We are all under pressure to multitask - to deal with emails, messages and reminders whilst also doing our 'real job'.
Even when not under this avalanche of inputs, many of us choose to listen to music as we work. We eat lunch at our desks as we work.
Students update their facebook pages (and more) whilst they listen to lectures
All this means our productivity is increasing, right?
Wrong!
For most of us it means our performance dips.
A recent research study shows students who multitasked on their laptops during lectures scored consistently lower in tests (by about 17%) than their non-multitasking peers.
We seem to have difficulty balancing priorities among all the tasks - dealing with trivial rather than important issues because they require less concentration and thus fit well in a multitasking scenario.
But failing to concentrate on, and effectively deal with, the important items on your agenda is not a recipe for success.
Even when not under this avalanche of inputs, many of us choose to listen to music as we work. We eat lunch at our desks as we work.
Students update their facebook pages (and more) whilst they listen to lectures
All this means our productivity is increasing, right?
Wrong!
For most of us it means our performance dips.
A recent research study shows students who multitasked on their laptops during lectures scored consistently lower in tests (by about 17%) than their non-multitasking peers.
We seem to have difficulty balancing priorities among all the tasks - dealing with trivial rather than important issues because they require less concentration and thus fit well in a multitasking scenario.
But failing to concentrate on, and effectively deal with, the important items on your agenda is not a recipe for success.
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