We set out to assess the extent to which writing modality affects recollection in children and adolescents. We examined 10- to 11-year-old children’s (N = 63) and 16-year-old adolescents’ (N = 43) handwriting, keyboarding with a laptop computer and keyboarding with a touchscreen tablet computer or mobile phone in a within-subjects experimental design. Participants were instructed to write down stories dictated to them in the three writing modalities. Recollection of the stories was assessed using free recall of details in the stories. The results indicate that the writing modality affects recollection, handwriting leading to better recollection. However, currently, digital writing tools are inundating classrooms and workplaces around the gl...
Abstract This study compares three different writing conditions – pen and paper, tablet,...
Digital competence is a skill that schools must teach. As society becomes more and more digitized, t...
The research reported here investigates the match between child, technology and task in the scenario...
Abstract We set out to assess the extent to which writing modality affects recollection in children...
Digitalisation has changed and broadened the ways people write. In higher education, typing is a com...
To date, there is no clear evidence to support choosing handwriting over keyboarding or vice versa a...
To date, there is no clear evidence to support choosing handwriting over keyboarding or vice versa a...
The increasing adoption of educational technology in school classrooms has resulted in greater use o...
Information and communications technologies have generated a multilevel metamorphose not only of the...
Abstract This article explores how resources used in test situations shape pupils’ writing and to ...
The use of the computer as a writing tool within early literacy programs has risen dramatically in t...
The great influence of mass technologies has changed our writing modality that is moving from the tr...
In this study, we compared three different writing conditions – pen and paper; tablet and tablet wit...
Given the importance of digital writing in the workforce and in academia (DeVoss, Eidman-Aardahl, &a...
In cognitive and educational sciences, the writing process is an incessantly debated area, particula...
Abstract This study compares three different writing conditions – pen and paper, tablet,...
Digital competence is a skill that schools must teach. As society becomes more and more digitized, t...
The research reported here investigates the match between child, technology and task in the scenario...
Abstract We set out to assess the extent to which writing modality affects recollection in children...
Digitalisation has changed and broadened the ways people write. In higher education, typing is a com...
To date, there is no clear evidence to support choosing handwriting over keyboarding or vice versa a...
To date, there is no clear evidence to support choosing handwriting over keyboarding or vice versa a...
The increasing adoption of educational technology in school classrooms has resulted in greater use o...
Information and communications technologies have generated a multilevel metamorphose not only of the...
Abstract This article explores how resources used in test situations shape pupils’ writing and to ...
The use of the computer as a writing tool within early literacy programs has risen dramatically in t...
The great influence of mass technologies has changed our writing modality that is moving from the tr...
In this study, we compared three different writing conditions – pen and paper; tablet and tablet wit...
Given the importance of digital writing in the workforce and in academia (DeVoss, Eidman-Aardahl, &a...
In cognitive and educational sciences, the writing process is an incessantly debated area, particula...
Abstract This study compares three different writing conditions – pen and paper, tablet,...
Digital competence is a skill that schools must teach. As society becomes more and more digitized, t...
The research reported here investigates the match between child, technology and task in the scenario...