Alcatel-Lucent along with Abilene Christian University and Cambridge University Press will work on a research project to develop solutions for mobile learning.
The project aims to bring in mobile devices in the overall education system value chain. It is spread over a time period of three years.
The alliance will develop software prototypes and aim to stimulate insight by presenting users with a diverse range of content including images, text, audio, and video.
‘Our work with digital publishing and media is a natural outgrowth of our work in mobile learning,’ says Dr William Rankin, ACU's director of educational innovation. ‘Imagine not just having “a thousand songs in your pocket”, but a thousand libraries. This represents not just a change in the transmission and consumption of information, but also a change in culture.’ Abilene Christian University, the first academic institution in the world to announce a university-wide learning initiative that leverages a new generation of mobile devices, to offer students and faculty opportunities to experiment with emerging forms of social, informational, and media access.
“Cambridge University Press did not become one of the world’s most respected publishers by standing still. We are committed to finding new ways to deliver our content and engage students and faculty,’ says Eric Baber, Innovations Director of the Press's New Directions Group. ‘Just as the advent of printing transformed education, this new generation of digital devices and the access they enable will also be transformative. We welcome the new capabilities that the iPad affords learners and researchers around the world. All of our journals and over 6,000 books are already available in electronic format, including on handheld devices, and we believe that new multimedia capabilities add a layer of information and engagement not previously possible.’
Together with our partners, we have the opportunity today to create the future of publishing and media for learning and education. As books move increasingly into the digital world, Bell Labs is inventing new technologies that will enhance the relationship between students, teachers, writers and publishers. Adding social communications to eBooks will create a new generation of social media,’ notes Bruno Aidan, Head of Bell Labs Applications Research. ‘Bell Labs’ contribution to this project represents a significant step forward for Alcatel-Lucent’s Applications Enablement strategy whose intent is to enhance the value of network assets for applications providers”, he adds.
Under the deal, Alcatel-Lucent will conduct technical research and develop the prototypes, Cambridge University Press will provide content, detail service requirements and validate integration while Abilene Christian University will evaluate user requirements, conduct technical experiments and validate usage patterns and results with a base of on-campus users.
‘At the heart of all of our work together -- both what we've already done and what we're committed to doing over the next few years -- goes toward helping students and faculty participate more richly in the creation, development, and publication of information,’ says George Saltsman, executive director of the Adams Center for Teaching and Learning at ACU. ‘We know that increased access is going to change how and even where we teach and learn, and we're working to understand that.’ Although the partners agree that the changes will be disruptive, they are convinced there is no cause for fear. ‘When printing was first introduced, many worried about the impact it would have on education, but the influx of new participants and the invention that followed changed the world for the better,’ Rankin adds. ‘We're convinced these new approaches are going to create a similar wave of creativity.” |