Using deliberate mistakes to heighten student attention

Authors

  • Abey P Philip Curtin University, Malaysia
  • Dawn Bennett Bond University, Australia

Keywords:

Student engagement, attention, consciousness, higher education, learning

Abstract

Attracting and retaining students’ attention is a concern for educators at every level of education, including those in higher education. Despite compelling evidence that student-centred pedagogies enhance attention, motivation and learning gain, exposition-centred delivery in forms such as lectures persists across higher education. Contemporary research on student attention suggests that student concentration in class begins to wane within 10 minutes; that neither tutorials or lectures tend to engage students effectively; and that the optimum length of a lecture is as little as 30 minutes. Where previous studies of student attention have focussed on the impacts of active listening, flipped classrooms and authentic assessment, the exploratory study reported here sought to determine the impact of a “deliberate mistake strategy” (DMS). The study engaged 103 undergraduate business students who self-assessed their attention span before and after a DMS was employed within their semester-long unit. Analysis of the students’ self-report involved paired sample t-tests and revealed that students’ attention span had increased significantly as the result of their engagement in DMS; there were no significant gendered differences. Cohen’s d revealed a large effect size with students reporting that DMS had helped them to increase their perceived attention span when in class. Amid continued debate about how to engage students and growing realisation that multiple approaches are needed, the findings suggests that the use of a simple strategy such as DMS merits further attention.

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Published

2021-05-03

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Using deliberate mistakes to heighten student attention. (2021). Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 18(6), 193-212. https://open-publishing.org/journals/index.php/jutlp/article/view/514