Laptops in the Classroom Stops Lecturing, Not Learning
College instructors often lament that laptops and other devices students from engaging with them, course material, or other students. There may be some truth to this. has shown students retain more information if they jot down notes rather than type them. Other research suggest is a lot harder than it seems. Laptops may tempt students to multitask during class, breaking their concentration. Instructors have and can use studies like these to justify why laptops shouldn鈥檛 be in the classroom.
However, such arguments paint the classroom with too broad a stroke. A more accurate picture would be that laptops and other devices can be a distraction in lecture-based classrooms, not all classrooms. This is especially true for instructors who aren鈥檛 using technology to keep students engaged in the lecture.
Laptop bans underestimate the many ways instruction can be enhanced with laptops and other technologies. For example, tracking student engagement through analytics and adaptive technologies, restructuring a course by it, incorporating techniques, or ensuring students have access to materials with (OER). And some disciplines couldn鈥檛 be taught without a device. Imagine a computer science instructor that didn鈥檛 allow students to make use of computers. 聽
Alongside research that suggests technology is not always the best substitute for pen and paper, colleges should consider the growing evidence suggesting technology-enhanced learning environments can be .
The laptop debate among college instructors is also very binary. It forces them to make decisions about their classroom鈥檚 technology policy with little choices. Instructors usually choose to either forbid or allow laptop and hand-held devices. Self-imposed binary choices don鈥檛 allow instructors to consider the use of laptops during class. In the long run, balance may serve instructors and their students better than an 鈥渁ll-or-nothing鈥 approach. Of course, there are exceptions to every rule. When instructors ban devices in the classroom, they often make exemptions for students who need .
Will higher education ever move past debates about whether laptops have or don鈥檛 have a role in classrooms? Maybe. To get there, universities will have to acknowledge that laptop bans are frequently made because of their potential to distract students from or stop lectures, not learning.