CTE Teaching Tips

Students with Laptops Laptops in the Classroom: A Virtue or Vice?

Laptops, tablet PCs, PDAs, and even smart phones all have great potential as classroom learning tools: many students use them to take class notes, while others use them to record lectures for later review. Instructors can further leverage the learning potential of laptops by encouraging students to make use of specific electronic documents during class. For example, an instructor might upload a skeleton outline of a lecture to the online course management system; the students then open that document and add the missing information as the lecture or class proceeds. Studies have shown that when an instructor provides this sort of partial outline, which is to be filled out by students during class, it results in more learning than when an instructor provides either a full transcription of the lecture or no lecture notes at all (see the Resources cited at the end of this Tip Sheet).

However, laptops and similar electronic devices also have the potential to disrupt classes. For example, some students might be distracted by the tapping of numerous keyboards. Wireless connections, too, might tempt students to check their email, post to Facebook, or watch videos on YouTube during class. Not surprisingly, many instructors have questions about how to manage problems that can arise from students using laptops in the classroom:

  1. Can I ban laptops from my classroom?
    No. Laptops are a required learning tool for many students who are registered with the Office for Persons with Disabilities (OPD).

  2. Can I ban laptops from my classroom for everyone except students registered with OPD?
    No. Doing so would essentially force students to reveal to their classmates that they have a learning disability, which they might not want to do. Moreover, laptops are a learning tool that all students might reasonably expect to avail themselves of.

  3. Can I ask students to close their laptops during certain class activities?
    Yes, within reason. You can require laptops to be closed during quizzes or midterms, just as you can require textbooks to be closed or packed away (in such circumstances, students who are registered with OPD, and who require the use of a laptop, would have made alternative arrangements for writing the quiz or midterm). It's probably also reasonable to ask students to close their laptops for short times during other activities, such as during a small group discussion.

  4. Some of my students have complained that it's hard to concentrate in the midst of all the tapping being made by classmates who are taking notes with laptops.
    You can probably remedy this problem by designating the back of your classroom as the "laptop zone" and the front as the "non laptop zone." Ask laptop users, too, to place their laptop on something soft (like a binder or sweater), so that the tapping doesn't resonate through the hard surface of their desk or table.

  5. What can I do about students who habitually use their laptops during class to check their email or to go on social networking sites like Facebook?
    Apart from appealing to their sense of courtesy, or referring them to studies that show cognitive multi-tasking results in poorer learning, there's probably not much you can do to stop them. If students want to pay tuition only to spend the class time surfing the web, daydreaming, or dozing, that's their prerogative -- unless it becomes a distraction for other students, in which case, see below.

  6. I've had several students complain about the visual content that a classmate is accessing through his laptop during class.
    University Policy 33 ("Ethical Behaviour") states that "no member of the University community (faculty, staff, student) may unduly interfere with the study, work or working environment of other members of the University or any aspect of another's University activity." The policy adds that "A 'poisoned environment' (or one that is intimidating, hostile or offensive) can be created based on any of the prohibited grounds under the Ontario Human Rights Code, and can be described as comment or conduct that is contrary to the aims of maintaining a supportive, respectful and tolerant environment." Using a laptop to view potentially offensive or inappropriate images during class could certainly contravene this policy, and an instructor would therefore have the responsibility to direct a student to refrain from this activity during class. Similarly, if a student is using a laptop in class to view material that is not offensive per se but merely distracting to others -- for example, a video of a high-speed car-chase -- it might reasonably be deemed to "interfere with the study, work or working environment of other members" of the class.

Resources