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posted by n1 on Wednesday September 17 2014, @04:49AM   Printer-friendly
from the was-not-paying-attention-to-begin-with dept.

A small study into electronic device usage during lectures found that there was minimal difference in scores between those who were distracted while listening to the lecture and those who weren't when there was a quiz afterwards.

Results. The sample was comprised of 26 students. Of these, 17 were distracted in some form (either checking email, sending email, checking Facebook, or sending texts). The overall mean score on the test was 9.85 (9.53 for distracted students and 10.44 for non-distracted students). There were no significant differences in test scores between distracted and non-distracted students (p = 0.652). Gender and types of distractions were not significantly associated with test scores (p > 0.05). All students believed that they understood all the important points from the lecture.

Conclusions. Every class member felt that they acquired the important learning points during the lecture. Those who were distracted by electronic devices during the lecture performed similarly to those who were not. However, results should be interpreted with caution as this study was a small quasi-experimental design and further research should examine the influence of different types of distraction on different types of learning.

 
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  • (Score: 1) by Tanuki64 on Wednesday September 17 2014, @09:15AM

    by Tanuki64 (4712) on Wednesday September 17 2014, @09:15AM (#94453)

    1,500 surveys were sent out, only ~50 were returned!!!

    HEY, this is very good. The most common statistic has n=1: 'My uncle/grandfather/father smoked his whole life and died with 95'. ;-)