M-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications
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A collection of all the tech comm topics I find most timely or helpful, with a special emphasis on e-learning and m-learning
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Scooped by Danielle M. Villegas onto M-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications
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Flame Wars need not apply.

Flame Wars need not apply. | M-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications | Scoop.it
I had planned for this post to be something a little more lighthearted, but my plan was changed when I received my first insulting comment on this blog. It came in, and made accusations that proved...
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Rescooped by Danielle M. Villegas from Instructional Design for eLearning, mLearning, and Games
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You've Decided to Go Mobile... What's Next?

You've Decided to Go Mobile... What's Next? | M-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications | Scoop.it
Home of InterBusiness Issues, art & society, and Peoria Progress magazines

Via DBliton
Danielle M. Villegas's insight:

When I first read this article, I thought, "This is EXCELLENT! This is truly what mobile strategy is all about." Once I saw that @VisualRinse (aka Chad Udell) wrote the article, I realized, "No wonder this was so good!" Chad wrote the book, "Learning Everywhere", last year, and it's great reading. So, he knows what he's talking about! 

 

This article isn't specifically for e-learning/m-learning either. It truly puts into perspective what mobile is truly about and the criteria that companies need to move forward in thinking about creating mobile content. 

--techcommgeekmom

DBliton's curator insight, January 9, 11:38 AM

"Should I just convert my existing content, platforms or applications to mobile? " --No. Probably not. Making eLearning mobile accessible probably doesn't help your target audience - it is not really mLearning.

DBliton's comment, January 10, 12:33 PM
Good point about noting who the author is. I added that info, since that is what drew me to the article to start with.