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Students pay attention!: Combating the vigilance decrement to improve learning during lectures

Students pay attention!: Combating the vigilance decrement to improve learning during lectures
Students pay attention!: Combating the vigilance decrement to improve learning during lectures

Maintaining student concentration in lectures has long been a challenge for lecturers. Pedagogical research consistently finds a drop in attention between 10 and 30 minutes into the lecture, which has been associated with the passive nature of the standard format, and has consequences for learning approaches and outcomes. A similar phenomenon has been observed in ergonomics for some time, known as the vigilance decrement. In this article, we present an exploratory effort to detect the vigilance decrement in four different lecture formats, by adopting an ergonomics measurement tool which has been related to vigilance, and relating the findings to students' assessment results. It was found that standard lecture formats do induce a vigilance decrement, and this can adversely affect learning of the material. Conversely, vigilance degradation is avoided when presentation is varied, though this is not necessarily associated with interactive participation techniques. Implications for lecturing styles, learning approaches and pedagogical research methods are discussed.

Active learning, Attention, Deep and surface learning, Ergonomics, Lectures, Pedagogy, Vigilance
1469-7874
41-55
Young, Mark S.
3f79589e-2000-4cb0-832a-6eba54f50130
Robinson, Stephanie
55ce53a2-2ab9-499d-aa59-e8dc8374823e
Alberts, Phil
2a98bb6f-d71c-4413-8b8f-d30536a602bd
Young, Mark S.
3f79589e-2000-4cb0-832a-6eba54f50130
Robinson, Stephanie
55ce53a2-2ab9-499d-aa59-e8dc8374823e
Alberts, Phil
2a98bb6f-d71c-4413-8b8f-d30536a602bd

Young, Mark S., Robinson, Stephanie and Alberts, Phil (2009) Students pay attention!: Combating the vigilance decrement to improve learning during lectures. Active Learning in Higher Education, 10 (1), 41-55. (doi:10.1177/1469787408100194).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Maintaining student concentration in lectures has long been a challenge for lecturers. Pedagogical research consistently finds a drop in attention between 10 and 30 minutes into the lecture, which has been associated with the passive nature of the standard format, and has consequences for learning approaches and outcomes. A similar phenomenon has been observed in ergonomics for some time, known as the vigilance decrement. In this article, we present an exploratory effort to detect the vigilance decrement in four different lecture formats, by adopting an ergonomics measurement tool which has been related to vigilance, and relating the findings to students' assessment results. It was found that standard lecture formats do induce a vigilance decrement, and this can adversely affect learning of the material. Conversely, vigilance degradation is avoided when presentation is varied, though this is not necessarily associated with interactive participation techniques. Implications for lecturing styles, learning approaches and pedagogical research methods are discussed.

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More information

Published date: 1 March 2009
Keywords: Active learning, Attention, Deep and surface learning, Ergonomics, Lectures, Pedagogy, Vigilance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479143
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479143
ISSN: 1469-7874
PURE UUID: 816c5f71-0cdc-42f8-860a-449cfe434dbe
ORCID for Mark S. Young: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0001-2594-453X
ORCID for Stephanie Robinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5436-2929

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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2023 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Mark S. Young ORCID iD
Author: Stephanie Robinson ORCID iD
Author: Phil Alberts

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