You have probably heard of the most common assumption associated with the new generation of students: multitasking. "They are multitasking. They are good at it and they feel good about it." However, there is a large body of research that demonstrates that all humans(new or old generation) are alike and are quite bad at multitasking. That does not mean that the next generation will be as bad as we are, it just means that at the moment we are not that good and should know about it.
I'm always looking for research supporting one or the other point of view and based on neurology or at least applying some basic neurology principles that go beyond self-reported surveys.
Here are a few links (I will eventually transform all this into a full APA style reference list):
- Abaté, C. J. (2008). You Say Multitasking Like It’s a Good Thing. Thought & Action. (Originally published in the Fall 2008 (Volume 24) issue of Thought & Action, The NEA Higher Education Journal) (last accessed in June 2013)
- Paul Atchley. You Can't Multitask, So Stop Trying. 2010 (last accessed in June 2013)
- Steven Novella. Multitasking – Can You Walk and Chew Gum at the Same Time? 2012 (last accessed in June 2013)
- Reynol Juncoa, Shelia R. Cotten. The relationship between multitasking and academic performance. 2012
- Adam Gorlick. Media multitaskers pay mental price, Stanford study shows. 2009
- Dzubak, C. M. (2008). Multitasking: The good, the bad, and the unknown. The Journal of the Association for the Tutoring Profession, 1.(last accessed in June 2013)
- Rosen, C. (2008). The myth of multitasking. The New Atlantis, 20, 105-110.
- Judd, T., & Kennedy, G. (2011). Measurement and evidence of computer-based task switching and multitasking by ‘Net Generation’students. Computers & Education, 56(3), 625-631.
- Wang, Z., & Tchernev, J. M. (2012). The “myth” of media multitasking: Reciprocal dynamics of media multitasking, personal needs, and gratifications. Journal of Communication, 62(3), 493-513.
- Hembrooke, H., & Gay, G. (2003). The laptop and the lecture: The effects of multitasking in learning environments. Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 15(1), 46-64.
- Kraushaar, J. M., & Novak, D. C. (2010). Examining the Affects of Student Multitasking with Laptops during the Lecture. Journal of Information Systems Education, 21(2), 11.