Allowing
students to use computers and the internet in classrooms substantially harms
their results, a study has found.
The paper
published by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that students
barred from using laptops or digital devices in lectures and seminars did
better in their exams than those allowed to use computers and access the
internet.
The
researchers suggested that removing laptops and iPads from classes was the
equivalent of improving the quality of teaching.
The study
divided 726 undergraduates randomly into three groups in the 2014-15 and
2015-16 academic years. The control group’s classrooms were “technology-free,”
meaning students were not allowed to use laptops or tablets at their desk.
Another group was allowed to use computers and other devices, and the third
group had restricted access to tablets.
“The
results from our randomised experiment suggest that computer devices have a
substantial negative effect on academic performance,” the researchers
concluded, suggesting that the distraction of an electronic device complete
with internet access outweighed their use for note-taking or research during
lessons.
The
research had an unusual twist: the students involved were studying at the West
Point academy in the US, where cadets are ruthlessly ranked by exam results,
meaning they were motivated to perform well and may have been more disciplined
than typical undergraduates.

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