“…Recognising the need for mobile learning, these African medical practitioners have suggested that the adoption of mobile technologies and online courses will enable class sizes to increase dramatically in a short space of time and could potentially be significant in mobilising a medical workforce that is struggling with traditional modalities that cannot produce the desired results. The growth of these technologies across the world and Africa, in particular, has prompted some studies on the use of mobile devices in medical education in SSA (Adebara, Adebara, Olaide, Emmanuel, & Olanrewaju, 2017;Chaya, Pilot, & Urassa, 2018;Frehywot et al, 2013;Ibrahim, Salisu, Popoola, & Ibrahim 2014;Lazarus, Sookrajh, & Satyapal, 2017b;Masika et al, 2015;Witt et al, 2016b). Koole (2009) defines mobile learning as "a process resulting from the convergence of mobile technologies, human learning capacities, and social interaction" (p.25).…”