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Examining the effects of note-taking styles on college students' learning achievement and cognitive load

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-20, 06:21 authored by Kate Thompson, Linda CorrinLinda Corrin, Jason M Lodge
This study investigated the effects of note-taking styles on college students’ learning achievement and cognitive load in a 6-week lecture-based computer network course. Forty-two students were randomly assigned into one of three groups, which consisted of collaborative note-taking, laptop note-taking, and traditional longhand note-taking. The results showed that students in the collaborative note-taking group did better on learning achievement and cognitive load than students in the other two groups. Particularly, students in the collaborative note-taking group had a significantly higher rate of learning achievement and a significantly lower level of extraneous load than students in the longhand note-taking group. Implications for practice or policy: College students can improve their learning achievement more effectively through collaborative note-taking style than individual note-taking style. College students can reduce extraneous load and improve germane load levels through collaborative note-taking. Instructors and administrators should encourage college students to take more collaborative notes during classroom instruction.

History

Journal

AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY

Volume

38

Pagination

1-4

ISSN

1449-3098

eISSN

1449-5554

Language

English

Publication classification

C4.1 Letter or note

Issue

5

Publisher

AUSTRALASIAN SOC COMPUTERS LEARNING TERTIARY EDUCATION-ASCILITE