Dr Alice Maucheline & Professor Julian Park (School of Agriculture Policy & Development)
During December 2016, we had the chance to share our teaching and learning experiences here at the University of Reading with thousands of other educators around the world by providing a case study for a seasonal online course called ‘The 12 apps of Christmas’.
The free, open, short, online Continuing Professional Development (CPD) course was run for the third time by the Dublin Institute of Technology. The programme released ‘an app a day’ for the first 12 weekdays in December and over 3,000 participants logged in to get quick outlines of different ways in which they could integrate mobile learning into their teaching and learning practices. The aim was to raise awareness of the benefits of mobile apps and technologies, to provide upskilling for educators and to help expand their personal learning networks. The course was a collaborative effort with case studies from Ireland, UK and the USA and now that it has finished, the site has been left online as an open resource for all to use. It’s available here.
The case study was produced in collaboration with colleagues at the Universities of Sheffield and Chester as a dissemination activity for the Enhancing Fieldwork Learning (EFL) project. The EFL team have been working together to research and share innovations in field teaching and learning with a particular focus on the use of mobile technologies.
The app we focused on for the case study was ‘Geospike’; this app allows instant location recording using the internal GPS of a mobile device, to which photos, videos and field notes can be attached. This functionality means the app can be used as a geo-referenced field notebook. The pedagogic case study we wrote described how we used the app to log field sampling sites in Iceland with Final year undergraduates from the University of Reading and the University of Akureyri, Iceland on a joint Microbiology field-based module led by Prof Rob Jackson (School of Biological Sciences).
Photos from the Iceland field trip showing students using the iPads to log their sampling locations in GeoSpike. (We gratefully acknowledge the Annual Fund for their support in purchasing a set of iPads to support field learning at Reading.)
The experience of sharing our pedagogic innovations through the 12 apps of Christmas provided us with the opportunity to interact with educators, students, librarians and learning technologists across the globe. The cohort included people with a multitude of different subject backgrounds and experiences which led to very interesting conversations through Twitter and exchanges of comments on the website.
Frances Boylan @boylanfm A map of #12appsDIT followers (https://twitter.com/boylanfm/status/808324692109119488)
Several other apps with similar functionality to Geospike were discussed along with many suggestions of alternative, innovative uses of this kind of app in teaching and learning activities.
Our favourite feedback was on Twitter from @LeithaD “#12appsDIT Really love the case study for GeoSpike. A nifty app is one thing, but a well-constructed learning activity is even better!”
Learn more:
Enhancing Fieldwork Learning https://enhancingfieldwork.org.uk/
12 Apps of Christmas https://the12appsofchristmas2016.wordpress.com/
Take part:
DIT aren’t running the 12 Apps of Christmas in 2017 but there are a couple of others to try this year:
- The 12 Apps of Christmas https://openeducation.blackboard.com/mooc-catalog/courseDetails/view?course_id=_1489_1 by Chris Rowell at Regent’s University London
- The 12 Apps of Christmas https://12appsofchristmas.ca/ by ETUG (a grassroots group of Canadian educators interested in teaching, learning & ed tech in post-secondary education)