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Mere Presence of a Cell Phone: Effects on Academic Ability
Author(s) -
Vanessa C. Boila,
Tru E. Kwong,
Jaimey E. Hintz
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
behavioural sciences undergraduate journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2562-4687
DOI - 10.29173/bsuj492
Subject(s) - phone , spelling , psychology , sentence , comprehension , affect (linguistics) , social psychology , communication , computer science , linguistics , natural language processing , philosophy , programming language
Prior research has suggested that cell phone use in the classroom and during learning-related tasks is detrimental to academic performance. Recently, the mere presence of a cell phone has been found to negatively affect relationships and to impair performance on learning and cognitive tasks. This study explored whether the presence (visibility without use) of a cell phone negatively impacts one’s performance on tests measuring preexisting academic ability. The study evaluated 45 participants; some were enrolled in an introductory psychology course, and others were members of the public. Three subtests from the Wide Range Achievement Test (WRAT-4) were completed: spelling, sentence comprehension, and mathematics. During testing, half of the participants had cell phones, and the other half did not. Statistical analyses revealed no significant difference between the cell phone-present and cell phone-absent group on the sentence comprehension (p=.52), spelling (p=.07), and mathematics subtest (p=.11). Unexpectedly, a non-significant trend was observed in the opposite direction; that is, the cell phone-present group outperformed the cell phone-absent group on all subtests. Therefore, the original hypothesis suggesting that the cell phone-present group would be significantly poorer at demonstrating preexisting skills on tests of academic ability in comparison to the cell phone-present group was not supported.

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