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?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
In college, a student pays their money to be in class. What they do in that class is up to them. As long as they are not annoying anyone else, they are entitled to do as they wish. They are responsible for their actions. If they cannot participate, because they have their nose in their computer screen, they will suffer the consequences. The grade at the end of the class will be the deciding factor. Technology isn't always a good thing. I've watched my son immediately reach for his phone to do a math problem easily done in my head. If we become too dependent on the technology around us, what will the students of today do if it's suddenly unavailable? It's good to know how to use it, but it's also good to know how not to use it.
I have used a laptop in class since my junior year in high school due to medical issues making it difficult for me to write neatly without it being very painful. And I can tell you, my grades SKYROCKETED after I got my laptop. I mean like D's to A's. I could take perfectly pristine notes, I could keep everything greatly organized in the same place, it's near impossible to lose anything, you can make multiple copies of notes to mark up however you need when studying, and you don't have to carry a notebook for each class. The improvement it has been on my life is astronomical, and I fully believe other people could benefit as well. If someone isn't responsible with it, that's not the professor's concern. People can be just as disruptive in other ways, and they are asked to leave the classroom. This should be no different. Professors are there to teach a subject. And pencils and pens make just as much noise as a laptop keyboard does. I am starting community college next year with the intention to transfer to a university in two years, and if any of my classes won't allow me a laptop, I'll have to drop. I'd go back to getting D's without it.
I am currently getting my Masters and what I find is that very often those who bring their laptops to class thinking they will take notes end up surfing the internet when the class gets "boring" or what have you. I think it's just another distraction that students don't need. We are all over stimulated as it is.
I'm not attending college for another year, but I think colleges should be some where between laptop and laptop free. I personally hate writing. Period. When I learned to type in middle school, the whole idea of writing notes drove me insane. Because I can not write as fast as teachers are speaking, it frustrates me that I have to find someone at the end of class to compare notebooks with to make sure I have everything important. I believe laptops are the modern day tape recorder. They allow you to catch everything you need, while taking part in class. On the other hand, I understand how it could be a major distraction. Having access to the internet gives you the ability to wander off mentally onto somethings that may seem more interesting at the time (be it websites, blogs, or even conversation via email). If colleges can figure out some monitoring system that limits the internet access in classrooms, I believe the laptop can only be an asset.
As one who just graduated from college, and will be attending Grad School in just over a week, I see laptops as being a powerful tool for students. Of course, as I'm sure any other student can attest, I saw students playing games and surfing the net while in class. But, to me, that isn't the issue. Students (or their parents) are paying for those classes, and they will just have to pay more when the students fails the class because they weren't paying attention. College isn't the time to baby the students; they need to learn responsibility. Otherwise, what will happen to that student when he/she enters the work world and has to deal with the temptation to surf the net during work hours? At some point, people have to be give the freedom to succeed or fail, and they have to be willing to accept the consequences (both good and bad) for their actions.
I'm on the fence about this, really.. As an Instructor, I want as much one-on-one, uninterrupted, free-flow interaction with my students as I can get. However, a lot of what I discuss is related to how traditional literacy and narrative structure is transformed by new modes of discourse and communication, so I can't morally say, "Let's discuss blogs and DVDs and Gaming narrative, but hey, don't use your computers while we do so, because that's not 'traditional' teaching." I allow laptops because, frankly, that's what most kids are used to transcribing notes into and I reference a LOT of online content and powerpoint in my lectures. I DO ask that cellphones and PDAs aren't in use; we're there to learn and discuss, not organize the kegger on the weekend or email each other. I make it clear that, if you don't want to come and learn, hey, it's YOUR time and you're an adult.....just don't expect me to give you a good mark or re-explain in my office what I went through in class. Attendance is not mandatory; it IS important, though...and by that i mean you are mentally as well as physically present.
I work full time and attend class part time at a large university. I am what the university calls a non-traditonal student. Translation=I'm old enough to remember what it was like to handwrite notes and papers. I have sat in class and watched students around me play online games, shop and pay bills during lecture. It's no secret--the professors know what they are doing. They just figure it's the student's loss. They know they are only there to collect "attendance" points. The final grade ends up reflecting the effort put forth by the student. Unfortunately it's these students that can't figure out why they ended up failing the class.
As a current law student, I believe wholeheartedly that laptops in the classroom are the modern form of academia "natural selection." If a student does not have the self-discipline to shut down Facebook, Myspace, AIM, and Amazon during class and pay attention to what is being taught, then all the more better for those of us who do.
When I was an undergraduate in the 1990's, cell phones and laptops were not allowed to be used in classroom. The few students who needed better notes than they were able take by hand utilized pocket-size tape recorders to record lectures. They made no noise and I remember only one professor objecting to them.
Hehe i am attending an academy (7th 8th 9th 10th 11th and 12th) grade where each student recieves a free laptop and everything we do is on a laptop/internet. Our homework, notes, even class discusions are done online. There is no talking in the class rooms...only typing to talk to eachother. Of course the school gave the laptops to us so things like IM and myspace and Ebay are all blocked but we still are REQUIRED to have our laptop with a charged battery in every class.
Why does is it that decisions, such as laptops in the classroom, are relegated to public opinion? Cannot we trust the learning institutions, teachers, and students to work it out through ordinary practices? And since we're asking for opinions, can I get advance PERMISSION to take a pain pill for my next headache? I've had surgery again, mind you!
What's the difference between chatting online, texting, talking to the person next to you, or sleeping in class? There's none, all of them are used to pass the time, but as for school policies banning it, there's no justification for it at all, this is COLLEGE not highschool, we PAY to be here, we CHOOSE to go to class, and if we decided to not pay attnetion, what's it to the professors? They still get paid, and still don't care whether people show up or not
I was in college for the late 90s, and there were maybe 3-4 people who would use a laptop during lectures. I, to be honest, found the constant tapping on a keyboard distracting as I was trying to take hand written notes... but too, I must say I would think having a way to type the notes would be faster, as I can type faster than I can write and therefore feel as though I would be able to keep up with the professor more. Then there is the argument that if I had to type out my notes to turn in as part of my grade, I can see where if I had to transcribe them from written notes, I may retain more knowledge as I would be rereading the info more intently as to make sure everything were put together more understandable for the professor to make sense of it all, as my note taking can be a jumble of words, sort of like a brain storm of ideas. As far as cell phones... turn them off or put them on vibrate and wait until the end of class to make any return calls/texts.
Laptop or no laptop, if a student isnt going to listen during lecture, they're not going to listen. I believe if students feel they can enhance their education by bringing laptops then so be it, unless the teacher feels that are times he or she feels is in appropiate.
When I finally got a hold of a Laptop for school my grades improved. This was because my ability to take notes by typing far surpassed my skill for writing notes by pencil and paper. For diagrams and whatnot, I would always use a notebook but for actual notes where a teacher is lecturing I could gather everything the teacher was saying by typing away on the keyboard and then review the notes later. I am also a very outspoken person, and would constantly be involved with the discussion, not just stuck behind the laptop typing away. So for me, as a student, having a Laptop in class really helped out a lot.
I"ve been on both sides of the podium....as a student and faculty. The incessant clicking of keys is highly annoying during the note taking process....1/2 the time..students were screwing around texting, surfing...took faculty complaining and the installation of software to monitor students before they got it thru their heads that the PC is a tool...not a toy. As faculty I'd walk around the room...lecturing....catching those playing...and embarassed the bejesus out of them...earning the name Dr. Evil...LOL....all this was going on in a tech school.... all in all .. PCs are a necessary evil....teaching programming classes...doing inclass assignments...all are enhanced by the PC....its all about discipline....setting expectations when students enter the class room from the FIRST day...and not relenting no matter how many times they go to the Dean...or whine ....I'm tired of being a baby sitter....age of students makes no difference....I taught the 30yo+ crowd...they complain as much as the youngins...in the end...they did want i wanted...and LEARNED in the process
Computers, internet, and all the things that go with them are a huge part of the human communication and data storage evolution. There's just no way to stop it. Instead we need to work with it and help it to evolve in a way that benefits us. I think that laptops should be encouraged in classrooms, and that even more emphasis should be put on inventing new technologies for the classroom.
How about does the tap tap of the keyboard drive the students insane? Get a tablet PC for taking notes! This an interesting debate, somehow tablet PC is not mentioned in the article or in any posts I have seen thus far. I have one and it is great. I am not for banning laptops, but Tablet PC is much better for class, no annoying tapping and no distracting screens everywhere.
I'm no computer whiz, and would LOVE to tap my notes into legible keepsakes- but, then, I'm a 50-plus student- It really does take some maturity to handle business with pleasure and still keep the business-end of things up. The sad question is- if you can handle this techno-age THAT well, is it a sure thing that you're mature enough to keep the right end of it thinking?
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46 Posted by linda_willis on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:52PM EDT Report Abuse
10 years ago I was one of the first students to take my laptop to class. It was great. I could spent my study time reading my notes instead of decoding them.