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Smartphone-based study reminders can be a double-edged sword

Education

Smartphone-based study reminders can be a double-edged sword

L. Nobbe, J. Breitwieser, et al.

This intriguing study by Lea Nobbe, Jasmin Breitwieser, Daniel Biedermann, and Garvin Brod explores how smartphone reminders impact the study habits of lower secondary school students. While reminders effectively prompt studying on designated days, they may inadvertently reduce students' motivation to study independently on other days, raising questions about reliance on technology in education.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Reminders are a popular feature in smartphone apps designed to promote desirable behaviors that are best performed regularly. But can they also promote students’ regular studying? In the present study with 85 lower secondary school students aged 10–12, we combined a smartphone-based between- and within-person experimental manipulation with logfile data of a vocabulary learning app. Students were scheduled to receive reminders on 16 days during the 36-day intervention period. Findings suggest that reminders can be a double-edged sword. The within-person experimental manipulation allowed a comparison of study probability on days with and without reminders. Students were more likely to study on days they received a reminder compared to days when they did not receive a reminder. However, when compared to a control group that never received reminders, the effect was not due to students studying more frequently on days with reminders. Instead, they studied less frequently on days without reminders than students in the control group. This effect increased over the study period, with students becoming increasingly less likely to study on days without reminders. Taken together, these results suggest a detrimental side effect of reminders: students become overly reliant on them.
Publisher
npj Science of Learning
Published On
Jun 21, 2024
Authors
Lea Nobbe, Jasmin Breitwieser, Daniel Biedermann, Garvin Brod
Tags
smartphone reminders
study frequency
educational technology
student habits
intervention study
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