dc.description.abstract |
Developing countries such as South Africa have underdeveloped human resources. Teaching with information
communication technology (ICT) as enabling technology has often been proposed as an approach to maximize the
development of human resources. Mobile phone features such as limited dependence on permanent electricity
supply, easy maintenance, easy to use audio and text interfaces, and affordability has made the mobile phone the
most important networked knowledge exchange technology in the developing world. Due to this accessibility,
usability and universality mobile phones have unmatched potential for innovation of education delivery in the
developing world. Unfortunately the potential to address human resource development through ICT is restricted by
the level of technology adoption and resource constraints in the South African tertiary education context. Firstly, the
level of technology penetration in Africa is low compared to other developing countries and this lack of
technological development has a detrimental effect on the education sector. Secondly, students at Higher Education
Institutions (HEIs) are often constrained in terms of financial resources and academic preparedness for entering a
HEI. The financial and educational constraints that hinder the adoption of ICT and specifically mobile technology
in developing countries need to be prioritized for resolution rather than accepted as inevitable.
This highlights the importance of proper planning to ensure the selection of appropriate technology for teaching and
learning in resource constrained environments. The purpose of this paper is to investigate students’ actual use and
preferences of e-learning tools as a point of departure for predicting students’ preferences for m-learning tools and
functions. The study was done at the Tshwane University of Technology where most students come from formerly
disadvantaged population groups. The research strategies include lecturer observations, interviews with students and
an online survey. The contribution of the study is to propose a set of usage spaces for m-learning based on the
opinions of students who have had all had the same minimum exposure to the technology. The findings should be of
value to researchers, policy-makers and practitioners in the fields of e-learning and mobile technologies towards
rethinking approaches to information access and dissemination in Development Informatics. |
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