Computers may hinder children’s education, say boffinsBack to the slate and chiselBy Paul Hales: Tuesday 22 March 2005, 07:46PARENTS BUYING COMPUTERS for the home may be erring if they think they’ll help their children learn, boffins warned, after studying the learning behaviour of around 100,000 15-year-olds.Thomas Fuchs and Ludger Woessmann took a look at data gathered by the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) , and concluded that PCs in the home can have a negative impact on some aspects of a child’s education.Fuchs is delivering the findings to the annual conference of the Royal Economic Society in Nottingham this week.Fuchs will tell the gathering that, holding other family characteristics constant, \"students perform significantly worse if they have computers at home.\"The study suggests that, \"computers at home may actually distract students from learning, both because learning with computers may not be the most efficient way of learning and because computers can be used for other aims than learning.\"Analysis of the data gathered in 32 countries, suggests that using PCs for homework and home study could be shown to negatively impact performance in literacy, science and maths, the boffins say. µ
i wonder, how do you pronounce a name like "Fuchs"?anyway i think the objective part of that article is the first line and especially the second word, "may".but as any sociologist can tell you, show me a statistic that says one thing and i'll show you 2 that say the opposite.