Moving to Mobile

Campuses respond quickly as the higher ed mobile marketplace takes shape.

Given the tremendous adoption of mobile devices and applications in the business and consumer markets, the rising interest in and support for mobile apps on the part of colleges and universities should come as no surprise. And while mobile technology adoption is in its infancy in higher education, we've already seen a substantial move toward the deployment of mobile applications on campus in the past two years.

According to the fall 2010 Campus Computing Survey, more than 70 percent of the surveyed CIOs and senior IT leaders "agree or strongly agree" that "mobile [LMS] apps are an important part of our campus plan to enhance instructional resources and campus services." (Currently, the majority of mobile apps in higher ed are tied to learning management systems, although their features often extend beyond the LMS.)


Source: Green, Kenneth C., Campus Computing 2010: The National Survey of Computing and Information Technology in American Higher Education, campuscomputing.net

Still, the move to mobile apps on campus remains in the early stages: Just 13 percent of the more than 525 campuses that participated in the Campus Computing Survey reported that they had activated mobile LMS apps as of fall 2010. However, another 10 percent say they will go live with mobile LMS apps this academic year, while nearly a quarter have a mobile app strategy under review. From these data we can see both great interest in mobile applications, and a strong indication of a growing movement in the activation of mobile apps.

What enables this quickening pace toward mobile applications in higher education? The answer may lie, in part, in a change underway in the education marketplace. "The first mobile apps for higher ed were launched just two years ago," says Kenneth C. Green, founding director of The Campus Computing Project. "The first wave of apps came from the LMS providers. However, as of winter 2011, both administrative system/ERP and LMS providers now offer colleges and universities a wider range of applications, resources, price points, and strategies to assist campus efforts to 'go mobile.'"


Source: Green, Kenneth C., Campus Computing 2010: The National Survey of Computing and Information Technology in American Higher Education, campuscomputing.net

Green sees a promising future for mobile apps in higher education. "Students of all ages increasingly expect their colleges and universities to provide the kinds of app-based resources and services they utilize and enjoy as consumers," he says. "Mobile apps provide easy, anytime access to instructional resources and campus services. Indeed, mobile apps are the new campus portal, as buttons on a smartphone screen replace the bookmarks on an internet browser or the hot links on a campus portal."

Editor's note: Casey Green will give a keynote at Campus Technology 2011, CT's annual summer conference, held this year in Boston, July 25-28.

About the Author

Mary Grush is Editor and Conference Program Director, Campus Technology.

Featured

  • network of transparent cloud icons, each containing a security symbol like a lock or shield

    Okta, OpenID Foundation Propose New Identity Security Standard

    Okta and the OpenID Foundation have announced the formation of the IPSIE Working Group — with the acronym standing for Interoperability Profiling for Secure Identity in the Enterprise — dedicated to a new identity security standard for Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications.

  • UIUC Study: AI Agents Can Exploit Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities

    In a new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), researchers demonstrated that large language model agents can autonomously exploit real-world cybersecurity vulnerabilities, raising critical concerns about the widespread deployment and security of these advanced AI systems.

  • IBM and Microsoft Partner on Cloud Security

    IBM and Microsoft have announced a "strengthened cybersecurity collaboration" aims at fortifying their joint customers' cloud environments.

  • scene in a cybersecurity operations center, showing an AI and a human competing head-to-head

    91% of CISOs Say AI Will Outperform Security Pros

    A new survey of CISOs by Bugcrowd indicates AI is already beating security pros in some areas and is expected to take on a larger role in the future.