Disengaged Students
Reflections on teachers' modern challenges
Recently, I had an exchange with a student that would not let me go. I've been thinking about it a lot and I concluded that it reflects many trends and dynamics that are plaguing higher education environment today.
My college, a small residential private school, provides the students with personal laptops that they are supposed to use to facilitate their learning, including note-taking in class. As old-school note-taker myself, I know they don't really take notes on the computer beyond copying some of the slides in case the professor checks (I don't do that as I'm not there to police their bad choices).
But standing in front of the class, I can tell when they use the computers to surf the Internet, by their eye movement and disengagement from the class material and discussion. If I ask them a question and call them out by name, they raise their empty eyes at me and ask, "Could you repeat the question, please?"
They think they can multitask. I teach communication where information-processing theory is still a thing and know that their idea of multitasking is different from what happens in reality: humans have not yet mutated or developed their brains so that we can process and respond to two information-related tasks at the same time.
We can combine motor or automatic tasks with information tasks, such as washing dishes and watching TV at the same time, but no one can drive and text at the same time or engage in meaningful conversations and watching the political debate at the same time. When it comes to information processing, you are either there or here. One information-processing tasks distracts us from the other, takes our full attention away, and our partners in conversation express their frustration by saying something like "You are not listening to me," or "Please put down your phone when I'm talking to you."
I try to start a class with some brain teasers, little questions or situations that would gear the students to our topic of discussion. So, that day I did the same, came up with two different versions of a request for the same thing and asked the students to identify which one was a simple request and which one was a persuasive attempt to influence the decision. They were displayed on the board for the students to read and think about them.
One student who rarely engages in class discussions voluntarily, couldn't peel his eyes off his computer and didn't even read what was on the board. When I asked him to respond to the question on the board, he looked at me with a sort of indignation that I interrupted whatever he was doing on the internet, and said, "I'm not the only one in the class you can ask, you know." He said it in a tone implying I was picking on him.
To say I was shocked is to say nothing. The audacity! Or, should I say, the chutzpah! He completely threw me off and it took me a second to collect my thoughts. My first one was, "Would you say that to a male professor?" which probably tells more about my gender dynamic awareness than his anyway. I of course did not say that out loud, not to make it embarrassing either for him or for myself. I finally pointed out to him that I'd noticed he was not paying attention and that's why I called him out. He mumbled something in response while another student came to the rescue and answered my question.
Now, this student has taken classes from me before and on previous occasions I had to fight with him to keep his phone away from the desk. At least now he uses the computer rather than the phone, but oh my, how often I want to ask him, "Why are you here? You are obviously not learning anything, so why waste time, both yours and mine?"
It is incredibly demoralizing and makes me wonder about the nature of learning and shifts in learning patterns and how long I will be able and willing to stay in academia. And no, it's not about me being a boring professor. I know I'm a good teacher and a great expert in my field, which has been recently confirmed by my tenure and my teaching evaluations from the students who want to learn. Many other teachers are complaining about the same problem of disengaged students.
Maybe it's the sign of our times, when people think that they have all the information at their fingertips. Just Google it, why even try to learn anything, right?
About the Creator
Lana V Lynx
Avid reader and occasional writer of satire and short fiction. For my own sanity and security, I write under a pen name. My books: Moscow Calling - 2017 and President & Psychiatrist
@lanalynx.bsky.social
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Comments (10)
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great piece of write up
This is the thing with the advancement of mobile tech and the internet - instant gratification. Feel the same about the annoying nature of mobile phones!
We get told to do "cold calling". It's basically a "no hands up" policy. So we tell them what the question is going to be, and we say something like, "everyone needs to have an answer ready, on case you're one of the ones asked to contribute your idea". I wasn't a fan of it at first, but it does seem to help keep more people more engaged, especially in larger groups.
I think you hit on an aspect of this which is hidden under the surface - Why are students there when they appear not to want to be there? Is it perhaps that it is true - they actually "don't" want to be there, but "have" to be there? I say this because, more and more often, a degree is "required" to get certain types of work, regardless of what an individual "gets" from the degree (The saying I've heard is D's get Degrees). As long as they have the "paper", that is what they need for the work. I think often, students don't really have an incentive to learn other than to get that piece of paper, as disappointing as it is for me to say that. But what other choice do they have? If they "don't" get the paper, their career choices become severely limited. Sometimes it doesn't even matter what is "on" the paper, or what degree you have received, as long as you have "a" paper. This has nothing to do with the Value of a Great Education, especially when delivered by Amazing Teachers like yourself. There just seems to be an issue with the way the system is set up around this, which sadly has also weakened the "worth" of the piece of paper (again, nothing to do with the Education itself). I think that this is going to create some interesting problems as we continue down this path.
Lana, I think what you have raised here is very thought -provoking. Education is taken for granted. Access to knowledge means that people think they know it all when actually they know less. The art of listening and engaging is dying out and the audacity of that student to call you out is, I think, a sign of the times. Great piece.
My close friend is a high school teacher and he complains about the same thing too. Also, I too would have been so shocked if my student asked me that when I call his name.
Dear Lk - I just have to say that even your heading of students in the classroom seems too tidy and unrealistic of late. Many students are covered in tattoos/and piercings; making personal statements. I've been called out on many occasions re; discrimination for my firm's hiring practices. They were always a distraction to our clients; it shouldn't be about them. Lana, as a Professor do you ever just ask: No matter how smart you are who's going to give you a job? We'll just replace you with Google info that we might have gotten from you. I just wrote a Short 'The Cheat' and I threw in this: "Gen Z'z you do know your generation didn't invent sarcasm." I'm probably the only one that notices..! - My Respect - Jk.in.l.a.
We have a policy about students not using smartphone and laptops, but I have given up on this. They think we cannot tell when they have a Samsung or Apple under the desk. At the beginning of the year, I make it clear that they are adults and I am not going to be a college instructor and a collector of technology during the lessons. If they fail, I get paid; if they pass, I get paid. And if they want to pay attention or ignore me, the deal is the same. Don't let them get to you.