Does the Tap-Tap of Laptops Drive Professors Insane?

Tue Aug 14, 2007 9:01AM EDT

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The kids will soon be back in those hallowed halls of academia and a good number of them will have their electronic appendages with them. Professors are working overtime trying to figure out how laptops, PDAs, and cell phones fit into the classroom.

Every professor has tales about the downside of laptops in their classrooms. They say that kids turn off their thinking skills and turn it into a touch typing class. Or that the annoying tap-tap of the keyboard drives them to distraction as they try to frame their next thought. They complain about kids who doze behind their open laptop screens (some report looking out on a sea of open laptop cases with logos) and about kids who IM, shop, and eBay to wile away the class hours.

Not all professors think laptops should be ousted from the classroom though; many talk about laptops the same way they talk about the students in their class—engage them and they'll be fine.

Campus Tech Fight
A few campuses are fighting back with their own technology. Some rig the campus network to be turned off in class. Some are experimenting with modifying a student's privileges to disable email and web accounts while they're scheduled for classes. Some schools have it written in school policy that students need explicit permission to be on their computers in class.

But aside from a few experimental campus-wide tactics, notebook policy varies from classroom to classroom, professor to professor. I spoke to an English professor at Columbia University (who happens to write about technology for PC Magazine as well) and his answer would have made Hemingway look verbose. "I don't allow laptops in class. Period. Teaching is a kind of conversation, even if one person participates only through facial expressions, and you can't have a conversation with someone who's typing on a keyboard."

Curiosity piqued, I wrote to my son's economics professor at Reed College to ask him what he and his colleagues thought about notebooks in the classroom. "Mixed feelings," he answered. He pointed out the many laptops add to the classroom experience—supporting arguments and gathering facts (what is the currency in Bulgaria?). Ultimately he felt that Reed College "would make this sort of behavior generally unacceptable by the community, not just the professor."

Another professor at Elon University pointed me to a thread from the Association of Internet Researchers where professors shared both philosophical and tactical thoughts on laptops in the classroom. One described her tactics, which basically amounted to humiliating the students into never having their phones disturb a class again. Another would have laptop time and laptop-free time at her discretion. Many spoke of laptop/cell phone policies making it an offense for students to be texting, taking photos, or otherwise misbehaving electronically.

A professor from Virginia Tech told me that she makes sure the laptops are closed during her Q & A sessions, but allows them during the rest of class time. To her, surfing the web is sort of the modern day counterpart of doodling. And she reminded me that "students think it's a great tool so that they don't have to transfer their notes to their computers later. They can also create files with class notes, blackboard lectures, and more all focused on the topic so it becomes a management tool for learning."

What do you think? Should college classrooms be laptop-free zones, free-for-all zones, or something in between?

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Comments on Does the Tap-Tap of Laptops Drive Professors Insane?

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  • 26 Posted by akathryns on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    I think laptops are a great idea as a college student. Most of my classes post notes online so you have to print them out to bring them to class. If you could just leave the notes on your computer then you would save paper. I think it is the students responsibility to govern themself. Nobody in any of my classes really use laptops but I think it would be a great idea. I have people sitting next to me reading the paper, sleeping and just plain not paying attention. You shouldn't hurt students who would like to use their laptops as a learning tool b/c other students are immature. In your class if you pay attention you get a good grade, if you don't then you get a bad grade. Let students decide what they want to do...thats part of growing up!

  • 27 Posted by cheripie4000 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:22PM EDT Report Abuse

    As a 45-year old graduate student and old-fashioned note taker, I find laptops of my fellow students in my classes to be a total distraction . I often sit towards the back of my class to view the slides better as I am studying art history. I continually see screen flashes in every laptop in front and to the sides of me. Most of the time, they are doing but taking notes. Not only are they checking their e-mails, they are e-amiling their freinds across the classroom as well! They are also on an assormtent of websites, from retailers to sports news. My son is entering his junior year at an Ivy League institution, and would surely oppose my view. Knowing how much time he spoends on the computer OUTSIDE the classroom, I imagine he and his friends are doing the same thing. Most importantly, it's pretty well known that when actually writing something down, the brain does a better job of recalling it later. Transcribing notes after class would only reinforce the subject matter supposedly learned.

  • 28 Posted by clivechang8 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    who cares...we're paying for it so it doesnt matter if we pay attention or not. For me if i bring my laptop to class it is because my professor is boring, without it i wouldnt show up at all. At least with my laptop I pick some stuff up, i may miss a lot but its a heck of a lot better than not going at all

  • 29 Posted by willwallace19 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    As I recent college graduate I hauled my laptop to every single class with the exception of my language classes. In classes where there was a structured lecture I found it a lot easier for notetaking and for later studying to use my laptop. Everything was in one place and far more organized. I can type a lot faster than i can write and so it made life easier for me in general. In class I did surf the net and check email, but for the most part this is not all I did. Besides if you have bad habits in class normally having a laptop won't change that fact. With many instructors and classes using online features as a part of their classes its bringing the laptop more and more into lecture halls.

  • 30 Posted by amy_luvs_jasonalot on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    kids should have laptops in class and they should b able 2 check their email and im friends and all that

  • 31 Posted by enormand88 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    Honestly, if laptops are banned from the classroom, students will find another way to distract themselves. Like the article states, surfing the web is modern day doodling and note-passing. It should be at the descretion of the student--if the student spends all his class time googling on the computer, he will learn his lesson when he receives his grade. Serious and responsible students will use their laptops as tools.

  • 32 Posted by oisian88 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    If the speed of learning that is required of students these days is facilitated by having an electronic note taker, then so be it. It's like the cellphone issue, etiquette should be established and then adhered to.

  • 33 Posted by jeepgrl1582002 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    I am an adult student who has returned to finish college after 15 years and was really surprised at how many students use laptops in the classroom. For the most part the students are taking notes, but in some classes I have been sitting near the student who uses it to check Myspace and Facebook the entire time. My opinion is you get what you pay for. If they think they don't need to take notes or pay attention, then it's their grades that will suffer and they will have to explain themselves to someone for the poor GPA. They want to be treated as adults, so I say let them learn the hard way.

  • 34 Posted by jkracy on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    I started college long before laptops existed and finished 2 years ago after they became common place. I used my own laptop in college, but not during class. I found it to difficult to pay attention and type at the same time actually. I think they are great when you have projects or need to do research while on campus, as the library isn't always the most convenient place. I did have a professor who preferred them but it was required that they be on a specific site that he monitored and allowed for greater participation. (In a room of 200 students, if helped keep you aware of the subject). He would call on people if they didn't respond to questions and made students not feel stupid if they got the wrong answer. This however is not the norm.

  • 35 Posted by bitmaxmouse on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    Seeing as how I am a computer science major, using laptops in my classes are imperative, even required sometimes. My professors have used various methods to effectively incorporate the use of laptops into their teaching - one of their bigger projects is: Ubiquitous Presenter, where students can get involved anonymously in class using their laptops. Banning laptops from the classroom is naive approach to a situation that is growing faster than be handled, professors really should consider utilizing technology instead of fearing it. As for the students who play on the laptop instead of listening to lecture... how is this any different than students that doodle, exchange notes, or text message during lecture? If the professor is too boring to listen to, perhaps it's time to make a change in the curriculum.

  • 36 Posted by rmcayford on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    My X-husband went through college and some of his classes were taught by a professor turning on a tape and it gave the lecture...what is the difference? While my children were in high school some of the teachers were on the pc playing games while the students were studying,,you do not think that was hard for the student to concentrate? The abuse of pc's work both ways in the classroom. The lap tops are great for taking down notes and saving,,were as the paper gets lost...I think the teachers nad professors need to face up to the 21st centry and stop complaining about everything. The students should not be on game sites in class, true..but to ban the pc's in class..no that is not the answer.

  • 38 Posted by davidschoennenbrenner on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    So far, the comments have ignored the most integral part of the learning environment which is the interplay between an educator and his or her students. I've found that my most rewarding classes, both as a teacher and as a student, have been classes where a sense of community developed...a sort of safe haven where students and the teacher can freely express and explore the content being examined. To simply say computers are a distraction just isn't true, and to simply defend them as being a tool necessary in the 21st century misses the point. Education is a process, and that process must have participants. As long as a student is fully engaged and is participating in his or her learning, then I have no qualms with any sort of educational aide, as long as it's used as that. I think by the time a student is admitted to college, that student has earned the right to choose to be engaged or not. Simply shutting a laptop isn't going to keep minds from wandering. Perhaps a critic of laptop usage would be better served by examining teaching methods and perhaps a defender of laptop usage would be better served by truly examining the need for the machine.

  • 39 Posted by barnefet on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    I think there are better ways to get students to pay attention and stay active in the classroom even with their laptops. Personally, taking notes isn't an options without one for me, my writing is too slow, and I can never read back to what I wrote, the classes I attend without my notebook, are the ones I am less attentive in.

  • 40 Posted by werwof on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    Laptops are a distraction for the person using it and those who are around them. Class time should be completly focused on the instructor no matter how dull the student may think they are. Ones education becomes one of bits and pieces from listening to the instructor o focused on there laptops.

  • 41 Posted by lilaznboy011 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    there are many point of views for this matter. up sides and down sides. this is like a constant arguement dat i doubt will ever finish.

  • 42 Posted by butchf16 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    We actually run a chat during class to clarify comments made by the professor. There is usually someone who understands what is going on, and it can be enhancing to the learning environment.

  • 43 Posted by rroan28 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:53PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree with the laptop being akin to old practice of doodling in class. If a student writes something other than notes on their paper, should the pencil and paper be taken away? After all, it IS distracting them.

  • 44 Posted by barry0412yu on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    Students pay for their classes, why restrict labtops to be used in college classes. Cell phones are understandable not to be used in class, but labtops can benefit a student. This is the 21st century indeed, students now adays can type much faster than he/she can write taking lecture notes.

  • 45 Posted by global_chick on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    Here's my thing: This is college. If the kids want to screw around on laptops during class on eBay, etc., that's their problem. It's their tuition money they are wasting. I used a laptop back in the 90s because I just was not fast enough to keep up with the professor. Overall, I think the profs need to quit being so sensitive.

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