Its back to school season. The retraining for a school schedule, paying attention to the teacher, and taking notes. My favorite funny memory is from middle school, of a classmate’s mom, a very sweet lady just watching out for her son’s best interest, she thought, no doubt, who routinely trolled the good note takers in class during lunch break and after school, seeking their notes for her son!
And this year, with the new challenge of online school, the dilemma amps up in the student community (and maybe their parents too) on the relevance of taking notes on paper in an online classroom. I found this article showcasing the importance of putting pen to paper for taking notes.
A Learning Secret: Don't Take Notes with a Laptop
Students who used longhand remembered more and had a deeper understanding of the material
By Cindi May
“More is better.” From the number of gigs in a cellular data plan to the horsepower in a pickup truck, this mantra is ubiquitous in American culture. When it comes to college students, the belief that more is better may underlie their widely-held view that laptops in the classroom enhance their academic performance. Laptops do in fact allow students to do more, like engage in online activities and demonstrations, collaborate more easily on papers and projects, access information from the internet, and take more notes. Indeed, because students can type significantly faster than they can write, those who use laptops in the classroom tend to take more notes than those who write out their notes by hand. Moreover, when students take notes using laptops they tend to take notes verbatim, writing down every last word uttered by their professor.
Obviously it is advantageous to draft more complete notes that precisely capture the course content and allow for a verbatim review of the material at a later date. Only it isn’t. New research by Pam Mueller and Daniel Oppenheimer demonstrates that students who write out their notes on paper actually learn more. Across three experiments, Mueller and Oppenheimer had students take notes in a classroom setting and then tested students on their memory for factual detail, their conceptual understanding of the material, and their ability to synthesize and generalize the information. Half of the students were instructed to take notes with a laptop, and the other half were instructed to write the notes out by hand. As in other studies, students who used laptops took more notes. In each study, however, those who wrote out their notes by hand had a stronger conceptual understanding and were more successful in applying and integrating the material than those who used took notes with their laptops.
What drives this paradoxical finding? Mueller and Oppenheimer postulate that taking notes by hand requires different types of cognitive processing than taking notes on a laptop, and these different processes have consequences for learning. Writing by hand is slower and more cumbersome than typing, and students cannot possibly write down every word in a lecture. Instead, they listen, digest, and summarize so that they can succinctly capture the essence of the information. Thus, taking notes by hand forces the brain to engage in some heavy “mental lifting,” and these efforts foster comprehension and retention. By contrast, when typing students can easily produce a written record of the lecture without processing its meaning, as faster typing speeds allow students to transcribe a lecture word for word without devoting much thought to the content.
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To evaluate this theory, Mueller and Oppenheimer assessed the content of notes taken by hand versus laptop. Their studies included hundreds of students from Princeton and UCLA, and the lecture topics ranged from bats, bread, and algorithms to faith, respiration, and economics. Content analysis of the notes consistently showed that students who used laptops had more verbatim transcription of the lecture material than those who wrote notes by hand. Moreover, high verbatim note content was associated with lower retention of the lecture material. It appears that students who use laptops can take notes in a fairly mindless, rote fashion, with little analysis or synthesis by the brain. This kind of shallow transcription fails to promote a meaningful understanding or application of the information.
If the source of the advantage for longhand notes derives from the conceptual processes they evoke, perhaps instructing laptop users to draft summative rather than verbatim notes will boost performance. Mueller and Oppenheimer explored this idea by warning laptop note takers against the tendency to transcribe information without thinking, and explicitly instructed them to think about the information and type notes in their own words. Despite these instructions, students using laptops showed the same level of verbatim content and were no better in synthesizing material than students who received no such warning. It is possible these direct instructions to improve the quality of laptop notes failed because it is so easy to rely on less demanding, mindless processes when typing.
It’s important to note that most of the studies that have compared note taking by hand versus laptop have used immediate memory tests administered very shortly (typically less than an hour) after the learning session. In real classroom settings, however, students are often assessed days if not weeks after learning new material. Thus, although laptop users may not encode as much during the lecture and thus may be disadvantaged on immediate assessments, it seems reasonable to expect that the additional information they record will give them an advantage when reviewing material after a long delay.
Wrong again. Mueller and Oppenheimer included a study in which participants were asked to take notes by hand or by laptop, and were told they would be tested on the material in a week. When participants were given an opportunity to study with their notes before the final assessment, once again those who took longhand notes outperformed laptop participants. Because longhand notes contain students’ own words and handwriting, they may serve as more effective memory cues by recreating the context (e.g., thought processes, emotions, conclusions) as well as content (e.g., individual facts) from the original learning session.
These findings hold important implications for students who use their laptops to access lecture outlines and notes that have been posted by professors before class. Because students can use these posted materials to access lecture content with a mere click, there is no need to organize, synthesize or summarize in their own words. Indeed, students may take very minimal notes or not take notes at all, and may consequently forego the opportunity to engage in the mental work that supports learning.
Beyond altering students’ cognitive processes and thereby reducing learning, laptops pose other threats in the classroom. In the Mueller and Oppenheimer studies, all laptops were disconnected from the internet, thus eliminating any disruption from email, instant messaging, surfing, or other online distractions. In most typical college settings, however, internet access is available, and evidence suggests that when college students use laptops, they spend 40% of class time using applications unrelated to coursework, are more likely to fall off task, and are less satisfied with their education. In one study with law school students, nearly 90% of laptop users engaged in online activities unrelated to coursework for at least five minutes, and roughly 60% were distracted for half the class.
Technology offers innovative tools that are shaping educational experiences for students, often in positive and dynamic ways. The research by Mueller and Oppenheimer serves as a reminder, however, that even when technology allows us to do more in less time, it does not always foster learning. Learning involves more than the receipt and the regurgitation of information. If we want students to synthesize material, draw inferences, see new connections, evaluate evidence, and apply concepts in novel situations, we need to encourage the deep, effortful cognitive processes that underlie these abilities. When it comes to taking notes, students need fewer gigs, more brain power.
Whether it is digital era, typewriter era or handwritten era,the fact is anything written down goes to long memory. And this is a time tested thing which has stood the test of time for centuries. The current question is which way of taking notes gives better results.
with online learning becoming the order of the day, taking notes assumes greater importance .plus it involves the upcoming future generations.
from third graders to Ph.ds, everyone has to learn online now..in an online lecture or class the learner cannot be expected to s go on listening attentively.they have to take notes of concepts, assumptions and key points as they listen.
The comments and articles put out by @shalini ramachandra and @aparna saligrama point out that taking notes by hand is better . It not only helps in conceptual understanding of the subject but also in synthesising of information.
yes but today’s youngsters and learners feel writing is slow, sloppy and not legible many times when jotted in a hurry. Not all have good and legible handwriting. Whereas typing on the device is faster ,clearer and volume would be more for the same time
One has to be very clear here that the online classes are for learning learning is something more than receiving or regurging of information.and that is understanding. Finally the key to the whole matter is the r or performance of the notes takers. And in this test those taking down by hand outperformed others. this is not a revolutionary finding or path breaking thing .Hand,eye,brain coordination is an undisputed thing. As the hand writes it remits some understanding for retention in the brain. When I was in my post graduation class,,a Professor was Explaining some difficult concepts for growth models. Then there were no laptops or any devices in the class. So, he would explain,wait for his students to take notes and proceed. A few students were taking down in short hand a convenient fast method used mostly by typists and secretaries. The profEssar immediately knew what these students were doing. He calmly said”you are here to learn and not take down like the typist. It is the job and requirement for a typist to take verbatim what the boss says, type it and put it up before the boss.your job on the other hand is to comprehend what I am explaining and put it in your brain. “
As it turned out those Students who took by shorthand underperformed to their potential and others outperformed them.
This is a real life incident to prove the wisdom of hand written notes tWords of such caution should be taken seriously .Or else the gen next will be mediocre or average. Give a thought and influence whomever you can. Thanks to qv woman for bringing it to our attention. #online classes#taking notes in digital era#handwriting#on line notes taking
The write up by@shalini Ramachandra and the article accompanying it about taking notes made very good reading. Even as I was reading and comprehending the things put out in that article, @aparna saligrama came out with her comments and she also supplemented with another article. My comments are for both of these.
after reading I am feeling confused about the whole thing. Though I do not have to take notes regularly, I see around what is happening. People now a days hardly remember things and would have to go to their computer or phones when some clarification, suggestion is needed. till recently it was being said the brain has to be loaded to keep it sharp and working .somehow the present over reliance on computers may lead to mediocrity and average ness is my fear. Though all cannot be brilliant trying at least to give emphasis to learn and understand will put one a notch higher. If taking down on a paper makes that better why not ?What is the problem ?
After reading these write ups and articles I will try to lessen my reliance on taking notes on computer and keep a piece of paper or small book then perhaps one would become a more attentive listener also which in turn helps in processing it in our heads.Thank you qv woman for this eye opener for me. I will try to influence others around me
#writing#meeting jottings#online classes#taking notes
@Shalini Ramachandra , this seems to be gaining momentum. Here is a similar article from the BBC, originally appeared on The Conversation and published through Creative Commons License.
https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20200910-the-benefits-of-note-taking-by-hand
#notetakingbyhand #writingrules #bettercognition #bbcworklife
Love the cartoon upfront!! 😍. I remember the saying "I see I forget, I write I remember, I do I understand"...in order to do, you need to remember first don't you??
Love the article, thanks.
#brainpower #writingrules #powerofwriting #writing #scientificamerican #backtoschool
This has come at the right time for back to school yes, but also as @finance geek says, during our remote sessions... I see a lot of people taking notes via paper and pen and some times it annoys me they are writing when they should have been listening. I don't say anything during my training sessions, instead I wait for them to complete... now I will ask everyone (we cannot always see everyone on screen) if they need a min or two more to jot down stuff....
Great read! Now I know why I still like to take my Zoom and Teams meetings notes in a notebook and was being justifiably smarter, I just didn't know how 😄