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Education

Using Electronic Devices During Lectures Led To Lower Grades, Study Finds (upi.com) 39

schwit1 quotes UPI: For the study, researchers followed 118 cognitive psychology students at Rutgers University in New Jersey. For one term, electronic devices were banned in half of the lectures and permitted in the other half. When the devices were allowed, students reported whether they had used them for non-learning purposes during the lecture.

Having an electronic device wasn't associated with lower students' scores in comprehension tests within lectures, but was associated with at least a 5 percent (half-a-grade) lower score in end-of-term exams.

The study was published July 27 in the journal Educational Psychology.

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Using Electronic Devices During Lectures Led To Lower Grades, Study Finds

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  • Yep (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Saturday August 04, 2018 @12:38PM (#57068990) Homepage
    People are generally bad multitaskers? Electronic devices might cause ADHD? News at 11.
  • The allmighty and ever-knowing Captain Obvious has spoken!

  • For me the opposite would have been true. I've always been a slow writer and in university before I had a laptop taking notes I'd fall far enough behind that the board I was trying to copy would get erased.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      I just went through past exam papers. Cross correlated them to the material handed out this time round and what the lecturer tended to focus on. I then copied across the most likely exam questions (pay attention to repeats, they are likely to repeat again) and researched and wrote down the best answers, for each question and I had my study notes, which I would read out aloud ie using multiple areas of the brain to process the data, reading, writing, talking. Doing the exam, I would got to the essay question

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Saturday August 04, 2018 @01:24PM (#57069212)

    Repetition Is the Key to Learning

    Repetition Is the Key to Learning

    And the best way to learn (for me) was to write down notes, and when an exam was coming up, I'd write anything important down.

    If the brain couldn't directly remember during an exam, my fingers and pen or pencil actually would...

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      I hated note-taking, if the teacher/professor wouldn't give you a full written transcript/curriculum so he'd force you to be in class I felt he was just protecting his own job. That is not to say I couldn't make notes of my own, but they'd be mine not copying the teacher's. Though I preferred reading and exercises, plain writing didn't really help me at all.

    • by timholman ( 71886 ) on Saturday August 04, 2018 @03:05PM (#57069614)

      And the best way to learn (for me) was to write down notes, and when an exam was coming up, I'd write anything important down.

      My 25 years of teaching experience has repeatedly demonstrated to me that handing out Powerpoint slides, or distributing the instructor's lecture notes in PDF form, is a recipe for underperformance with students.

      Requiring students to take their own handwritten notes (forcing them to organize and follow the material in their own minds) significantly improves their comprehension of the material. If someone else's notes are right in front of them, students tend to "zone out". That is especially true in today's classroom environment where cellphones and laptop computers compete for their attention.

      For most students, electronic devices of any type are a distraction in the classroom. Paper and pen/pencil (or a really good tablet with pen entry) will beat them every time.

      • by Minupla ( 62455 )

        For most students

        Being one of the exceptions here (auditory learner, dyslexia/dysgraphia (or if you prefer the current parlance 'a specific learning disability in reading' and 'a specific learning disability that affects written expression' - someone was being paid by the word for that update :))), I'm assuming that was the carveout you intended there.

        But as a father of a high functioning ASD child, (who had the bad luck to also inherit Daddy's psych-ed verbiage) what's your experience with ASD kids? is th

  • students using their devices to play games, check and read their social media, watch movies listen to music, generally not paying any attention in class have lower grades! Wow what a discovery!
    Next they will figure out sleeping through classes or not showing up does the same thing!
    Wonder what the cost for this earth shattering research project was.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
    • Just my 2 cents ;)

      Well, what else would it be?

    • by j-beda ( 85386 )

      students using their devices to play games, check and read their social media, watch movies listen to music, generally not paying any attention in class have lower grades! Wow what a discovery!
      Next they will figure out sleeping through classes or not showing up does the same thing!

      Wonder what the cost for this earth shattering research project was.

      I have not taken a look at this particular study (I couldn't get to it through a couple of clicks, and I am lazy), but I doubt that it is as cut and dried as you imply.

      This type of study is hard to do well. Questions that are of interest might be: "How much do students use their devices to do non-educational stuff while in the classroom?", "How large of an impact is it?", "Are there effects on other students in the vicinity who are not using a device?", "How does it influence the instructor?", "Are there po

  • by Anonymous Coward

    For how long still are we going to ignore the evidence? Social media, mobile devices, ubiquitous connection 24/7 MAKE PEOPLE DUMBER. As much as I am on the "progressive" crest of the technology perspective, and definitely not a Luddite, I cannot avoid staring at what looks like a self-evident fact.

    But I guess the millennial narrative of the "sharing is caring" does a lot of good to those in power. In fact, I'm pretty sure Mark Zuckerberg's children will be educated to stay as disconnected as possible from t

  • Graphing calculators became popular when I was in college in the 1990's. One semester I couldn't afford the recommended Texas Instrument graphing calculator for pre-calculus (I ended up owning three models of TI calculator by graduation). A graphing calculator gives you an instant answer and a pretty graph, especially for the more difficult problems. But sometimes drawing the graph is more insightful than having the answer given to you. A lot of students spent more time figuring out how to program their gra
  • Lately I keep getting blindsided by these out-of-the-blue, shocking stories! A few days it was the problems at MoviePass; and now this! Once again I was fortunately sitting down... but this one knocked me out of my chair!

    My old heart can’t take it!

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