- Brain Decline, Dementia Common Among Older American Indians
- Stroke, Migraine, Alzheimer’s: Climate Change Will Likely Make Them Worse
- Immunotherapy Before and After Surgery Boosts Lung Cancer Survival
- Cream Cheese From Aldi, Hy-Vee Stores Recalled Due to Salmonella Risk
- Seeing Your Doctors Via Zoom? What’s Behind Them Matters
- Mediterranean Diet Could Be a Stress-Buster, Study Finds
- PTSD Triples Odds for Teeth Grinding, Study Finds
- Dreams Might Help You Process Bad Experiences
- Lymphoma: Know Your Treatment Options
- FDA Approves First Self-Test Collection Kit for HPV
Using Smartphones During Lectures = Lower Grades
College students might want to leave their smartphones and tablets behind when they head to a lecture, new research suggests.
Otherwise, the distraction might translate into a lower grade on the final exam.
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.
“These findings should alert the many dedicated students and instructors that dividing attention is having an insidious effect that is impairing their exam performance and final grade,” said study author Arnold Glass, a professor at Rutgers.
“To help manage the use of devices in the classroom, teachers should explain to students the damaging effect of distractions on retention — not only for themselves, but for the whole class,” Glass added in a journal news release.
More information
The National Education Association explains how some teachers use smartphones in the classroom.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.