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Featured researches published by Laura E. Levine.


Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology | 2000

Television viewing and attentional abilities in fourth and fifth grade children

Laura E. Levine; Bradley M. Waite

Abstract To evaluate the common assumption that television viewing is related to attentional difficulties in school, 70 fourth and fifth grade students recorded a “television diary” for one week and reported their preferred television shows. Parents estimated their childs television viewing time and reported their childs preferred shows. Assessment of attentional difficulties included teacher ratings, parent ratings, standardized tests, and classroom observations. It was found that the amount of television a child viewed was significantly related to teacher ratings of attentional difficulties, but not to parent ratings, classroom observations or a standardized test. Type of shows viewed did not relate to any attentional outcome variable. There was a clear relationship between fourth and fifth grade childrens ability to pay attention in school, as assessed by their teacher, and the amount of time they spent watching television.


College Teaching | 2008

Creating Significant Learning Experiences Across Disciplines

Laura E. Levine; Carolyn R. Fallahi; Joan M. Nicoll-Senft; Jack T. Tessier; Cheryl L. Watson; Rebecca M. Wood

The purpose of this study was to use Finks (2003) taxonomy of significant learning to redesign courses and assess student learning. Significant improvements were found across the semester for students in the six courses, but there were differences in which taxa showed improvement in each course. The meta-analysis showed significant, positive changes across disciplines in the areas of foundational knowledge, application, human dimension, and learning how to learn. This study provides support for Finks taxonomy in which significant learning can be achieved through course redesign.


International Journal of Cyber Behavior, Psychology and Learning (IJCBPL) | 2012

Mobile Media Use, Multitasking and Distractibility

Laura E. Levine; Bradley M. Waite; Laura L. Bowman

Portable media devices are ubiquitous and their use has become a core component of many people’s daily experience, but to what effect? In this paper, the authors review research on the ways in which media use and multitasking relate to distraction, distractibility and impulsivity. They review recent research on the effects of media multitasking on driving, walking, work, and academic performance. The authors discuss earlier research concerning the nature of media’s impact on attention and review cognitive and neuropsychological findings on the effects of divided attention. Research provides clear evidence that mobile media use is distracting, with consequences for safety, efficiency and learning. Greater use of media is correlated with higher levels of trait impulsivity and distractibility, but the direction of causality has not been established. Individuals may become more skilled at media multitasking over time, but intervention is currently required to improve the safe and effective use of mobile media.


Computers in Education | 2018

Off-task multitasking, note-taking and lower- and higher-order classroom learning

Bradley M. Waite; Rachel Lindberg; Brittany Ernst; Laura L. Bowman; Laura E. Levine

Abstract We examined whether multitasking via concurrent off-task text messaging during an academic presentation impacted students’ performance on tests assessing lower-order and higher-order learning. College students (N = 183) were assigned to one of two conditions involving either concurrent texting or not texting during an academic presentation, or to a no presentation condition. Students in presentation conditions were encouraged to take hand-written notes. Between-participants analyses revealed that students who saw the presentation performed better on learning measures than the control group who did not see the presentation, indicating that students did learn from the presentations. Non-texters scored significantly higher than texters on multiple choice tests of factual, lower-order information (e.g., knowledge, comprehension), but not on essays requiring higher-order application, analysis, evaluation, and synthesis of information. Within-participants analyses demonstrated that texters performed more poorly on lower-order questions that were based on information presented at times when they were texting. Non-texters took more quality notes than texters; amount of quality notes was positively related to test scores of all types. The amount of quality notes taken partially mediated the relationship between texting condition and multiple choice test scores. It appears that multitasking with media devices during an academic presentation interferes with note-taking and the encoding of information specific to the presentation.


Computers in Education | 2010

Can students really multitask? An experimental study of instant messaging while reading

Laura L. Bowman; Laura E. Levine; Bradley M. Waite; Michael Gendron


Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking | 2007

Electronic Media Use, Reading, and Academic Distractibility in College Youth

Laura E. Levine; Bradley M. Waite; Laura L. Bowman


New Directions for Teaching and Learning | 2009

Using Fink's integrated course design: How a book changed our students' learning, our university, and ourselves

Carolyn R. Fallahi; Laura E. Levine; Joan M. Nicoll-Senft; Jack T. Tessier; Cheryl L. Watson; Rebecca M. Wood


The International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning | 2007

Teaching Ourselves: A Model to Improve, Assess and Spread the Word

Laura E. Levine; Carolyn R. Fallahi; Joan M. Nicoll-Senft; Jack T. Tessier; Cheryl L. Watson; Rebecca M. Wood


Infant and Child Development | 2010

Self–other awareness and peer relationships in toddlers: gender comparisons

Laura E. Levine; James M. Conway


Archive | 2015

Multitasking and Attention

Laura L. Bowman; Bradley M. Waite; Laura E. Levine

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Bradley M. Waite

Central Connecticut State University

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Laura L. Bowman

Central Connecticut State University

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Carolyn R. Fallahi

Central Connecticut State University

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Cheryl L. Watson

Central Connecticut State University

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Jack T. Tessier

State University of New York System

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Joan M. Nicoll-Senft

Central Connecticut State University

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Rebecca M. Wood

Central Connecticut State University

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Brittany Ernst

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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James M. Conway

Central Connecticut State University

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Michael Gendron

Central Connecticut State University

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