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Should college professors allow their students to bring laptops to class?

Results so far:

Yes
79% 253 votes Total: 320 votes
No
21% 67 votes

Yes

by Wendy Brumback

Created on: February 16, 2010

The debate about laptops in the classroom remains strong.  Some believe that the constant sound of the keyboard tapping can distract both the professor and other students.  But using a laptop in the classroom can provide benefits that far outweigh the consequences.

The first is that for most students, they can type faster than they can write.  This allows for maximum notes.  A student can not only write what the teacher is saying, but their own observations as well.  The argument is that a recorder will do the job just as well, but there is a down side.  Most students already have a laptop, using a recorder means they have to dish out the money to buy one.  Also a student can place a recorder on the table and then not pay attention, or even hand it over to another student and skip class all together.  The laptop requires a student to be present and listen.  A recorder also has the down side of not picking up the teachers voice.

Another great advantage is the invention of Wireless internet.  A student can look up information the teacher has given them or input websites a professor has suggested.  The information is right at hand for the student.  Because of this they can engage in the lecture with information they might not have known before, or even debate the teachers information.  Argued here is that a student will play around on the internet rather than listen to the professor.  This however is unlikely for two reasons.  Most students in college are there to learn, so they are less likely to play around in class.  The other reason is that it is just as easier to play on the internet in their dorm room than it is in the classroom.  The dorm room has the added bonus of not having to go anywhere and the ability to look at whatever you want to without having a classroom full of kids looking at the same thing you are.

Oddly another reason laptops are a plus is because of handwriting.   Some people just don’t have nice penmanship.  And there are even more that write sloppier the faster they write.  A student may be missing information because they can’t read their own handwriting.  Also included in this is the fact that they may write slower than the teacher can talk. Missing information means that the student isn’t learning to their full positional.

Finally using a laptop in the classroom means that the information they need is already in the place they will do the most studying. By having the notes in the computer they can post links directly to the body of the notes as well as adding pictures and graphs.  It can be argued that notes can always be rewritten on the computer later.  And while this is true, the above mentioned handwriting could be a problem as well as the idea of time.  A college student’s time is very valuable.  Is it fair to ask the student to spend valuable studying time copying notes rather than writing a paper?

The truth is that this is the twenty-first century.  Technology is a big part of our everyday lives. To leave it out of the classroom is to leave it out of our education.  Without it our students’ education will be lagging behind the rest of the world.

Learn more about this author, Wendy Brumback.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.

No

by Kelli Nunez

Created on: February 06, 2010   Last Updated: February 07, 2010

I do not believe college professors should allow students to bring laptops to class with them. For one, they have their cell phones on hand. That alone is more than enough technology for them to have access to. The computer, and particularly the Internet, are a huge distraction. When  a student is sitting in class, on their laptop, more than likely, they will wander over to Facebook, or to their email, sooner or later. As a result, they will miss out on important information they should be learning and applying in class. They may plan to takes notes, but this will take a backseat before long.

Before I became an online student, I never brought my laptop to class with me. It remained at home. I did not need the extra baggage, along with my bookbag and purse. Plus, there was the extra hassle of having to remember to charge it up before leaving home, or to take my charger with me. More baggage. Although most of the students I was in class with simply took notes the regular way, via pen and paper, there was always at least one person with a laptop on hand. From what I observed, nine times out of ten they were over on Yahoo looking at the headlines, viewing their friends on Myspace, or in a chatroom. Sure, they would type out something the professor was saying once in a while, but without fail, they were back on the Internet moments later. Even when nothing new was happening on Facebook, they would go back there over and over again, literally craving some new form of activity. It was almost like being hyper. It was obvious this was taking away from their time in class. There were things I was writing they were paying no attention to at all. In the battle between professor and the Internet, the excitement and intrigue of being online usually wins, hands down.

Taking notes by actually writing is not difficult. Students have been doing it for years, long before anyone had ever heard of a laptop. We as a society have become so spoiled by our gadgets and toys, we act like we cannot make it, even for a few minutes, without them. If a student were to not have Internet access on their laptop, bringing one to class would be an entirely different situation. That way, they would only be able to take notes with it only. They could do nothing else. However, it is not really a computer in the eyes of many if there is no Internet connection.

There was a girl in my philosophy class who always brought both her Blackberry and her laptop to class. She sat next to me. Between all of her texting, and visits to her Facebook page, she never paid attention in class. To make a long story short, she failed the class. She did not have time for it. She gave it no attention, and why? All of the distractions she brought with her. Of course, students have always failed classes in college. That is legendary. However, to add to the possibility of it by bringing your outside life and activities into the classroom is foolish.

There was a history teacher on campus who banned laptops from his class. I can understand his position. There is plenty of time for that when class is over.

Learn more about this author, Kelli Nunez.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.


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