Transcript

CHRIS BALDWIN:
So M-learning, as it's often called, is mobile learning, which basically means using a mobile phone or whatever device you've got in your pocket as something to encourage learning. There are something like five billion mobile phone connections in the world. So it's getting on for as many connections as people are on the planet-- not quite there yet. But it's something which has huge outreach.
So maybe we think of mobile learning as something better in the richer world, but really, it's something which can have an impact everywhere in the world. Now, I read a statistic the other day which said in Tanzania, 97% of the population has access to a mobile phone one way or another.

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So you can see here, this was somebody from Tibet, and there was a Tibetan house there.

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CHRIS BALDWIN:
So if they've got pictures in their phones, they can just look at the pictures and show their classmates the pictures, show the teacher the pictures, and talk about what's in the picture, which is far more motivating than looking in a coursebook and discussing the picture of who knows who it is in the model in the coursebook.

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He sits next to me.
What's his name?
Ryan.
OK.

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CHRIS BALDWIN:
So if they're actually talking about their family, their friends, maybe if they got pictures from their holidays, they can use those pictures to discuss the holiday they've been on. If you're talking about a picture from a textbook, it's something which is removed from you. So I mean, it's someone you don't know, you don't care about.
If you're talking about somebody that you know, that you love, you care for, then you're much more motivated to talk about them. And because you're much more involved with it, you're producing real language related to you, which is then going to be much more memorable. And also, it gives you more reason to want to talk about it.
So if he wants to talk about it, you're going to want to say things. Maybe your student doesn't know how to say a particular word or a particular idea, but rather than just not bothering because it's a picture in the book that they don't care about, if it's a picture of a real person, they really want to tell their classmates, or they really want to tell the teacher that thing.

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What is this of? What is this of?
It's like a-- it's a museum.
[INAUDIBLE].
[INAUDIBLE] this, I think, the culture.
Yes.

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CHRIS BALDWIN:
And I give you a very simple activity which really works well, is pretty much every phone, even the cheaper ones, have a voice recorder. You can get them to do a speaking activity and record themselves when they're doing it.

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--to planets as our forests and fresh water supplies vanish.
Our planet is [INAUDIBLE].

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CHRIS BALDWIN:
It can be a monologue. It can be a conversation. They can be reading the script from the book. It can be a pronunciation activity. But they just do it, and they record themselves when they do it. And then they can listen to themselves and listen to each other there and then.

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In the past 30 years, we have used nearly 30% of the Earth's natural resources.
In the last 30 years, we have used nearly 30% of the Earth's natural resources.
What do you think? You've heard it.
It's OK.

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CHRIS BALDWIN:
I mean, that's very easy. Because maybe previously, you had to go, and if the school you worked in had the technology, you had to book computers or voice recorders or tape recorders in the past. But now, everybody's got it in their pocket anyway.
Maybe some people don't know how to do it. You've got to fiddle around a little bit on the menus to find where the voice recorder is, but it takes a couple of minutes. And then there's a bit of real communication between the students and the teacher when you're actually talking about, well, how do you find this voice recorder on the phone? That real communication is very valuable as well.

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Obviously, we're at the British Council here. There are some very good British Council apps. There's the Elementary Podcast app, which basically lets the students automatically download Elementary Podcast that they can listen to in their own time, their own convenience.
There's also things like Murphy's, the famous grammar book from-- I think it was Cambridge University Press. That's available as an app for the iPhone, I think it is, which has lots of the grammar-type exercises that you get in the printed book. But it's on your phone, so you can do it when you're on the bus or just got five minutes to kill.
Using technology in the classroom-- it's no different to using a coursebook in the classroom. A coursebook is a resource. You can use it well, you can use it badly. Technology is a resource. You can use it well, or use it badly. But it's there.
And coursebooks, the students have to actually go out and buy them. They bring them for a reason. But the students are bringing this technology anyway, so why not get them to use it?

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