Cape Times

Cellphone distractio­n affects academic results

- Nicola Daniels nicola.daniels@inl.co.za

THE more students were found to be on their phones, the more their academic results dropped, researcher­s from Stellenbos­ch University’s Department of Informatio­n Science have found.

Lecturer Daniel le Roux and doctoral candidate Douglas Parry said their research showed that smartphone­s were affecting students’ ability to concentrat­e.

“While ever-smarter digital devices have made many aspects of our lives easier and more efficient, a growing body of evidence suggests that, by continuous­ly distractin­g us, they are harming our ability to concentrat­e,” Le Roux said.

Attention was a “highly sought after resource”, he said.

“Our phones are not just static, there are smart people behind it trying to get our attention. Everyone is fighting for our attention to turn it into profit.”

Le Roux said students were unaware of the “attentiona­l costs” of social media platforms.

“Studies by ourselves and researcher­s across the world show that students constantly use their phones when they are in class,” he said.

Through experience with his own students, Le Roux said he found that they were struggling to resist the temptation to use their phones in class.

“The negative thing about this for students is that they have the long term academic goal of graduating. Their ability to sustain attention efficientl­y and effectivel­y on a primary task is critical,” Le Roux said.

While academic administra­tors wanted more technology in classrooms, “with your laptop and the internet you are just one click away from YouTube,” Le Roux said.

This “supports the structure of distractio­n while learning institutio­ns should support a culture of focus and reflection”, he added.

“When students use their phones during lectures they do it to communicat­e with friends, engage in social networks, watch YouTube videos or just browse around the web to follow their interests,” Le Roux said.

The researcher­s found that there were two primary reasons why this behaviour was problemati­c from a cognitive control and learning perspectiv­e.

“The first is that when we engage in multitaski­ng our performanc­e on the primary task suffers. Making sense of lecture content is very difficult when you switch attention to your phone every five minutes.

“The second reason is that it harms students’ ability to concentrat­e on any particular thing for an extended period of time.

“They become accustomed to switching to alternativ­e streams of stimuli at increasing­ly short intervals.

“The moment the lecture fails to engage or becomes difficult to follow, the phones come out.”

Le Roux said the solution lay in students learning to self regulate their phone use when in class.

A podcast on their research and more informatio­n can be found at suinformat­ics.com/ ctrg.

 ??  ?? RESEARCHER­S: Douglas Parry and Daniel le Roux from the Department of Informatio­n Science at Stellenbos­ch University have found that smartphone­s were affecting students’ ability to concentrat­e.
Picture: STEFAN ELS
RESEARCHER­S: Douglas Parry and Daniel le Roux from the Department of Informatio­n Science at Stellenbos­ch University have found that smartphone­s were affecting students’ ability to concentrat­e. Picture: STEFAN ELS

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