A friend’s kids just went to college. Their university charges them $10 a month for their dorm room phone, as part of their on-campus living expenses. They, of course, never even use the dorm phone (they are 100% mobile) and their dad doesn’t even know the number. Seems like a waste of money for the school and the student.
Mobility in higher-ed is an open issue right now. A big chunk of campus wireline infrastructure for living quarters is arguably unneeded and under-appreciated. What telecommunications services (if any) should a college provide? Should they give every student a mobile phone? But many kids will already have one and have no desire to switch. It makes sense to give students a way to access data more cheaply, more easily, and at greater speeds from their phone while on campus. It also seems reasonable to complement access with new campus-related mobile apps, whether for coursework, research, extra-curriculars, or safety.
But how does the college fund this? Is it just part of the basic package a 21st century college has to provide to remain competitive? Or is it a value-add service that can provide new revenue for the institution?
Very practical concern. But I worry that asking only the “funding” question locks us into a mindset of mobile phones as just a dorm phone replacement, instead of as a potential catalyst for changing the basic educational experience itself.
Maybe that sounds a bit too grandiose, but some folks are thinking about campus mobility very broadly. Here is a snippet of what Duke University was doing last year to encourage its faculty to integrate mobility: http://cit.duke.edu/tools/mobile/index.html They say: “… mobile devices offer an opportunity to further educational goals by leveraging and building upon the functions of technologies already adopted by and considered indispensible to a majority of students.”
That last part is dead-on. Here is a technology kids love and find absolutely immersive. Use it for all it’s worth. Over the next 5-10 years, I truly believe we are going to see mobile phones become as intrinsic a part of the college educational experience as they are today of the social experience. They will be a conduit of learning and, let’s face it, much more fun than my memories of watching freshman physics tutorials on closed-circuit campus TV.


Why not convince the IT Department at a major university to pocket the $10 , provide a requirement for a mobile phone and provide one at extra cost to the student. At UNC I know that this could fly well into their Carolina Computing Initiative which is already funded by alumni.
This is the future of education.
Comment by Bruce W Cavey — June 15, 2009 @ 1:48 pm