=Paper= {{Paper |id=Vol-1154/paper14 |storemode=property |title=Journalist, citizen and learner? A consideration of context in learning mobile journalism through mobile learning |pdfUrl=https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1154/paper14.pdf |volume=Vol-1154 |dblpUrl=https://dblp.org/rec/conf/biiml/Gross14 }} ==Journalist, citizen and learner? A consideration of context in learning mobile journalism through mobile learning== https://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1154/paper14.pdf
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Journalist, citizen and learner?—A consideration of context in learning mobile journalism through
mobile learning

                                             By Dr Bernhard Gross
                                        University of the West of England
                                          Bernhard.gross@uwe.ac.uk



This paper considers some generic key factors in undergraduate students’ mobile learning
experience in relation to the teaching and learning of mobile/smartphone journalism. The paper will
raise issues related to boundaries of learning, trend (iii) of the Ideas for Mobile Learning Symposium,
through a consideration of generic contextual factors influencing the mobile learning situation and
the tension arising of mutually contradictory aspects. It raises questions about how potentially
contradictory fields of practice (Bourdieu, 1992) influence the specific learner generated learning
context. The paper highlights some concerns about risk in the mobile learning context resulting from
this dynamic. This paper represents a research in progress report.

Background: Mobile technology in journalism

In the context of the practice of journalistic production mobile technology is becoming increasingly
influential. Smart phones in particular have moved from a device used by non-professionals, who
decide to capture images or audio of something newsworthy that they happen to encounter, to a
first-choice, default newsgathering and production tool for professional journalists. Due to this
development, the introduction of a mobile technology strand into the journalism curriculum
represents more than a mobile teaching and learning strategy to achieve other learning outcomes
but the ability to use mobile technology journalistically represents a key learning outcome in itself.

Learning mobile journalism through mobile learning

At the outset of the academic year 2013/14, 32 second year undergraduate half-award journalism
students on the module were asked to respond to a baseline survey. The survey assessed what
devices, data allowances etc. students owned as well as attitudes and existing behaviours towards
using their devices in quasi-journalistic ways and their perception of how well they understood
regulatory and risk factors relevant to a specific situation of using their devices. On the latter aspects
students will be able to report back in a second survey at the end of the academic year 2013/14.

In between, over the course of two semesters the students respond to a series of tasks, of increasing
technical and journalistic sophistication, basically moving from scrapbooking, i.e., using their phone
to take a picture or record a brief reminder, to newsgathering, i.e., collecting material that could be
used in a journalistic product, to news production, i.e., completing a journalistic product. Students
use their own devices and post their responses on a personal blog on Blackboard, the university’s
virtual learning environment. This very incremental approach and the use of personal devices are
necessary as, though most students’ devices have the technical capability; most students do not use
them in this way. At the same time the various operating systems and applications on the market
operate differently. While teaching staff can advise and make some suggestions, it is not possible to
provide one-size-fits-all training sessions on the operation of devices nor can the university provide
the students with such devices for the duration of the academic year. This allows them to become
familiar with the processes of their device. The assignment is part of a portfolio of journalistic
products assessment element. The blog entries are only assessed for completion in relation to the
brief not for quality.

The surveys and exercises highlight some of the generic contextual tensions as well as the pushing of
boundaries inherent in the specific situations of mobile learning generated here. Students become
potential 24/7 students. Student-related activities are no longer restricted to the classroom or a
specific fieldwork time-window. In the context of teaching mobile journalism, mobile learning
situations can arise at any moment. Transferring behaviours, e.g., taking pictures of people
acceptable in a social setting, when out with friends, into a quasi-professional context and learning
context, e.g., taking pictures of members of the public engaged or involved in a newsworthy event,
to which different formal and informal rules apply. The latter two themselves stand in some tension.
A consideration of the university’s duty of care may result in a rather different evaluation of
acceptable risk than evaluating the situation either along journalistic rules and regulations or if
students were acting as non-student witnesses only, i.e., not in their capacity as students but only as
any other passer-by/citizen witnessing something. This is particularly important, as the preliminary
findings from the first survey compared to students’ understanding of of risk and regulatory factors
display in the classroom, suggest an overestimation of their ability to understand the impact these
aspects have.

Bourdieu, P. 1992. The Logic of Practice. Cambridge: Polity Press.