At today’s Friday Focus on e-Learning, we took a moment to reflect on the 2012 ECAR Study of Undergraduate Students and Information Technology. This is a replay of a Feb. 2012 session from the EDUCAUSE Learning Institute (ELI) conference, of which UTHSC was a virtual participant.
Since 2004, ECAR has surveyed undergraduate students annually about technology in higher education. In 2012, ECAR collaborated with 195 institutions to collect responses from more than 100,000 students about their technology experiences. The findings are distilled into the broad thematic message for institutions and educators to balance strategic innovation with solid delivery of basic institutional services and pedagogical practices and to know students well enough to understand which innovations they value the most.
Access a wealth of information about the 2012 and prior years’ ECAR Study reports here.
Various bits & pieces:
- 74% of students say they’ve taken a course with one or more online components
- 16% of students say they skip classes when course lectures are available online
- 54% of students say they are more actively involved in courses that use technology
- 55% of students say they wish their instructors used more simulations/educational games
- 57% of students wish instructors would use more online open educational resources
- 86% of students own laptops
- 62% of students own smartphones
- 33% of students own desktops
- 15% of students own tablets
- 12% of students own e-Readers
Important to do from a mobile device:
- 66% access course website or syllabi
- 64% using course or learning management systems
Platforms students are using:
- 77% laptops; 20% macs
- 44% iphone, 46% Android
- 57% iPad
75% of students say that technology helps them achieve their academic outcomes
importance of various devices to academic success (the top 3):
- laptop 85%
- printer 84%
- thumb drive 68%
Percentage of students who use the resources now as compared to 2010:
- 7x as many students using e-portfolios
- 5x as many students use web-based citation/bib tools
- 3x as many students used e-books
Technology literacy isn’t innate
- 66% of students surveyed in the US say they agree/strongly agree they’re prepared to use technology upon entering college/university
- 64% say it’s very/extremely important to be trained
- most students say that they get info from instructors on how to use technology
57% of students say they like to keep academic and social lives separate
53% of students say to use F2F interaction more
Key Findings for 2012
See the report for a full list key messages, findings, and supporting data.
- Blended-learning environments are the norm; students say that these environments best support how they learn and best engage them.
- Students want to access academic progress information and course material via their mobile devices, and institutions deliver.
- Technology training and skill development for students is more important than new, more, or “better” technology.
- Students use social networks for interacting with friends more than for academic communication.
ECAR Recommends these Actionable Results
See the 2012 report for a full list of actionable results.
- Look to emerging or established leaders (other institutions, other countries, other industries) for strategies to deliver instruction and curricular content to tablets and smartphones. Learn from their exemplary strategies for IT support and security with student devices as well as planning, funding, deploying, and managing instructional technologies, services, and support.
- Prioritize the development of mobile-friendly resources and activities that students say are important: access to course websites and syllabi, course and learning management systems, and academic progress reports (i.e., grades).
- Bridge the gap between the technologies that have seen the greatest growth (e-portfolios, e-books/e-textbooks, and web-based citation/bibliographic tools) and students’ attitudes about their importance. Focus training/skill-building opportunities for students, professional development opportunities for faculty, and support service opportunities on these emerging technologies.
- Use e-mail and the course and learning management system for formal communication with students. Experiment with text messaging and instant messaging/online chatting, and don’t focus efforts on using social networks and telephone conversations to interact with students.

