Digital Devices Lead to Low Concentration in College

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Students get bored in class is not a new phenomenon. Early research has shown that 77% of undergraduate students confessed of being fed up with attending classes, 15% of them is willing to cut classes because of laziness, 8% of them is not going to classes if there is not absent-checking, and only 7% of them is actually interested in listening to their lecturers (Nguyen Trang, 2012). However, the incidence of poor awareness in learning seems to be increasing on universities. It is an undeniable fact that the appearance of a range of social groups as “bored student council, Congress likes playing, likes sleeping than learning,…”on the social networking site has increasingly rising . Does it reflect an alarming issue that the students are really satiate to lecture?According to Mr. Nguyen (2012), most of students get sick of attending classes due to the fact that serious lecture has caused the dull atmosphere. Moreover, no amicable friend has been pointed out as second main reason. Finally, college students can escape from the binding of their parents.
According to a new study by a University of Nebraska-Lincoln associate professor (2013), the reason of low concentration in class was that typical college student plays with his or her digital device averaging 11 times a day while learning. Leslie Reed (2013) has showed that more than 80% of students admitted that the use of smart phones, tablets and laptops can interfere their learning. Regarding to situational factors, McCoy (2012) has reported that “students do not think that it is necessarily problematic matter but part of their lives.”
Here is how often respondents said they used their digital devices for non-classroom purposes during a typical day (percentages equal more tha...

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... laptop or smart phone on the class are very necessary to solve partly our issues.
More investigation from Kim Novak Morse showed the results from the above study reveal that indeed students are off task in class: however, it is not as extensive as we thought: “Second-year students were off task the most time, at 42% of the entire semester. First-years were off task approximately 35% of the time for the semester while third-years spent approximately 28% of their class time off task. Regarding how many individual students were ON-task at a given instant, roughly 82% of third-years, 69% of first years, and 50% of second-years were NOT misusing their laptops. Moreover, this study suggests something different: that the students already know they can get a better grasp on the material elsewhere, or they are just not that interested in what is happening in the classroom”.

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