Content area

Abstract

Students enrolled in three levels of general chemistry self-reported their attention decline during both lecture and other teaching approaches via personal response devices (clickers). Students report attention declines of 1 min or less more often than longer attention lapses. The data suggest that student engagement alternates between attention and nonattention in shorter and shorter cycles as lecture proceeds. Introduction of other pedagogies, specifically, clicker questions and demonstrations resulted in significantly lower self-reported student attention decline than lecture. This effect persisted during lectures immediately following the intervening pedagogies. Implications of this research for teaching are discussed. (Contains 6 tables and 1 figure.)

Details

Title
How Long Can Students Pay Attention in Class? A Study of Student Attention Decline Using Clickers
Author
Bunce, Diane M.; Flens, Elizabeth A.; Neiles, Kelly Y.
Pages
1438-1443
Publication year
2010
ISSN
0021-9584
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Peer reviewed
Yes
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
870288963