As mobile learning continues to increasingly make its way into the physical and online classroom, app development is one of the areas I have been interested for some time now. There is no question that there is a plethora of apps that can address a number of educational learning needs whether a child is practicing basic addition/subtraction to college-level groups of students collaborating on planning documents with Google Drive on the go. In my initial research into app development revealed that coding languages such as Java, C++, Python, Corona-One, and Ruby to name a few is necessary. However, over time and further investigation, I began noticing a number of applications and services that require less of needing a programing language knowledge base but including a more graphical user interface instead. This is similar to building web pages now where you don't have to have a working knowledge of HTML code. Below are several cloud/Web-based applications I encountered that can potentially offer easy-to-use interfaces for creating educational mobile apps.
- App Press. This is a Web-based app builder that targets iPhone, iPad, and Android applications. App Press uses a Photoshop-like interface for assembling visual assets via layers.
- EachScape. A cloud-based builder that provides a drag-and-drop interface for native iOS and Android apps as well has HTML5 Web apps.
- iBuildApp. This easy-to-use builder provides customizable templates for iPhone, iPad, and Android apps. No coding required as well.
- AppGyver. This is another drag-and-drop builder that aims at iOS and Android apps. Apps can then be published to Apple's App Store and Google's Play Store.