (1965), second the life cycle model of a virtual learning community developed by Garber (2004). The research findings indicate that a learning community which is centered on a new technology has five 'life' phases of development: Pre-birth, birth, formation, performing, and maturity. Further, the research finding indicate that the norms that were encouraged by the preservice teachers who initiated the cellular phone learning community resulted in a community which developed, nourished and matured to be similar to a community of experienced applied mathematicians who use mathematical formulae to study everyday phenomena.

Highlights

  • The development of this cellular learning community has common factors with other learning communities and specific factors which distinguish it from other communities, like the wondering sub-stage of the second stage of the formation phase

  • What is specific for this community life development is that its maturity phase is characterized by an interesting educational phenomenon: the students turning into mathematicians who look for real life phenomena to investigate mathematically

  • The cellular learning community described here had five 'life' phases of development: Pre-birth, birth, formation, performing, and maturity. These are the phases of the life cycle of a learning community which lives a new experiment, in our case integrating the cellular phone in teaching mathematics outdoor

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Especially mobile phones, are increasingly common amongst the younger generation This provides new possibilities, opportunities and challenges for the educational environment [3], especially for math. Reference [5] studied learning processes and experiences within a mobile phone learning environment In doing so they aimed to examine how socio-cultural and situated learning aspects were reflected in these processes and experiences. They found that the contribution of the mobile phone environment "lies in making dynamic mathematical application more available, and in supporting the execution of tasks that are closer to the students’ experiences and more relevant to them, which has the potential to enhance experiential learning. The authors reported that the participants' learning experiences motivated their further learning

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call