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Students who get homework answers online do worse on tests

The ease with which students can find answers to homework assignments online is hurting their retention and their grades, a new study finds.
A college student sits against a wall while charging his smartphone and reading a text book

The ease of finding information on the internet is hurting students’ long-term retention and resulting in lower grades on exams, according to a new study.

The researchers found that smartphones seem to be the culprit.

Students who received higher homework but lower exam scores—a half to a full letter grade lower on exams—were more likely to get their homework answers from the internet or another source rather than coming up with the answer themselves.

“…they transform homework from what has been, until now, a useful exercise into a meaningless ritual that does not help in preparing for exams.”

“When a student does homework by looking up the answers, they usually find the correct answer, resulting in a high score on the assignment,” says Arnold Glass, a professor of psychology at Rutgers-New Brunswick and lead author of the study in the journal Educational Psychology .

“However, when students do that, they rapidly forget both the question and answer. Consequently, they transform homework from what has been, until now, a useful exercise into a meaningless ritual that does not help in preparing for exams.”

The research also found that while 14% of students scored lower on exams than homework in 2008, that number jumped to 55% in 2017 as the use of smartphones for homework has become more common.

Glass says when students read a homework question, they should think about it, generate the answer on their own, and commit to that answer.

“If the student does this first and then finds the correct answer online, the student is likely to remember the answer, which will have a significant long-term effect on subsequent exam performance,” says Glass, whose goal was to determine when a student knows a particular fact, whether they remember it and can generalize it.

The study included 2,433 Rutgers-New Brunswick students in 11 different lecture courses. Over the 11-year period more than 232 different questions were created.

The study is a part of an ongoing project to use technology to monitor academic performance and to assess the effects of new instructional technologies, like smartphones and the Internet, on how students perform in school.

Source: Rutgers University

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