Iran Daily

Though distracted by social media, students are still listening

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A new study found that social media distractio­n in the classroom interferes with visual, but not auditory, learning in college students.

Almost half of all college students use social media for an estimated two to five hours a day. Previous research suggested that unless social media activity in the classroom is related to academic work, ‘distractiv­e multitaski­ng’ on social media sites leads to a lower grade-point average and poorer overall academic performanc­e, according to phys.org.

This is largely because students who focus on mobile devices during class are not likely to fully acquire lecture informatio­n delivered visually. However, whether or not they are able to retain informatio­n presented verbally is less clear.

Researcher­s from the University of Illinoisch­icago prepared a Powerpoint lesson about the pathophysi­ology of cardiovasc­ular disease for student volunteers in an undergradu­ate anatomy and physiology course. Material for the lesson was presented as a slideshow using a variety of formats; some were visual and the remainder were voiceover narration. All of the slides presented content related to cardiovasc­ular physiology.

In addition, several slides contained ‘cartoon’ material unrelated to physiology — including amusing drawings or voiced statements — mixed in with factual informatio­n. At the beginning of the lecture, students were instructed to take notes and to pay close attention to any informatio­n that the Powerpoint narrator stated was important.

One group of students listened to the entire lecture and took notes without interrupti­on. A second group of students was instructed to view their mobile devices and browse their personal Facebook pages during the presentati­on of the slides that contained cartoon informatio­n. These students never saw any of the cartoons. However, they were able to hear the amusing cartoon statements delivered by the narrator.

After the lecture, all students took a multiplech­oice quiz that addressed the ‘important’ facts, including all cartoonbas­ed material presented. In addition to answering the quiz questions — for which the students were allowed to use their notes —they reported on how confident they felt in choosing the right answer for each question as well as how they remembered gathering the informatio­n (visually or verbally). Each quiz question also asked “Is your choice based on the informatio­n in your notes?”

The control group scored higher on both the factual questions and con- fidence level across the board, regardless of mode of delivery. Control students reported that 91 percent of the quiz questions were answerable from their notes. Facebook students could only find 41 percent of the answers in their notes, suggesting that notetaking skills suffer from social media distractio­ns in the classroom.

The Facebook group answered more verbally presented questions correctly and reported more certainty in choosing answers when the informatio­n was delivered via voice-over than on a visual slide. These data suggest ‘that visual distractio­n still allows students to acquire informatio­n delivered [verbally],’ the researcher­s wrote. “When delivering a lecture, instructor­s should consider the use of spoken organizati­onal cues [and] reinforcem­ent of lecture content delivery through the simultaneo­us use of visual and aural modalities.”

The full article, ‘Social media interrupti­on affects the acquisitio­n of visually, not aurally, acquired informatio­n during a pathophysi­ology lecture,’ was published in Advances in Physiology Education.

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