Laptops are common in lecture halls worldwide. Students
hear a lecture at the Johann Wolfang Goethe-University in Frankfurt am Main,
Germany not too long ago.
As laptops become smaller and more ubiquitous, and with
the advent of tablets, the idea of taking notes by hand just seems
old-fashioned to many students today. Typing your notes is faster — which comes
in handy when there's a lot of information to take down. But it turns out there
are still advantages to doing things the old-fashioned way.
For one thing, research shows that laptops and tablets
have a tendency to be distracting — it's so easy to click over to Facebook in
that dull lecture. And a study has shown that the fact that you have to be
slower when you take notes by hand is what makes it more useful in the long
run.
In the study published in Psychological Science, Pam A.
Mueller of Princeton University and Daniel M. Oppenheimer of the University of
California, Los Angeles sought to test how note-taking by hand or by computer
affects learning.
"When people type their notes, they have this
tendency to try to take verbatim notes and write down as much of the lecture as
they can," Mueller tells NPR's Rachel Martin. "The students who were
taking longhand notes in our studies were forced to be more selective — because
you can't write as fast as you can type. And that extra processing of the
material that they were doing benefited them."
Mueller and Oppenheimer cited that note-taking can be
categorized two ways: generative and nongenerative. Generative note-taking
pertains to "summarizing, paraphrasing, concept mapping," while
nongenerative note-taking involves copying something verbatim.
And there are two hypotheses to why note-taking is
beneficial in the first place. The first idea is called the encoding
hypothesis, which says that when a person is taking notes, "the processing
that occurs" will improve "learning and retention." The second,
called the external-storage hypothesis, is that you learn by being able to look
back at your notes, or even the notes of other people.
Because people can type faster than they write, using a
laptop will make people more likely to try to transcribe everything they're
hearing. So on the one hand, Mueller and Oppenheimer were faced with the
question of whether the benefits of being able to look at your more complete,
transcribed notes on a laptop outweigh the drawbacks of not processing that
information. On the other hand, when writing longhand, you process the
information better but have less to look back at.
In A Digital Chapter, Paper Notebooks Are As Relevant As
Ever
For their first study, they took university students (the
standard guinea pig of psychology) and showed them TED talks about various
topics. Afterward, they found that the students who used laptops typed
significantly more words than those who took notes by hand. When testing how
well the students remembered information, the researchers found a key point of
divergence in the type of question. For questions that asked students to simply
remember facts, like dates, both groups did equally well. But for
"conceptual-application" questions, such as, "How do Japan and
Sweden differ in their approaches to equality within their societies?" the
laptop users did "significantly worse."
The same thing happened in the second study, even when
they specifically told students using laptops to try to avoid writing things
down verbatim. "Even when we told people they shouldn't be taking these
verbatim notes, they were not able to overcome that instinct," Mueller
says. The more words the students copied verbatim, the worse they performed on
recall tests.
And to test the external-storage hypothesis, for the
third study they gave students the opportunity to review their notes in between
the lecture and test. The thinking is, if students have time to study their
notes from their laptops, the fact that they typed more extensive notes than
their longhand-writing peers could possibly help them perform better.
But the students taking notes by hand still performed
better. "This is suggestive evidence that longhand notes may have superior
external storage as well as superior encoding functions," Mueller and
Oppenheimer write.
Do studies like these mean wise college students will
start migrating back to notebooks?
"I think it is a hard sell to get people to go back
to pen and paper," Mueller says. "But they are developing lots of
technologies now like Livescribe and various stylus and tablet technologies
that are getting better and better. And I think that will be sort of an easier
sell to college students and people of that generation."
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