In the latest edition of The International Educator newspaper, an article was published that argued that laptops may cause more harm to student learning than good:
Study finds laptops in class hinder learning
The study finds:
“Instead of zeroing in on the lecture, students who brought laptops to class spent considerable time e-mailing, surfing the Internet and playing games, posing a “significant” distraction to both users and
fellow students.
Further, the study found a relationship between laptop use in class and a weaker understanding of course material and a lower overall course performance; the students with laptops earned an average grade of five per cent lower than if they hadn’t brought the computers.”
This study, conducted at an American university, presents misleading information about the use of laptops in schools, and therefore its findings can hardly be considered conclusive. Here’s one reason why:
“Students enrolled in two large lecture-oriented psychology classes participated in the study.”
First of all, to call this a “study” of the use of laptops in schools is inappropriate. A study with a sample size of TWO classes, yes, but its findings should be understood as applying only two these two particular classes, which were large lecture-style university classes. This particular university’s laptop “program” is described as follows:
“Students were told at the beginning of the course that they could bring their laptops to class to take notes if they wanted to, but that they would never need their laptops.” (italics added)
Any school thinking of implementing a laptop program should be careful NOT to emulate this university’s particular approach. What’s the result when students are encouraged to use laptops, but told they would “never need them”? Here’s what one professor observed:
“‘You’d sit and watch the students, and wonder, ‘What are they doing with their laptops?’ You’d walk by other classes and see everybody playing solitaire. I wanted to know, ‘Is this a problem?,”‘ said Fried, a psychology professor at Winona State.
The laptop users reported in weekly surveys that they did other things other than take notes for an average of 17 minutes out of each 75-minute class.
Checking e-mail during the lectures was the most common distraction; 81 per cent admitted to this transgression compared to 68 per cent reporting that they used instant messaging. Forty-three per cent reported surfing the Internet, while 25 per cent reported playing games.”
It should be no surprise that students spent most of their time with their laptops surfing the net, chatting and playing games, given that professors apparently made no attempt to integrate the computers into their instruction. Obviously this represents a failure not of “laptop programs” in general, rather of this university’s failure to implement a program effectively. The university’s failure lies in the simple fact that professors view the laptop as a fancy tool for taking notes, rather than what it is: a tool for communication, collaboration, and innovative research.
Laptop programs do not “hinder learning”, BAD laptop programs hinder learning. The study discussed in this article focuses on one, very bad laptop program at a university that does not understand the role technology should play in education. One professor made this observation:
“Fried doesn’t want to ban laptops outright. But she sees value in blocking wireless transmission in classes so students focus on note-taking.
“I don’t want to say, ‘You cannot bring computers to class,’ but I don’t think we as educators should be providing them with the tools of their own destruction.”
The researchers, professors and the university are apparently ignorant when it comes to the role technology should play in education. The removal of wireless access would essentially eliminate the most valuable dimension laptops bring to a classroom setting: that is, connectivity. Educators who view computers as a digital notepad are missing the point of technology integration altogether. What this university, indeed any institution, should do is train its educators to effectively integrate technology into their instruction so that students with laptops have something engaging and interesting to do during class, besides play solitaire, that is.
Laptops enhance student learning, but only if their integration is multi-dimensional. The computer is not simply an expensive substitute for pen and paper, although this is one dimension of its use. Wireless internet presents innovative educators with limitless dimensions through which student learning can be enriched and enhanced. The study discussed here fails to grasp the role laptops should play in education, and only points out the short-sightedness and ignorance of the university, the researchers, the professors themselves.
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THANK YOU! For writing this. I was flaming after reading the article this weekend too. You do a great job Jason of looking at this so called study in light of what it really is…which is nonsense.
I’m glad you wrote this, because my entry wouldn’t have been very good….I’m too upset that a paper that usually supports technology and its use would print such a story on the front page.
At the same time this report came out of North Carolina on a 1:1 program running there:
53% of high school students were at or above grade level before 1:1, and now it’s 78%
59% of middle school students at or above grade level before, and now it is 76%
Prior to 1 to 1 laptops, 25% of high school graduates entered college. Last year it was 79%. 84% have already been accepted among this year’s graduating class
Teen Pregnancy rate was #2 in North Carolina. Now it’s #18.
You cited that study showing:
“68 per cent reporting that they used instant messaging. Forty-three per cent reported surfing the Internet, ” … I wonder if they also looked at the content of the IMs/ Surfing. Were they actually just IMing their friends and/ or using the Internet to get further clarification when they didn’t understand the lecturer … in the way that in the past they’d have whispered to the person next to them “what did that mean?”
I read this article too with much fear. However, it was aimed at college students that bring their laptops to lecture halls. I too would likely have been surfing the net while a boring professor droned.
It does not, however, relate at all to using laptops in MS and HS as the teacher should ensure they laptops are being used effectively.
I wonder what the results would have been if a similar study was given for the uses of pencils in lecture situations:
Do you use Pencils to:
a)Take notes
b) Pass notes
c) doodle
d) practice that neat twirling trick between your fingers.
This is a great article. I love that you took the chance to provide an alternative besides just saying, “You’re wrong to prevent kids from being on laptops.”
I choose not to use my laptop in class, because I am guilty of all of the above transgressions and I have found that even when I focus on the lecture, I don’t learn as well.
However, you make a fantastic point that professors should integrate technology in the lecture. I would be so happy if a professor said at the beginning of class: “I need four volunteers. Okay guys, I need you to divvy up these four questions and answer them. We’ll discuss it halfway through the lecture.” What a great concept! Get kids to take charge of their learning.
By the way, I see the point of limiting access for high school and middle school, but I feel there’s way too much oversight for college kids. We pay to be there; it should be our decision to make good use of our time or not. This includes internet usage and class attendance, neither of which actively hinders the learning process of other people.