The document discusses challenges and opportunities for delivering educational content to mobile learners. It presents options for developing mobile websites versus apps and considers tradeoffs such as cross-platform accessibility, development requirements, and access to device features. The presentation concludes by thanking attendees and providing contact information for several speakers.
8. … but we have an app Keren Mills Articles R Us Articles R Us
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11. Apple is not the only fruit Keren Mills http://www.asymco.com/2011/02/08/android-and-iphone-conquistadors-or-pioneers/
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13. Thank you Keren Mills Claire Grace Head of Content and Licensing [email_address] @ClaireEGrace Keren Mills Digital Services Development Officer [email_address] @mirya Gill Needham Associate Director – Information Management & Innovation [email_address] @ambridge7 Hassan Sheikh Head of Systems Development [email_address] @hassan_sheikh
[2 minutes 40 seconds] As we’ve heard from Agnes, the learner is mobile. Our aim is to be where the students are, across all platforms.
Around 70% of our 250 000 students remain in work while studying. Up to 44 per cent of our UK student population starts undergraduate study without the entry qualifications they would need at a conventional university. http://www8.open.ac.uk/about/main/the-ou-explained/facts-and-figures Have you heard of Ranganathan’s five laws of Library Science? Books are for use . Every reader his or her book . Every book its reader . Save the time of the reader . The Library is a growing organism . It still applies today Web resources are for use . Every user his or her web resource . Every web resource its user . Save the time of the user . The Web is a growing organism .
A student is on a trip to London and decides to make use of their travel time to study. They’ve logged in to the VLE, and looked up an article/ebook they’re required to read. They go from the VLE to the library website….
66.5% of Edinburgh University students surveyed own a smartphone. This is an increase of 17.3% from the IS survey in March 2010. 89% rate searching library databases on a mobile as “Very useful” or “Generally useful”.
… ..and search for the article/ebook. They’ve found a link to the article/e-book, so they click on it….now what? Do they connect seamlessly, or….
Make authentication easy – allow users to sign in through their usual institutional log-in method.
How does the student know that? And why can’t they use their institutional login to access the content?
Supposing the authentication works and they’re successfully directed to the full text of the article or e-book, then what do they see? Provide resources in formats that will reflow to fit different screen sizes, and accessible format so that text to speech software can be used by all. PDF, HTML or ePub? Culture of instant gratification - I’m used to being able to access what I want without delay – music, answers and now books… Make it easy to share, annotate and save a link or article to read later.
What happens when I lose my connection? Can I keep reading what I’ve found so far?
According to Ofcom’s 2010 Communications Market Report, in the UK 91% of households have mobile connections, there are129 mobile connections per head of population 29% of respondents use a mobile handset to access the internet AT HOME Nearly a quarter of adults (23 per cent) accessed content or sent emails on their mobile phones. Among 15-24s this rises to 45 per cent. http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/research/cmr/753567/icmr/ICMR_2010.pdf