Mobile phones in school: From disturbing objects to infrastructure for learning
Abstract
Amid digitalisation, the mobile phone has pervaded society and become
one of the most widespread digital technologies. In school, the mobile
phone has stirred up conflicts and tensions visible in public debate as well
as classrooms. Teachers and students have struggled to manage mobile
phones within the boundaries of school practice. This thesis explores
these conflicts and tensions surrounding mobile phones in upper-secondary
school. Theoretically, the analysis is based on the sociocultural perspective
and views school as a social practice that builds on the installed
base of infrastructure compiled from material and social resources and on
institutional arrangements assigned or designed to support learning.
The empirical foundation of this thesis comprises four separate studies.
Together, they present a mixed-methods approach to address the tensions
surrounding mobile phones in school as they have arisen in public
debate and in teachers and students’ viewpoints. The results show that
banning the use of mobile phones in school is an issue that politicians
have used in the debate. Teachers have been equipped with legislation
allowing them to ban the use of mobile phones when they are disruptive
or threaten education. Nevertheless, many teachers permit students
to use their mobile phones when the use is compatible with schoolwork.
Students often use their mobile phones for school-related activities but
struggle to balance their use with the conventions of school practice.
The mobile phone challenges school practice and education in many
ways, for example, in classroom roles, curriculum implementation and
control over education. Despite these challenges to school practice from
mobile phones, the results show that both teachers and students use many
features of the devices to support schoolwork. Thus, despite these challenges
and tensions, the mobile phone has become part of schools’ infrastructure
for learning.
Parts of work
Ott, T. (2014). A historical materialist analysis of the debate in Swedish print media on mobile phones in school settings. International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning, 6(2), 1–14. Ott, T., Haglind, T., & Lindström, B. (2014, 3-5
november 2014). Students’ use of mobile phones for schoolwork. In: M. Kalz, Y. Bayyurt, & M. Specht (Eds.). Mobile as mainstream—towards future challenges in mobile learning: 13th World Conference on Mobile and Contextual Learning, mLearn 2014 Istanbul, Turkey, November 3–5, 2014, proceedings (pp. 69–80). Istanbul, Turkey: mLearn 2014. Ott, T., Lundin, J., & Lindström, B. (2017a). Unintentional integration of technology—teachers’ attitude and permission of mobile phones as tools for
learning in the classroom. Manuscript in preparation. Ott, T., Grigic Magnusson, A., Weilenmann, A., & Hård af Segerstad, Y. (2017b). “It must not disturb; it’s as simple as that”: Students’ voices on mobile phones in the infrastructure for learning in Swedish upper secondary school. Education and Information Technology.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. IT-fakulteten
Institution
Department of Applied Information Technology ; Institutionen för tillämpad informationsteknologi
Disputation
Fredagen den 29 september 2017, kl. 13.00, Torg Grön, Hus Patricia, Institutionen för Informations Teknologi, Forskningsgången 6, Göteborg
Date of defence
2017-09-29
torbjorn.ott@gu.se
Date
2017-09-06Author
Ott, Torbjörn
Keywords
mobile phone
upper secondary school
teachers
students
public debate
infrastructure for learning
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-88254-01-4
Series/Report no.
Studies in Applied Information Technology
1652-490X
Language
eng