Banning Laptops in the Classroom: Is it Worth the Hassles?

Journal of Legal Education, Vol. 57, 2008

46 Pages Posted: 27 Dec 2007 Last revised: 5 Dec 2012

See all articles by Kevin Yamamoto

Kevin Yamamoto

South Texas College of Law Houston

Abstract

Over the last several years law school classrooms have seen an explosion of student laptop use. Law professors have allowed this by default, generally under the pretense that laptops make note-taking easier. However, many professors complain that students use their laptops to play games, watch movies, or if they have an Internet connection, to do web surfing and e-mailing during class. This paper presents my experience in banning laptops from my classroom in the Fall of 2006, the first time it was done at my institution. The article covers the reasons for and against allowing laptops in the classroom, my reasoning and procedure for banning them, perceived differences in the classroom experience and relevant student comments from my course evaluations, which were overwhelmingly positive to the laptop ban. Also covered are the cognitive psychological reasons in support of banning laptops. Studies show that lower grades were correlated with increased student web browsing during class (Grace-Martin & Gay, 2001; Hembrooke & Gay, 2003), and the amount of time which students used their laptops for tasks other than taking lecture notes (Fried, 2007). MRI studies of the brain indicate that the brain stores information differently when distracted, which occurs when students attempt to multi-task in class (Foerde, Knowlton, & Poldrack, 2006). The science of note-taking is also covered, which indicates verbatim typing may interfere with learning (e.g., Kiewra, 1991). The paper concludes by urging law school professors to review why laptops are allowed in their classrooms and, unless they feel that laptops increase student learning, to ban or heavily restrict their classroom use.

Keywords: law school, classroom, laptop, computer, teaching

Suggested Citation

Yamamoto, Kevin, Banning Laptops in the Classroom: Is it Worth the Hassles?. Journal of Legal Education, Vol. 57, 2008, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1078740

Kevin Yamamoto (Contact Author)

South Texas College of Law Houston ( email )

1303 San Jacinto Street
Houston, TX 77002
United States

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