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Paper wins out over computer for note taking


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By Wray Herbert, Huffington Post

I went to college long before the era of laptops, so I learned to take notes the old-fashioned way: ink on paper. But that does not mean my note-taking system was simple. Indeed it was an intricate hieroglyphic language, in which asterisks and underscoring and check marks and exclamation points all had precise meaning, if only to me.

It’s a lost art. Many college students have some kind of electronic note-taking device nowadays, and most will swear by them. And really, only a Luddite would cling to pen and notebook in the 21st century. Typing is faster than longhand, producing more legible and more thorough notes for study later on.

But has anyone actually compared the two? Is it possible that laptops somehow impair learning — or conversely, that pen and paper convey some subtle advantage in the classroom? Two psychological scientists, Pam Mueller of Princeton and Daniel Oppenheimer of UCLA, wondered if laptops, despite their plusses, might lead to a shallower kind of cognitive processing, and to lower quality learning. They decided to test the old and the new in a head-to-head contest.

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Comments (3)
  1. Darla says - Posted: February 6, 2014

    Glad I went to college in the age of pen and paper ! I still prefer writing notes on paper over typing notes on a computer.

    Thanks for posting the article on your site.

  2. Haha says - Posted: February 6, 2014

    Support your local logger. Write on paper and buy .05 paper bags from Raley.

  3. Robert Fleischer says - Posted: February 6, 2014

    I could have saved them a lot of time and money (of course, THOSE things were the point, were they not?…cynically speaking….).
    Most who multi-task, and typing is a task, will find that the more the multi-tasking, the less the UNDERSTANDING. Taking notes is a task, as is listening, as is trying to actually understand what you are hearing. The very best way to understand something is to have a give and take with the presenter, in this case the professor who was lecturing. Ask questions, think, ask questions. Take only such notes, in brief, that will remind you of things to look deeper into. Notes of any kind are far less important than UNDERSTANDING.