Use Facebook, Lose a Letter Grade
Ah, here's a great piece detailing the academic consequences of Facebook use. Watch out young scholars...your new literacies and/or slacking off could portend poor curricular performance.
Archive Fever is a long-running writing practice devoted to essays, poetry, and scholarship that explore how environments — especially coastal and marine spaces — shape memory, perception, and meaning. What began as a blog on media and information studies has gradually shifted toward place-based writing, environmental and health humanities, and the slow work of attention. The ocean functions here as a living archive: a site of return, repetition, loss, and renewal.
Comments
I would be surprised if this sample returned a result that low - our study last fall at UNC found high 90s. This is classic sampling error/self-selecting populations problem.
I'd love to see the full results of the survey - did they ask about intensity of Facebook use, so they could put it on a continuum? I could see a linear relationship maybe emerging there (i.e., lots of FB time/lower grades -> less FB time/higher grades), but again, I'll believe it when I see it.
I think the most important phrase of the article is probably "correlation does not equal causation." (After all, it was the first thing I learned in AP Psychology) The article certainly has not told me anything I don't already know, but I hate hear bad things about my favorite social networking site. I've been on Facebook for about two and half years now, and I don't think my grades have suffered the least bit. However, I realize that making a generalization out of my own personal experience is silly (In fact, I'd call it a statistical no-no). Many of my friends do stay on Facebook for hours at a time, but the problem is not Facebook. The problem is their inability to manage their time wisely.
It'd be cool if a graduate student did research on this at Carolina. Sadly, I don't think Carolina would be the optimal place to do it. According to the DTH and the "Newless Record," (The Greensboro News & Record) Carolina would need to deal with its monstrous grade inflation problem first. Apparently, there are too many intelligent "young scholars" with good GPAs on this campus.
I liked this article, thanks for pointing it out.
-Lauren C.