George Lucas Educational Foundation
Brain-Based Learning

The Lowdown on Longhand

Taking notes by hand helps students form deeper connections to information than they do when using a laptop.

August 6, 2014 Updated August 28, 2017
©Caia Images/500px

My Catholic school third-grade teacher was extremely tough on me. Her biggest gripe was my handwriting, which looks more like an EKG scan than penmanship. For years, I harbored not-so-fond memories of her, but now I know that her strictness about penmanship was actually helping my brain develop. Recently, scientists have shown that longhand writing benefits the brain.

Today, cursive writing is becoming a lost art as note taking with laptops becomes more and more prominent in classrooms. But what we are losing is much bigger than a few scratches on a page—we are losing a robust way of learning.

There has been much debate on the use of laptops for note taking in classrooms. The pro side sees laptops as an efficient way of collecting and storing information. The con side sees laptops as an opportunity for distractions and multitasking. What’s missing is an understanding of how taking notes in longhand influences the brain. In recent studies, students who took notes with laptops performed worse on conceptual questions than ones who took notes in longhand. In short, the first group had the information on their computers but did not have an understanding of that information in their brains.

So in this age of technology, I’m suggesting that students take notes with paper and pen. It’s a crazy idea, but hear me out.

A Plea for Penmanship

When students take notes with their laptops, they tend to mindlessly transcribe the data word for word, like speech-to-text software. But verbatim transcription is not the point of taking notes. What’s lacking in their note-taking-by-laptop is the synthesis, the reframing, and the understanding of the information. Students who transcribe with laptops form shallow connections to what’s being presented to them, while those who take notes by hand process the information and represent it in a way that makes sense to them. They’re learning.

Now, I’ll be the first to say that longhand writing is so 19th century. But we need to answer a question: Do we want students to have a deep or shallow connection to the information we’re giving them? While we live in a world of short sound bites where news is thrown at us unprocessed, this should not be the mode for schools. In the 21st century, the ability to connect knowledge in new ways is more important than the knowledge itself. So students with deeper connections to information can link it in new ways—they can create.

The Pen Is Mightier

All this raises the question of how we can incorporate longhand in a digital age. What about a daily notebook, written by hand?

A lost art in the world of science is the lab notebook, in which scientists write down observations, impressions, and all the variables and outcomes of an experiment. If you teach science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) classes, might I suggest that you resurrect the lab notebook and have students personalize it? Give them assignments in which they have to hand-draw pictures of what they see and what they predict. Let them figure out how to visually represent these things—without digital pictures. Research says that taking images with a camera does not improve one’s memory, so these notebook entries must be written or drawn. Skill doesn’t matter. What we’re fostering are experiential links in a child’s brain, and one of the best pathways is through their fingers.

If you don’t teach STEM classes, have students carry a personal notebook in which they write down observations and draw things by hand on topics of their choosing. We’re trying to create more connections to information, and developing fine motor skills along the way.

If you have a classroom with lots of technology, try to integrate note taking. Often when I give my PowerPoint slides to students, I pass out a version that doesn’t have all the information students see on the screen, which means that they need to fill it in by hand. And when I glance over their notes, I see that their work doesn’t all look the same. This is great because my students are doing the most important thing we can teach them—they are learning how to teach themselves.

So let us not confuse efficiency with the real goal of teaching. Teaching is not a job of cramming as much as we can into a brain. It is about learning. And getting students to learn means that we must use every pathway to connect them with information. Using laptops reinforces the Industrial Revolution ideal that every kid should get the information in the same way, and that it should come out the same way. But by occasionally replacing the laptop with a pen, learning happens, which is why we got into this business in the first place.

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