PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

One-minute phone breaks could help keep students more focused in class and better in tests

Researchers conducted a term-long experiment that showed that allowing college students to use their phones for just one minute could result in less phone use during class and higher test scores

2024-10-02
(Press-News.org) Phones can be useful tools in classrooms to remind students of deadlines or encourage more exchange between students and teachers. At the same time, they can be distracting: Students report using their phones for non-academic purposes as often as 10 times a day. Thus, in many classrooms, phones are not allowed.  

Now, researchers in the US have investigated if letting students use their phones for very brief amounts of time – dubbed phone or technology breaks – can enhance classroom performance and reduce phone use.

“We show that technology breaks may be helpful for reducing cell phone use in the college classroom,” said Prof Ryan Redner, a researcher at Southern Illinois University and first author of the Frontiers in Education study. “To our knowledge, this is the first evaluation of technology breaks in a college classroom.”

The shorter, the better

Throughout a full term, the researchers experimentally evaluated the effectiveness of technology breaks, lasting one, two, or four minutes, respectively. In some of the bi-weekly sessions, the researchers introduced equally long questions breaks as a control condition. During these breaks, students were not allowed to use their phones, but were encouraged to ask questions. Both breaks occurred 15 minutes into the lecture element of class. In the study, phone use was defined as touching the phone.

The results showed that when technology breaks were implemented, students generally used their phones less often than during sessions with question breaks. During technology breaks lasting just one minute, phone use was at its lowest, making them most efficient at reducing the time students spent on their phones during class.

It is not yet fully understood why this might be. “One possibility is that one minute is enough to read and send a smaller number of messages. If they have more time to send many messages, they may be more likely to receive messages and respond again during class,” explained Redner.

In addition, the researchers also found that in class sessions where one-minute breaks were in effect, students’ test performance peaked. Higher average test scores (over 80%) were consistently observed. “Our hope is that it means students were less distracted during lecture, which leads to better performance,” said Redner.

Used to phone use

The researchers said that it is unlikely that students behaved differently knowing their phone use was monitored – an effect called reactivity. “Typically, reactivity occurs early in a study and its effects are reduced over time. We may see some in early sessions, but I am not convinced that we had much reactivity. At this point, students are probably used to using cell phones in the college classroom, also under the observation of the professor and other students,” Redner explained.

While their results point to the possible effectiveness of short technology breaks, the researchers said their data is hard to explain in its current state. For example, phone use data was highly variable among sessions, and it is not entirely clear why. This makes it more difficult to draw definite conclusions. Further studies are needed, the researchers said, to find the underlying reasons for high variability.

They also said that while phone use decreased in some of their experimental settings, it was not non-existent. “We are trying to find ways to reduce cell phone use and doing so without penalties. We hope our findings inspire researchers and teachers to try approaches to reducing cell phone use that are reinforcement-based,” concluded Redner.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New study identifies gaps in menopause care in primary care settings

2024-10-02
CLEVELAND, Ohio (Oct 2, 2024)—Timely identification and treatment of bothersome hot flashes have the potential to improve the lives of many women and save employers countless days of related absenteeism and lost work productivity. Yet, a new study finds that such symptoms are often not documented in electronic health records (EHRs) or not adequately addressed during primary care visits. The study is published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause Society. Approximately 75% of women experience hot flashes as they go through the menopause transition. Despite the common occurrence of these bothersome ...

Do coyotes have puppy dog eyes? New study reveals wild canines share dog's famous expression

2024-10-02
New research from Baylor University reveals that coyotes, like domestic dogs, have the ability to produce the famous "puppy dog eyes" expression. The study – "Coyotes can do 'puppy dog eyes' too: Comparing interspecific variation in Canis facial expression muscles," published in the Royal Society Open Science – challenges the hypothesis that this facial feature evolved exclusively in dogs as a result of domestication. The research team, led by Patrick Cunningham, a Ph.D. research student in the Department ...

Scientists use tiny ‘backpacks’ on turtle hatchlings to observe their movements

Scientists use tiny ‘backpacks’ on turtle hatchlings to observe their movements
2024-10-02
New research suggests that green turtle hatchlings ‘swim' to the surface of the sand, rather than ‘dig’, in the period between hatching and emergence. The findings have important implications for conserving a declining turtle population globally. Published today in Proceedings B, scientists from UNSW’s School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, used a small device, known as an accelerometer, to uncover novel findings into the behaviours of hatchlings as they emerge from their nests. Sea turtle eggs are buried in nests 30 – 80cm deep. Once hatched, the newborn turtles make their way to the surface ...

Snakes in the city: Ten years of wildlife rescues reveal insights into human-reptile interactions

2024-10-02
A new analysis of a decade-long collection of wildlife rescue records in NSW has delivered new insights into how humans and reptiles interact in urban environments. Researchers from Macquarie University worked with scientists from Charles Darwin University, and the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water to analyse over 37,000 records of snake and lizard rescues in the Greater Sydney region between 2011 and 2021. Their study, Interactions between reptiles and people: a perspective from wildlife rehabilitation records is published in the journal Royal Society Open Science on Wednesday 2 October. Lead author Teagan Pyne, ...

Costs of fatal falls among US older adults trump those attributed to firearm deaths

2024-10-01
The cost of fatal falls among older people (45-85+) trump those of firearm deaths in the US, finds research published in the open access journal Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open. The stark economics and shifting age demographics in the US underscore the urgency of preventive measures, conclude the researchers. Falls account for around 1 in 5 of all injury-related hospital admissions, and the World Health Organization reports that falls are the second leading cause of unintentional injury deaths worldwide, with the over 65s especially vulnerable, highlight the researchers.  Like falls, firearms related injuries ...

Harmful diagnostic errors may occur in 1 in every 14 general medical hospital patients

2024-10-01
Harmful diagnostic errors may be occurring in as many as 1 in every 14 (7%) hospital patients—at least those receiving general medical care—suggest the findings of a single centre study in the US, published online in the journal BMJ Quality & Safety. Most (85%) of these errors are likely preventable and underscore the need for new approaches to improving surveillance to avoid these mistakes from happening in the first place, say the researchers. Previously published reports suggest that current trigger tools for ...

Closer look at New Jersey earthquake rupture could explain shaking reports

2024-10-01
The magnitude 4.8 Tewksbury earthquake surprised millions of people on the U.S. East Coast who felt the shaking from this largest instrumentally recorded earthquake in New Jersey since 1900. But researchers noted something else unusual about the earthquake: why did so many people 40 miles away in New York City report strong shaking, while damage near the earthquake’s epicenter appeared minimal? In a paper published in The Seismic Record, YoungHee Kim of Seoul National University and colleagues show how the earthquake’s ...

Researchers illuminate inner workings of new-age soft semiconductors

Researchers illuminate inner workings of new-age soft semiconductors
2024-10-01
One of the more promising classes of materials for next-generation batteries and electronic devices are the organic mixed ionic-electronic conductors, OMIECs for short. These soft, flexible polymer semiconductors have promising electrochemical qualities, but little is known about their molecular microstructure and how electrons move through them – an important knowledge gap that will need to be addressed to bring OMIECs to market. To fill that void, materials scientists at Stanford recently employed ...

University of Houston partners with Harris County to create a sustainable energy future

University of Houston partners with Harris County to create a sustainable energy future
2024-10-01
University of Houston researchers are partnering with the Harris County Office of County Administration’s Sustainability Office, the Harris County Energy Management Team and other county staff to develop a comprehensive baseline of energy use and energy-use intensity for county’s assets.  Once established, the baseline will enable the team to track progress and evaluate the effectiveness of energy-saving measures over time, laying the groundwork for programs aimed at reducing energy consumption, maximizing savings, and increasing the use of renewable and resilient ...

Looking deeper into the mirror

2024-10-01
A team of Canadian and American scientists has made a promising breakthrough in understanding the origins of a mysterious neurological disorder known as mirror movements.   The discovery was made by Kaiyue Zhang, a doctoral student at the Montreal Clinical Research Institute (IRCM), affiliated with Université de Montréal, and by Karina Chaudhari, a doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania.   As co-first authors, they published their study today in the journal Science Signaling.   They were led by Frédéric Charron, an UdeM research professor ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Discovery of promising electrolyte for all-solid-state batteries

One-minute phone breaks could help keep students more focused in class and better in tests

New study identifies gaps in menopause care in primary care settings

Do coyotes have puppy dog eyes? New study reveals wild canines share dog's famous expression

Scientists use tiny ‘backpacks’ on turtle hatchlings to observe their movements

Snakes in the city: Ten years of wildlife rescues reveal insights into human-reptile interactions

Costs of fatal falls among US older adults trump those attributed to firearm deaths

Harmful diagnostic errors may occur in 1 in every 14 general medical hospital patients

Closer look at New Jersey earthquake rupture could explain shaking reports

Researchers illuminate inner workings of new-age soft semiconductors

University of Houston partners with Harris County to create a sustainable energy future

Looking deeper into the mirror

Friends of BrainHealth donor circle awards coveted grants to fuel innovative research

Study of infertility, health among women of Mexican heritage funded by $2.2M NIH grant

Airborne plastic chemical levels shock researchers

DOD awards $9M for snowpack and meltwater research and Arctic training program in Alaska and New England

SETI Institute awards education grant through the STRIDE program

NYU Historian Jennifer L. Morgan wins 2024 MacArthur “Genius Grant”

Research in 4 continents links outdoor air pollution to differences in children’s brains

UTA physicists explore possibility of life beyond Earth

Seeing double: Designing drugs that target “twin” cancer proteins

Fierce names Insilico Medicine as one of its Fierce 50 Honorees of 2024

Cleveland Clinic researchers build first large-scale atlas of how immune cells react to mutations during cancer immunotherapy

Pioneering quantum computer research continues in Baden-Württemberg

Discovery of orbital angular momentum monopoles enables orbital electronics with chiral materials

New mouse models offer valuable window into COVID-19 infection

Antibodies in breast milk provide protection against common GI virus

University of Cincinnati professor named MacArthur fellow

Research provides new insights into role of mechanical forces in gene expression

HSE scientists have developed a new model of electric double layer

[Press-News.org] One-minute phone breaks could help keep students more focused in class and better in tests
Researchers conducted a term-long experiment that showed that allowing college students to use their phones for just one minute could result in less phone use during class and higher test scores