A 21st CENTURY EDUCATION

Educating the Mobile Generation

In this film, Soloway and Norris take a road trip through Texas and Louisiana to see firsthand how mobile devices are being used in schools.

Elliot Soloway/Cathie Norris's Biography

Elliot Soloway is Arthur F. Thurnau Professor at the University of Michigan and professor in the School of Information, the School of Education, and the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.

Soloway is a principal investigator of the Center for Learning Technologies in Urban Schools grant, which has been created with four partners: Detroit Public Schools, Chicago Public Schools, the University of Michigan, and Northwestern University. The focus of the center’s activities is the creation of strategies for embedding and sustaining the use of computing and communications technologies in the science curriculum at the middle school level. The center has a four-year, $6 million grant from the National Science Foundation.

As a member of the Center for Highly Interactive Computing in Education at the University of Michigan, Soloway is working to develop technology-embedded curricula for school-based programs, and has been in close collaboration with the Detroit Public Schools and the Ann Arbor Public Schools to produce a new generation of middle-school science curriculum that leverages the affordances of the emerging computational and communications technologies to uniquely scaffold students’ learning and support teachers’ instructional strategies.

For 14 years, Cathie Norris was a high school mathematics and computer science teacher before moving to the University of North Texas where she is a professor in the Department of Technology and Cognition.

Soloway and Norris advocate employing mobile computing devices – Palms, cell phones, and other handhelds – in the classroom. They argue that laptops and desktops do not adequately meet the needs of young learners. Acknowledging that purchasing and maintaining these computers is prohibitively expensive for districts already strapped for funding, the mobile computing solution puts the infrastructure costs on the carrier, not the school. Students can work alone, interactively with other students, or in combination with smart boards and other networking applications. Handhelds like the iPhone will allow for learning to happen anytime and anywhere. Recognizing the giant leap of faith that districts and schools must make to adopt mobile devices, Soloway and Norris are confident that the widespread use of mobile computing in the classroom is inevitable.

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