If you're a student looking for the most advanced learning machine available, give laptops a pass—and pick up an age-old notebook.
You'll absorb and retain more information if you take notes by hand, according to a study by UCLA, giving you an edge on your tests.
That spiral-bound stack of paper has other advantages, too: You can't zone out on Facebook and Instagram during a lecture, so you are more likely to stay focused.
Putting pen to paper requires a different kind of mental processing than typing does. Sure, typing on a laptop gives you the power to record a lecture nearly word for word—but transcribing verbatim is associated with what's called "shallow cognitive processing." The words may be captured on your screen, but they basically went in one ear and out the other.
Also, your notebook doesn't run Fortnite.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by JoeMerchant on Thursday May 09 2019, @02:13AM
You jest, but I go OCD on indentation and other things just to slow me down and mentally process the code I'm working with - it helps to understand it better if you spend more time thinking about it than just the time it takes to type and read it. It's all too easy to glance through something and think you know what's going on, and move on to the next thing before you really work through all the implications, corner cases, etc.
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