This document summarizes a research paper that argues law schools should teach mindfulness to students. It discusses how students today have short attention spans and are constantly distracted due to multitasking with technology. This divided attention has negative impacts on learning, as attention is important for processing information and moving it from short-term to long-term memory. While students think they can multitask, research shows the brain can only focus on one task at a time and switches between tasks inefficiently. The paper argues mindfulness training can improve focus, concentration, learning, memory and reduce stress and anxiety, helping students cope with these challenges. It advocates law schools incorporate mindfulness like medical schools to address issues with the traditional legal education model.
This document discusses student use of Wikipedia for academic research. It notes that today's students have grown up with the internet and see it as their primary source of information. While Wikipedia provides easily accessible information, instructors and information professionals are concerned about students' ability to evaluate sources critically. The document reviews literature on student information behavior, the concerns of instructors, Wikipedia as a source, and how students use Wikipedia. It finds that students often feel frustrated by academic databases and gravitate towards familiar sources like Wikipedia and Google.
A study of sixth graders’ critical evaluation of Internet sourcesaj6785
This study was a descriptive, task-based analysis to determine how sixth-grade students approach the cognitive task of critically evaluating Internet sources. Pairs of sixth grade students in an Information Literacy course evaluated four preselected Internet sites to determine their credibility and appropriateness for two specific research scenarios. Data for analysis included written responses, screencasts, and video of students while completing the task. Results suggest that these students tended toward simplistic modes of evaluation in the face of increased cognitive load, though some moved toward a more critical stance and many applied basic metacognitive strategies. The study points to the importance of instructional approaches that teach students to flexibly apply evaluation criteria in ill-structured environments, that teach advanced metacognitive strategies, and that instill habits of mind for critical inquiry. Instruction that empowers students to practice healthy skepticism even in the face of authority is also essential.
Investigating Multitasking with TechnologyYangyan Dong
This document discusses research on multitasking with technology in academic settings. It explores how multitasking affects students' learning and retention of information. Some key findings from previous studies include: (1) true multitasking is impossible as the brain can only focus on one task at a time, (2) the amount of time spent on distracting tasks like phone/laptop use correlates with poorer retention of lecture material, (3) student motivation and boredom contribute to multitasking behaviors. The researchers aim to build on past work by developing a conceptual model of the factors that influence and are impacted by multitasking in the classroom, with a focus on the role of technology.
Barbara Truman presented on using immersive learning environments like virtual worlds for study abroad orientation. She discussed how they allow for non-threatening experiential learning, social experimentation, role play, and identity exploration to help prepare students culturally. Examples included using a virtual world to orient students to a short-term trip to Nicaragua or allowing international students to collaborate in a virtual case study. Truman suggested immersive environments could enrich orientation by allowing students to grasp foreign cultures through simulated interactions and experiences to better understand social norms and safety abroad.
Overdependence on Digital Technology by ChildrenNele Rieve
This document discusses overdependence on digital technology by children under age 12 and proposes an intervention called QT to promote healthy media consumption. It provides background on increasing technology access and usage among young children. While technology offers benefits, excessive early use is linked to physical, psychological, and developmental issues. The automatic thinking encouraged by fast-paced media disrupts concentration and comprehension. Parents are uncertain about risks due to limited experience but see educational benefits, and moderate usage through rules but struggle with implementation due to their own tech habits. The proposed QT intervention aims to inform parents to improve children's health, development, learning, and social skills.
This presentation identifies motivations for and myths about open educational resources. The presentation was shared for a workshop "Open Education for Collaboration, Flexibility, and Global Visibility", which I gave at University of Nairobi on August 27, 2013. All of the materials for the workshop are available at http://openmi.ch/uon-aug2013.
Internet use and its impact on secondary school students in chianCristopher Sodusta
This thesis investigates Internet addiction (IA) among Thai secondary school students. It employs a mixed methods approach including a Delphi technique, online survey, and interviews. The Delphi technique engaged Thai experts to develop a consensus definition of IA and diagnostic criteria. An online survey of 952 students in Chiang Mai assessed IA prevalence and impacts. Interviews with 30 students provided further understanding of IA. The study found a 3.7% prevalence of IA. Impacts included academic, physical and mental health, and relationship problems. The study contributes to the literature by generating an IA definition and criteria for Thai students as well as identifying intervention strategies.
THE VICES OF SOCIAL MEDIA ON STUDENTS SUCCESS AT THE ADAMAWA STATE POLYTECHNI...ijcsit
Social media and social networking web sites have continued to gain supremacy in determining the
student’s success in education. It captures the attention of students and their tutors over the years. A social
media network is only an electronic links amongst its users which turned out to be a habit for students,
youngsters,
and even the grown person. The influence of social media on students is alarming and doing more harm
than good. The aim of the paper is to analyze the vices of social media on the academic success of students
of Adamawa State Polytechnic, Yola. The survey method of research was adopted to achieve the objectives
of the study. Some research questions were presented to the respondents where the results revealed that so
many (96 percent of them) usually spent much time on the social networking sites than to their academics.
As such, the academic success of the students suffers setbacks which lead to poor performance in the
student’s academics. It is therefore recommended that the networking sites should be built in such a way to
support student’s educational activities in a positive way, as this will help in attracting the students to ge
This document discusses student use of Wikipedia for academic research. It notes that today's students have grown up with the internet and see it as their primary source of information. While Wikipedia provides easily accessible information, instructors and information professionals are concerned about students' ability to evaluate sources critically. The document reviews literature on student information behavior, the concerns of instructors, Wikipedia as a source, and how students use Wikipedia. It finds that students often feel frustrated by academic databases and gravitate towards familiar sources like Wikipedia and Google.
A study of sixth graders’ critical evaluation of Internet sourcesaj6785
This study was a descriptive, task-based analysis to determine how sixth-grade students approach the cognitive task of critically evaluating Internet sources. Pairs of sixth grade students in an Information Literacy course evaluated four preselected Internet sites to determine their credibility and appropriateness for two specific research scenarios. Data for analysis included written responses, screencasts, and video of students while completing the task. Results suggest that these students tended toward simplistic modes of evaluation in the face of increased cognitive load, though some moved toward a more critical stance and many applied basic metacognitive strategies. The study points to the importance of instructional approaches that teach students to flexibly apply evaluation criteria in ill-structured environments, that teach advanced metacognitive strategies, and that instill habits of mind for critical inquiry. Instruction that empowers students to practice healthy skepticism even in the face of authority is also essential.
Investigating Multitasking with TechnologyYangyan Dong
This document discusses research on multitasking with technology in academic settings. It explores how multitasking affects students' learning and retention of information. Some key findings from previous studies include: (1) true multitasking is impossible as the brain can only focus on one task at a time, (2) the amount of time spent on distracting tasks like phone/laptop use correlates with poorer retention of lecture material, (3) student motivation and boredom contribute to multitasking behaviors. The researchers aim to build on past work by developing a conceptual model of the factors that influence and are impacted by multitasking in the classroom, with a focus on the role of technology.
Barbara Truman presented on using immersive learning environments like virtual worlds for study abroad orientation. She discussed how they allow for non-threatening experiential learning, social experimentation, role play, and identity exploration to help prepare students culturally. Examples included using a virtual world to orient students to a short-term trip to Nicaragua or allowing international students to collaborate in a virtual case study. Truman suggested immersive environments could enrich orientation by allowing students to grasp foreign cultures through simulated interactions and experiences to better understand social norms and safety abroad.
Overdependence on Digital Technology by ChildrenNele Rieve
This document discusses overdependence on digital technology by children under age 12 and proposes an intervention called QT to promote healthy media consumption. It provides background on increasing technology access and usage among young children. While technology offers benefits, excessive early use is linked to physical, psychological, and developmental issues. The automatic thinking encouraged by fast-paced media disrupts concentration and comprehension. Parents are uncertain about risks due to limited experience but see educational benefits, and moderate usage through rules but struggle with implementation due to their own tech habits. The proposed QT intervention aims to inform parents to improve children's health, development, learning, and social skills.
This presentation identifies motivations for and myths about open educational resources. The presentation was shared for a workshop "Open Education for Collaboration, Flexibility, and Global Visibility", which I gave at University of Nairobi on August 27, 2013. All of the materials for the workshop are available at http://openmi.ch/uon-aug2013.
Internet use and its impact on secondary school students in chianCristopher Sodusta
This thesis investigates Internet addiction (IA) among Thai secondary school students. It employs a mixed methods approach including a Delphi technique, online survey, and interviews. The Delphi technique engaged Thai experts to develop a consensus definition of IA and diagnostic criteria. An online survey of 952 students in Chiang Mai assessed IA prevalence and impacts. Interviews with 30 students provided further understanding of IA. The study found a 3.7% prevalence of IA. Impacts included academic, physical and mental health, and relationship problems. The study contributes to the literature by generating an IA definition and criteria for Thai students as well as identifying intervention strategies.
THE VICES OF SOCIAL MEDIA ON STUDENTS SUCCESS AT THE ADAMAWA STATE POLYTECHNI...ijcsit
Social media and social networking web sites have continued to gain supremacy in determining the
student’s success in education. It captures the attention of students and their tutors over the years. A social
media network is only an electronic links amongst its users which turned out to be a habit for students,
youngsters,
and even the grown person. The influence of social media on students is alarming and doing more harm
than good. The aim of the paper is to analyze the vices of social media on the academic success of students
of Adamawa State Polytechnic, Yola. The survey method of research was adopted to achieve the objectives
of the study. Some research questions were presented to the respondents where the results revealed that so
many (96 percent of them) usually spent much time on the social networking sites than to their academics.
As such, the academic success of the students suffers setbacks which lead to poor performance in the
student’s academics. It is therefore recommended that the networking sites should be built in such a way to
support student’s educational activities in a positive way, as this will help in attracting the students to ge
This document contains an annotated bibliography by Yolonda Alston on the topic of how technology impacts education for youth versus older generations. It summarizes several sources that discuss how youth are more adapted to learning with technology like multimedia, are more engaged by visual learning styles, and that banning social media from education is counterproductive as it is essential for communicating with today's students. The sources argue that integrating technology into teaching can improve student performance and that educators need to adapt to digital learning styles.
This document summarizes a study conducted in a rural Costa Rican school that provided students with laptop computers. Key findings include:
1) Students gained technological fluency using the laptops to learn about various topics, rather than through separate technology classes.
2) "Whole project learning" engaged students in rich, collaborative projects integrating concepts from different subjects.
3) Some students created original media projects at home, showing the ability to independently learn and express ideas through technology.
The document discusses research on the impact of internet use on young students in Bangladesh. It provides context on the growth of internet usage globally and concerns about internet addiction. The literature review covers definitions of internet use and addiction, risk factors for young adults, and potential negative impacts of excessive usage including effects on interpersonal relationships, behavior, physical and psychological health, and academic performance. The purpose is to explore internet use impacts on Bangladeshi youth by reviewing existing global research on this topic.
If i upload it, will they come using lazy user theory to explain student use ...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study that examined student use of optional online learning resources based on the theory of lazy user behavior. The study surveyed 55 undergraduate business students about their perceptions and use of different online services like groupware and online courses. The results indicated that students' decisions about using administrative online services were strongly influenced by minimizing effort, but effort minimization was less of a factor for more learning-focused services. The findings provide insights into how students allocate effort across different online learning options.
The document discusses a proposed intervention to address overdependence on smart devices by children under age 12. It begins with an introduction outlining the purpose and structure. The background section reviews research showing risks of excessive technology use for young children and current parental and child perspectives/behaviors. From a behavioral economics lens, the document analyzes heuristics and biases that influence current behaviors, such as the availability heuristic, anchoring heuristic, status quo bias, and optimism bias. Key obstacles to changing behaviors are identified as overcoming the status quo bias and loss aversion. The discussion proposes addressing parental motives and developing solutions to promote healthy media consumption patterns for children's well-being.
District parent session on technology today and future 2011 feb 15Brian Kuhn
a session given to parents on current trends in technology used for learning and teaching, examples shared from classrooms through video, demos of powerful free learning tools, anticipation of the future, gathered feedback on a new idea Parent Spaces, etc.
The document describes a study on social media use by students in university library computer labs. The researcher conducted observations of 60+ students over three half-hour periods. They found that approximately 10% of students were engaged in social media activities like Facebook and Twitter while also doing schoolwork. To understand why, they interviewed students. The researcher believes social media could enhance education if incorporated properly. Their role changed from non-participant to someone who relates to students' behaviors and motives regarding social media use.
Tackling Assumptions and Expectations; Implementing Technology in Higher Education........................................ 1
Teri Taylor
The Virtual Management of Schools ................................................................................................................................. 14
Dr. Esteban Vázquez-Cano and Dr. Eloy López-Meneses
Course Contents Analysis of Students’ Academic Performance in Basic Electronics.................................................. 25
Aina Jacob Kola and Akintunde, Zacchaeus Taiwo
Modified Useful-Learning Approach: Effects on Students‘ Critical Thinking Skills and Attitude towards
Chemistry .............................................................................................................................................................................. 35
Arlyne C. Marasigan, Allen A. Espinosa
Effects of Music on the Spatial Reasoning Skills of Grade-One Pupils ......................................................................... 73
Desiree B. Castillo, Czarlene Kaye San Juan, Maria Robelle Tajanlangit, Irish Pauline Ereño, Maria Julia Serino, Catherine
Tayo and Allen A. Espinosa
Impact of Organizational Commitment and Employee Performance on the Employee Satisfaction ....................... 84
Naveed Ahmad, Nadeem Iqbal, Komal Javed and Naqvi Hamad
A Multivariate Analysis (MANOVA) of where Adult Learners Are in Higher Education ........................................ 93
Gail D. Caruth
Group Communication and Interaction in project-based Learning: The Use of Facebook in a Taiwanese EFL
Context ................................................................................................................................................................................. 108
Wan-Jeng Chang
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE USE OF BLACKBERRY WITH THE STUDENTS’ DEMAND FULF...csandit
The communication technology mainly Blackberry enables a medium to facilitate mediated
interpersonal communication because of its interactive ability. This aspect creates some
easiness. In the interpersonal communication keeping apart with a distance, the interactivity of
the convergent media has been over the potential ability of a feedback since a person accessing
a convergent medium directly gives a feedback of the message conveyed. Blackberry as a result
of an advanced technology development has been growing so fast in this life.
Based on the background and phenomenon mentioned, this research studied about “The
Relationship between The Use of Blackberry with The Demand Fulfillment and Personality of
The Junior High Students in Bandung.” The research was aimed at finding out: (1) the
correlation between ten intensity of blackberry use with the cognitive and affective fulfillment of
The Junior High School Students, (2) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use
with the Tense Release of The Junior High School Students, (3) the correlation between the
intensity of blackberry use with the Personal Integrative of The Junior High School Students;
(4) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use with the Socially Integrative of The
Junior High School Students; (5) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use with
the Confidence of The Junior High School Students; (6) the correlation between the intensity of
blackberry use with the Tolerance of The Junior High School Students; (7) the correlation
between the intensity of blackberry use with the Whole Fulfillment of The Junior High School
Students; (8) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use with the Personality as a
whole of The Junior High School Students
The research used a quantitative approach with the explanatory survey method. The Theories
used were: Cognitive Psychology, Technology Determinism, and Uses and Gratification . The
population of the research was The Junior High School students. By using random sampling
technique, it was taken 5 schools and 200 students as the sample. The data were taken through
questionnaires. The data obtained were analyzes by using the statistical test of correlation. The
results of the research were shown in the forms of Bar Chart.
This document discusses the negative effects of internet addiction among youth in India. It provides statistics showing high internet usage in India. It then discusses the neurobiological factors that can contribute to internet addiction, such as the role of dopamine in creating feelings of pleasure and addiction. Case studies are presented showing common physical, emotional, and social symptoms of internet addiction, such as depression, social isolation, and poor academic performance. Risk factors for youth include easy access to technology and lack of emotional support. The document analyzes how internet addiction can be linked to other psychiatric disorders and negatively impact brain development.
Impact of Social Media among Students’ Behaviors in Tertiary Institution of A...IJSRP Journal
The impact of social media among students behavior in tertiary institution has become worrisome. Social media is a means of connections among people in which they create, share, and exchange information and ideas in virtual communities and network. This craze for social media has led to a host of question regarding its impact among students behavior particularly in tertiary institution. This paper is set to study the impact of social media among students in tertiary institution in Adamawa State, Nigeria. A 5 likert scale questionnaire comprises of 19 questions was used as an instrument for data collection. 300 respondents sampled from 6 selected tertiary institutions in Adamawa State formed the population of the study. Descriptive statistics was used to analyze the data. The study revealed that social media has positive impact as well as negative impact on students behavior. The study further recommended that students need to be trained on better usage of social media so as to minimize its misused, School management should train and encourage students on how to use skype and other video conferencing tools to have discussion with lecturers and group members academically.
Issues of using ICTs in higher educationPaul Oliver
Presentation slides for "issues of using information communication technologies in higher education" presented by Paul Oliver and Emma Clayes (Perth College UHI) at the European Conference of Social Media (ECSM 2014).
This document summarizes a study that investigated parents' attitudes towards digital technology use in early childhood education in Croatia. A survey of 152 parents at a public kindergarten found that while parents are well equipped with digital devices at home, they feel anxious about allowing young children to use technology. The survey aimed to understand what children do with technology at home and whether parents are aware. The document also reviews literature on both the benefits and risks of early digital technology use, finding the research remains divided. It concludes that developmentally appropriate technology integration that meets children's needs can enhance learning if based on child development principles.
This document discusses a study on hospitality students' adoption of e-books during the COVID-19 pandemic from the perspective of a developing country. The study uses the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model to examine factors that influence hospitality students' behavioral intention to use e-books. A survey was conducted with 237 hospitality students in India. The results found that performance expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions positively impacted students' adoption of e-books during the pandemic when traditional library resources were unavailable. The study has implications for educational administrators, e-book publishers, and academic librarians in developing strategies to increase hospitality students' use of e-books.
This document summarizes a presentation on teaching 21st century learners. It discusses how today's students have grown up with technology and have different learning preferences than previous generations. These "digital natives" are used to multi-tasking, random access to information, and interactive learning. It suggests faculty incorporate more collaborative and experiential learning activities that engage students through multimedia. Technology can empower students by allowing them to learn more efficiently. However, faculty also need training to develop technology-rich courses that meet the needs and expectations of 21st century learners.
Technological expansion and the changing way individuals gain access to information has deeply impacted the structure of libraries – physically as well as conceptually. A new generation of digital services platforms for libraries is emerging, designed to provide a more comprehensive approach to the management and access to all formats of library materials. Despite the modernization of libraries and their adaption to the digital age, the library still hold a critical role within community to serve its users, continuing to be beacons of information sharing, learning, and entertainment even amidst tight fiscal times.As one of the leading university in Indonesia, Bogor Agricultural University Library must find solutions to new challenges, overhaul many of their entrenched business processes, and foster systems that engage students.This study examined the information seeking behavior of the digital native and digital immigrant students of Bogor Agricultural University, in order to remind the library that there are some changes happened in its users and to recommend the new services should be taken by the library. The similarities and differences in seeking information of those two group students were discussed.
The document summarizes research on the use of technology in the classroom and its impact on student learning. It discusses studies that have been conducted at various education levels, from elementary school through post-secondary education. While some studies found that technology improved student achievement, others found no significant impact or that proper teacher training is needed to effectively use technology. Overall, the research suggests that technology can aid student learning if implemented correctly with teacher training, but on its own may not enhance learning outcomes.
Communicating with Students: What Technologies Should You Use?David Compton
The document discusses communication technologies that should be used to reach students, particularly prospective college students aged 16-20. It analyzes print media, email, and digital/social media. While print was traditionally important, reading has declined significantly as students spend more time online. Email is widely used but has drawbacks like requiring prompt responses and potential for miscommunication. Digital media like social networks have become highly popular ways for students to get information, but content must be engaging to stand out. The best approach is a cross-platform strategy using multiple technologies.
The document discusses emerging technologies that will change education, including gesture recognition, electronic books, and semantic-aware applications. It describes how these technologies offer benefits like accommodating students with disabilities but also face challenges like high costs and issues with file formats and software compatibility. The document envisions a future where these interactive digital tools enhance learning by making it more natural, diverse, and accessible through 3D interfaces, virtual environments, and collaborative features, though care must be taken that interactive aspects are age-appropriate.
Se presenta los logros del la Red de Formación en el Sur respecto al Programa de Formación Superior en Enfermería publicado en la Revista de Gobierno y Políticas Públicas denominado
Se cree necesario enfocar la problemática de los RRHH en Salud, desde una perspectiva más integral, donde se pueda observar que los problemas de orden cuantitativo son efecto y no causa. Ya no basta encarar los recursos humanos como una mera administración del personal, es necesario visualizar la dimensión social del trabajo en salud, en un contexto social determinado. No se pueden realizar propuestas o concebir nuevas transformaciones para el sector, sin tener en cuenta el papel fundamental que juega el personal.
This document contains an annotated bibliography by Yolonda Alston on the topic of how technology impacts education for youth versus older generations. It summarizes several sources that discuss how youth are more adapted to learning with technology like multimedia, are more engaged by visual learning styles, and that banning social media from education is counterproductive as it is essential for communicating with today's students. The sources argue that integrating technology into teaching can improve student performance and that educators need to adapt to digital learning styles.
This document summarizes a study conducted in a rural Costa Rican school that provided students with laptop computers. Key findings include:
1) Students gained technological fluency using the laptops to learn about various topics, rather than through separate technology classes.
2) "Whole project learning" engaged students in rich, collaborative projects integrating concepts from different subjects.
3) Some students created original media projects at home, showing the ability to independently learn and express ideas through technology.
The document discusses research on the impact of internet use on young students in Bangladesh. It provides context on the growth of internet usage globally and concerns about internet addiction. The literature review covers definitions of internet use and addiction, risk factors for young adults, and potential negative impacts of excessive usage including effects on interpersonal relationships, behavior, physical and psychological health, and academic performance. The purpose is to explore internet use impacts on Bangladeshi youth by reviewing existing global research on this topic.
If i upload it, will they come using lazy user theory to explain student use ...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study that examined student use of optional online learning resources based on the theory of lazy user behavior. The study surveyed 55 undergraduate business students about their perceptions and use of different online services like groupware and online courses. The results indicated that students' decisions about using administrative online services were strongly influenced by minimizing effort, but effort minimization was less of a factor for more learning-focused services. The findings provide insights into how students allocate effort across different online learning options.
The document discusses a proposed intervention to address overdependence on smart devices by children under age 12. It begins with an introduction outlining the purpose and structure. The background section reviews research showing risks of excessive technology use for young children and current parental and child perspectives/behaviors. From a behavioral economics lens, the document analyzes heuristics and biases that influence current behaviors, such as the availability heuristic, anchoring heuristic, status quo bias, and optimism bias. Key obstacles to changing behaviors are identified as overcoming the status quo bias and loss aversion. The discussion proposes addressing parental motives and developing solutions to promote healthy media consumption patterns for children's well-being.
District parent session on technology today and future 2011 feb 15Brian Kuhn
a session given to parents on current trends in technology used for learning and teaching, examples shared from classrooms through video, demos of powerful free learning tools, anticipation of the future, gathered feedback on a new idea Parent Spaces, etc.
The document describes a study on social media use by students in university library computer labs. The researcher conducted observations of 60+ students over three half-hour periods. They found that approximately 10% of students were engaged in social media activities like Facebook and Twitter while also doing schoolwork. To understand why, they interviewed students. The researcher believes social media could enhance education if incorporated properly. Their role changed from non-participant to someone who relates to students' behaviors and motives regarding social media use.
Tackling Assumptions and Expectations; Implementing Technology in Higher Education........................................ 1
Teri Taylor
The Virtual Management of Schools ................................................................................................................................. 14
Dr. Esteban Vázquez-Cano and Dr. Eloy López-Meneses
Course Contents Analysis of Students’ Academic Performance in Basic Electronics.................................................. 25
Aina Jacob Kola and Akintunde, Zacchaeus Taiwo
Modified Useful-Learning Approach: Effects on Students‘ Critical Thinking Skills and Attitude towards
Chemistry .............................................................................................................................................................................. 35
Arlyne C. Marasigan, Allen A. Espinosa
Effects of Music on the Spatial Reasoning Skills of Grade-One Pupils ......................................................................... 73
Desiree B. Castillo, Czarlene Kaye San Juan, Maria Robelle Tajanlangit, Irish Pauline Ereño, Maria Julia Serino, Catherine
Tayo and Allen A. Espinosa
Impact of Organizational Commitment and Employee Performance on the Employee Satisfaction ....................... 84
Naveed Ahmad, Nadeem Iqbal, Komal Javed and Naqvi Hamad
A Multivariate Analysis (MANOVA) of where Adult Learners Are in Higher Education ........................................ 93
Gail D. Caruth
Group Communication and Interaction in project-based Learning: The Use of Facebook in a Taiwanese EFL
Context ................................................................................................................................................................................. 108
Wan-Jeng Chang
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE USE OF BLACKBERRY WITH THE STUDENTS’ DEMAND FULF...csandit
The communication technology mainly Blackberry enables a medium to facilitate mediated
interpersonal communication because of its interactive ability. This aspect creates some
easiness. In the interpersonal communication keeping apart with a distance, the interactivity of
the convergent media has been over the potential ability of a feedback since a person accessing
a convergent medium directly gives a feedback of the message conveyed. Blackberry as a result
of an advanced technology development has been growing so fast in this life.
Based on the background and phenomenon mentioned, this research studied about “The
Relationship between The Use of Blackberry with The Demand Fulfillment and Personality of
The Junior High Students in Bandung.” The research was aimed at finding out: (1) the
correlation between ten intensity of blackberry use with the cognitive and affective fulfillment of
The Junior High School Students, (2) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use
with the Tense Release of The Junior High School Students, (3) the correlation between the
intensity of blackberry use with the Personal Integrative of The Junior High School Students;
(4) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use with the Socially Integrative of The
Junior High School Students; (5) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use with
the Confidence of The Junior High School Students; (6) the correlation between the intensity of
blackberry use with the Tolerance of The Junior High School Students; (7) the correlation
between the intensity of blackberry use with the Whole Fulfillment of The Junior High School
Students; (8) the correlation between the intensity of blackberry use with the Personality as a
whole of The Junior High School Students
The research used a quantitative approach with the explanatory survey method. The Theories
used were: Cognitive Psychology, Technology Determinism, and Uses and Gratification . The
population of the research was The Junior High School students. By using random sampling
technique, it was taken 5 schools and 200 students as the sample. The data were taken through
questionnaires. The data obtained were analyzes by using the statistical test of correlation. The
results of the research were shown in the forms of Bar Chart.
This document discusses the negative effects of internet addiction among youth in India. It provides statistics showing high internet usage in India. It then discusses the neurobiological factors that can contribute to internet addiction, such as the role of dopamine in creating feelings of pleasure and addiction. Case studies are presented showing common physical, emotional, and social symptoms of internet addiction, such as depression, social isolation, and poor academic performance. Risk factors for youth include easy access to technology and lack of emotional support. The document analyzes how internet addiction can be linked to other psychiatric disorders and negatively impact brain development.
Impact of Social Media among Students’ Behaviors in Tertiary Institution of A...IJSRP Journal
The impact of social media among students behavior in tertiary institution has become worrisome. Social media is a means of connections among people in which they create, share, and exchange information and ideas in virtual communities and network. This craze for social media has led to a host of question regarding its impact among students behavior particularly in tertiary institution. This paper is set to study the impact of social media among students in tertiary institution in Adamawa State, Nigeria. A 5 likert scale questionnaire comprises of 19 questions was used as an instrument for data collection. 300 respondents sampled from 6 selected tertiary institutions in Adamawa State formed the population of the study. Descriptive statistics was used to analyze the data. The study revealed that social media has positive impact as well as negative impact on students behavior. The study further recommended that students need to be trained on better usage of social media so as to minimize its misused, School management should train and encourage students on how to use skype and other video conferencing tools to have discussion with lecturers and group members academically.
Issues of using ICTs in higher educationPaul Oliver
Presentation slides for "issues of using information communication technologies in higher education" presented by Paul Oliver and Emma Clayes (Perth College UHI) at the European Conference of Social Media (ECSM 2014).
This document summarizes a study that investigated parents' attitudes towards digital technology use in early childhood education in Croatia. A survey of 152 parents at a public kindergarten found that while parents are well equipped with digital devices at home, they feel anxious about allowing young children to use technology. The survey aimed to understand what children do with technology at home and whether parents are aware. The document also reviews literature on both the benefits and risks of early digital technology use, finding the research remains divided. It concludes that developmentally appropriate technology integration that meets children's needs can enhance learning if based on child development principles.
This document discusses a study on hospitality students' adoption of e-books during the COVID-19 pandemic from the perspective of a developing country. The study uses the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) model to examine factors that influence hospitality students' behavioral intention to use e-books. A survey was conducted with 237 hospitality students in India. The results found that performance expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions positively impacted students' adoption of e-books during the pandemic when traditional library resources were unavailable. The study has implications for educational administrators, e-book publishers, and academic librarians in developing strategies to increase hospitality students' use of e-books.
This document summarizes a presentation on teaching 21st century learners. It discusses how today's students have grown up with technology and have different learning preferences than previous generations. These "digital natives" are used to multi-tasking, random access to information, and interactive learning. It suggests faculty incorporate more collaborative and experiential learning activities that engage students through multimedia. Technology can empower students by allowing them to learn more efficiently. However, faculty also need training to develop technology-rich courses that meet the needs and expectations of 21st century learners.
Technological expansion and the changing way individuals gain access to information has deeply impacted the structure of libraries – physically as well as conceptually. A new generation of digital services platforms for libraries is emerging, designed to provide a more comprehensive approach to the management and access to all formats of library materials. Despite the modernization of libraries and their adaption to the digital age, the library still hold a critical role within community to serve its users, continuing to be beacons of information sharing, learning, and entertainment even amidst tight fiscal times.As one of the leading university in Indonesia, Bogor Agricultural University Library must find solutions to new challenges, overhaul many of their entrenched business processes, and foster systems that engage students.This study examined the information seeking behavior of the digital native and digital immigrant students of Bogor Agricultural University, in order to remind the library that there are some changes happened in its users and to recommend the new services should be taken by the library. The similarities and differences in seeking information of those two group students were discussed.
The document summarizes research on the use of technology in the classroom and its impact on student learning. It discusses studies that have been conducted at various education levels, from elementary school through post-secondary education. While some studies found that technology improved student achievement, others found no significant impact or that proper teacher training is needed to effectively use technology. Overall, the research suggests that technology can aid student learning if implemented correctly with teacher training, but on its own may not enhance learning outcomes.
Communicating with Students: What Technologies Should You Use?David Compton
The document discusses communication technologies that should be used to reach students, particularly prospective college students aged 16-20. It analyzes print media, email, and digital/social media. While print was traditionally important, reading has declined significantly as students spend more time online. Email is widely used but has drawbacks like requiring prompt responses and potential for miscommunication. Digital media like social networks have become highly popular ways for students to get information, but content must be engaging to stand out. The best approach is a cross-platform strategy using multiple technologies.
The document discusses emerging technologies that will change education, including gesture recognition, electronic books, and semantic-aware applications. It describes how these technologies offer benefits like accommodating students with disabilities but also face challenges like high costs and issues with file formats and software compatibility. The document envisions a future where these interactive digital tools enhance learning by making it more natural, diverse, and accessible through 3D interfaces, virtual environments, and collaborative features, though care must be taken that interactive aspects are age-appropriate.
Se presenta los logros del la Red de Formación en el Sur respecto al Programa de Formación Superior en Enfermería publicado en la Revista de Gobierno y Políticas Públicas denominado
Se cree necesario enfocar la problemática de los RRHH en Salud, desde una perspectiva más integral, donde se pueda observar que los problemas de orden cuantitativo son efecto y no causa. Ya no basta encarar los recursos humanos como una mera administración del personal, es necesario visualizar la dimensión social del trabajo en salud, en un contexto social determinado. No se pueden realizar propuestas o concebir nuevas transformaciones para el sector, sin tener en cuenta el papel fundamental que juega el personal.
Aerowire is Alabama's largest provider of wireless high-speed internet access. It utilizes licensed-exempt radio spectrum to rapidly deploy scalable and secure wireless networks for residential and business customers. Its deployment strategy focuses on targeted areas and adding additional access points as needed, making it a highly capital efficient option compared to alternatives like copper, fiber, cable or DSL.
NLP Presuppositions are success principles of life that can be applied as it is. Application of these principles in life changing.
For info log on to www.healthlibrary.com. Success Principles of Life By Ms. Paulomi Pandit held on 18 Nov 2015.
What have you learnt about technologies from the process of contrusting q6damsofficial_
Damilola Lawson learned several new technologies while constructing a thriller opening project, including Final Cut Pro, Soundtrack Pro, Quark, and video cameras. Final Cut Pro was used to edit video clips together, Soundtrack Pro to add music and sounds, and Quark to create a digital storyboard. Health and safety training was also required to properly operate the video cameras used for filming.
Con el objeto de cumplimentar con los requisitos planteados en el Trabajo no presencial de la Cátedra de Epidemiología y Demografía se realizó una búsqueda de los indicadores demográficos, socioeconómicos, de mortalidad y servicios de Chile y Paraguay ya que son dos de los que presentan posiciones extremas (favorable y desfavorable), tal cual lo solicitado en la consigna de trabajo.
Chemotherapy of sexually transmitted diseasesChinmay Hegde
This document discusses the treatment of sexually transmitted diseases syphilis and gonorrhea. For syphilis, it recommends penicillin as the primary treatment for early syphilis, with doxycycline or erythromycin as alternatives for those allergic to penicillin. For late or neurosyphilis, it recommends longer courses of penicillin. For gonorrhea, it recommends various antibiotics that can be administered either as a single dose or short course, including penicillin, cephalosporins, fluoroquinolones, and spectinomycin. It also provides treatment guidelines for complicated gonorrhea cases involving pelvic inflammatory disease.
El documento habla sobre los colores utilizados en las señales de seguridad y las alertas meteorológicas para huracanes. Explica que el verde significa emergencia segura, amarillo precaución de riesgo, rojo alto peligro y blanco información. También describe los cuatro niveles de alerta para huracanes representados por colores: verde sin riesgo, amarillo atención, naranja riesgo importante y rojo extremo peligro. Sin embargo, en algunos países el rojo se está sustituyendo por la alert
The document discusses aura meditation as a way to gain self-awareness and release blocks. It describes interpreting aura colors and their meanings related to emotions. Different aura shapes are outlined like the fuzzy aura, aura wall, and spiky aura which relate to boundaries and defense mechanisms. The seven chakras are also briefly mentioned along with thanks to Josh creations.
Revenue Statistics in Africa: First editionOECDtax
The document provides an overview and analysis of revenue statistics from eight African countries. It finds that tax-to-GDP ratios have generally increased since 2000, driven primarily by growth in income taxes and VAT. Consumption taxes remain the dominant form of taxation across countries. Non-tax revenues, which include natural resource royalties and grants, contribute more significantly to the budgets of lower-income countries. The report aims to establish a standardized dataset on African government revenues for comparative analysis and policymaking.
Experimental and Modeling Column Study of Phosphorus Removal by Permeable Rea...Agriculture Journal IJOEAR
Abstract— This study evaluates the performance of permeable reactive materials for phosphorus removal from water by experimental and model development. A one dimensional solute transport model that describes adsorption process in porous media by mass transfer equation and surface area reduction was developed. Validity of the model was evaluated using several data sets from batch and column experiments. The marble dust, standard sand and volcanic ash were utilized as permeable reactive barriers and porous materials inside packed columns in this research. It was found that the calcium (Ca) content was the most important characteristic of the permeable reactive materials and a factor determining their phosphorus removal efficiency. A high Ca content material showed higher removal capacity of phosphorus. The results of this study demonstrated that the marble dust sorbent has a high efficiency to remove phosphorus from aqueous solution. Comparing the performances of three packed columns filled up with different combinations of the three investigated materials, the differences in permeability played an important role in the treatment residence time and its ensuing effect on the removal efficiencies of phosphorus from water. A combination of 70% marble dust and 30% volcanic ash (as porous packed layers in one column) made a reasonable compromise between high steady phosphorus removal efficiency (~80%) and longevity (over 180 days). A suggestion/recommendation in conclusion was proposed based on these results.
General overview of the active labour market policies in Catalonia, explaining with a little bit more of detail one of our best practice, the Youth Guarantee program (Programa de Garantia Juvenil)
Indispensables, con un diseño mínimo, las taquillas Lockers se diseñaron para ambientes de trabajo y domésticos. Perfectos en los centros de bienestar y de deporte, en los lugares de trabajo, en las escuelas y en los centros de salud, se distinguen por su robustez, su elevada funcionalidad y sus diferentes posibilidades de empleo. Infinitos estantes, anillos y contenedores útiles para proteger, guardar y conservar.
PositiveNegative· Can increase social interaction for those wh.docxChantellPantoja184
Positive
Negative
· Can increase social interaction for those who have trouble creating relationships with humans (for mental, physical, or circumstantial reasons): discussed in Brown, Turkle
· Make our lives easier/ more convenient: discussed in Diana, Brown, Sharkey
· Can perform jobs/ activities that are considered unsafe for humans: Discussed in Sharkey, Brown
· Can decrease social interaction and cause people to lose touch with human relationships: discussed in Sharkey, Turkle
· Lead us to rely too much on technology. Humans are almost unable to function without technology: discussed in Turkle, Brown, Diana
· Create safety concerns (physical, mental, privacy): discussed in Brown, Diana, Sharkey
We have read four different perspectives on the issue of the development of robotics. Some people believe that the use of robotics is positively advancing our society. Others contend that such developments are changing society negatively. What is your position on this issue? Is the development of robotics helpful or harmful?
You can draw from all perspectives to make a statement about the development of robotics in general, e.g. The development of robotics has negative effects on society, or make a claim that focuses on specific types/uses of robots, e.g. “While the development of human-controlled robotic devices has the potential to make our lives more convenient and entertaining, the development of autonomous robots poses serious risks and must be stopped”, or you can align yourself with the claims of one of the four texts. Either way, your comments and suggestions need to be supported with examples from the texts.
Multitasking: A Poor Study Habit
Noelle Alberto
A recent National Public Radio program described the study habits of a modern teenager, Zach Weinberg of Chevy Chase, Maryland. On a typical evening, he worked on French homework while visiting his e-mail and Facebook, listening to iTunes, messaging a friend, and playing an online word puzzle. According to the story, Zach is a successful student, but many studies of multitasking suggest that he could be better if he focused on one thing at a time. While human beings are capable of doing two things at once if one of those things does not require much attention, like driving and drinking your morning coffee, there are some things that require a single focus, like school work. Multitasking between studies and recreational technology is not an effective way to study because multitasking wastes time, wastes money, damages student’s ability to learn, and prevents students from learning how to pay attention to one thing at a time.
One misconception that students may have about their multitasking is that they are saving time. One student named Mike Lutz, for example, claims that he gets much more work done when he multitasks (as cited in Hamilton, 2008). Some say that they feel they get more done in a shorter amount of time, but they are actually not doing two things at once. They are s.
The document discusses the history of women's status and role in Indian society. It mentions that women philosophers like Gargi and Maetri were respected in ancient Vedic times, showing that a tradition of women pursuing education and intellectual roles existed in India from early on. This tradition continued with poet-saints like the Andals, Akka Mahadevis, and Meera. The document argues this tradition helped pave the way for later influential women in Indian history and culture like Rani Jhansi, Rani Padmini, and Indira Gandhi. It notes feminist scholars are now more interested in studying this aspect of ancient Indian society which allowed more liberal roles and power for women compared to western cultures at the
The document is a research proposal examining the impact of social networking sites on the academic performance of adolescents. It includes an introduction outlining the research problem, literature review on relevant topics, research design using questionnaires and interviews of a sample of local adolescents, and a proposed presentation of findings and data analysis. The research aims to evaluate the negative impact of social media usage on academics, determine influencing factors for student participation, and identify measures to reduce time spent on social networking sites.
For German Philosopher Martin Heidegger, “To be a work means to set up a world , and holds truth: Truth, as the
clearing and concealing of beings, happens in being composed.” Taking an adult-centered online course as “the
work” and a metaphor for a constructed world, the author uses an interdisciplinary approach to discuss the development of adults as learners.
Presented at the Jean Piaget Society for the Study of Knowledge & Development 37th Annual Meeting, Amsterdam
31 May–2 June, 2007
Benefits Of Using Mobile Technology In The ClassroomLucy Nader
Here are a few key points about integrating instructional technology:
- Technology should enhance learning objectives, not replace the teacher. It is a tool to help facilitate learning, not the primary means of instruction.
- When used effectively, technology can help engage students and appeal to multiple learning styles. It allows for more interactive, hands-on activities.
- Teachers need proper training on the pedagogical uses of various technologies. Simply having the technology is not enough - it needs to be integrated strategically.
- Not all subjects or lessons are enhanced by technology. Teachers should be selective in its use and thoughtfully plan how it contributes to the learning goals.
- Equity issues need consideration. Not all students
This document contains an annotated bibliography by Yolonda Alston on the topic of how technology impacts education for youth versus older generations. It summarizes 5 sources that discuss how youth are more adapted to using technology like social media and multimedia in the classroom compared to older generations. The sources describe ways that integrating technology into lessons can help engage students and enhance their learning compared to traditional lecture-based methods.
Running Head VYGOSTKY’S THEORY 1VYGOSTKY’S THEORY 2.docxtoltonkendal
Running Head: VYGOSTKY’S THEORY
1
VYGOSTKY’S THEORY
2
The Vygotskian Framework
Name
Institution
Course
Instructor
Date
Introduction
Vygostky is best known as an education psychologist with socio-cultural theory. According to his theory, social interaction leads continuous changes in children’s thought and behavior that are different in different cultures. He suggests three ways that cultural tool can be transferred which includes; imitative learning, instructed learning, and collaborative learning (Harris & Schroeder, 2013).
Basic Elements underlying the Vygotskian Framework
To implement socio-cultural theory basic underlying principles assist in its development. One of these elements is that children construct their knowledge. This involves the practice where children speak to themselves planning and guiding their own behavior. Preschoolers are mostly in this category since they have not learnt proper social skills and therefore result to having a private speech to help in accomplishing tasks (Hallam, Mani, & Lee, 2011). The second element is that development cannot be separated from its social context. This Suggest that children are more socialized in the dominant culture and this lay their foundation in development. The third element is that learning can lead development and the fourth is that language plays a central role in mental development. Following this process of socialization in the dominant culture induces cognitive development (Ballard & Butler, 2011).
My personal experience depicts that Language plays a central role in mental development. After birth I belonged to our culture where before I joined school I got the primary socialization. However, the first thing I mastered was my cultural language which equipped me with the capability to know the norms and values in my society. I later joined school where language was necessary for communication and learning process. My maturation has been as a result of my education which has made me who I am. I could not have done anything without support from my parents and teachers. These wonderful people in my life instilled knowledge, skills and understanding that lacked in me. I have developed higher mental function which involves ability to plan, evaluate, memorize and reason.
Socio-cultural Theory Revolutions
Vygotsky theory was based on a truly scientific psychology which could aid in the revolutionary transformation of society and help in exposing the capitalist’s myth. The theory realized that a scientific understanding would first require a scientific theory of human society. The prevailing ideas in the time of the theory were that human psychology originates in the isolated individuals. However, there is a scientific alternative that progressives can advance. Alexander Luria seemed surprised that the science of psychology has avoided the idea that many mental processes are social and historical in origin and that important manifestations of human consciousness have ...
Running head STUDENTS DEPENDENCE ON PERSONAL DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY 1.docxtoltonkendal
Running head: STUDENTS DEPENDENCE ON PERSONAL DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY 1
STUDENTS DEPENDENCE ON PERSONAL DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY 2
Students Are Harmed By Their Dependence on Personal Digital Technology
December 2, 2016
WALSH, K. (2012, June 20). Pros and cons of digital devices in the hands of young students. Retrieved from EmergingEd Tech: http://www.emergingedtech.com/2012/06/pros-and-cons-of-digital-devices-in-the-hands-of-young-students/ In her article, “Pros and cons of digital devices in the hands of young students” Walsh, (2012) evaluates the various advantages as well as disadvantages that accrue from students’ use of technology devices. Walsh expresses her worry concerning the extent to which students are using computers tablets among other devices. Even though she agrees that the devices have their advantages, wash still maintains that the devices, have numerous distractors and they may also expose the students to inappropriate content. Moreover, she argues that the digital technology also exposes the students to some health issues.
Mateo, S. (2911, June 1). Digital Dependence of Today's College Students Revealed in New Study from CourseSmart. Retrieved from PR Newswire: http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/digital-dependence-of-todays-college-students-revealed-in-new-study-from-coursesmart-122935548.html
Mateo, (2011) compiled the research findings of research concerning the dependence of college students on digital devices. The research had been carried out by Coursemart. The findings reveal that students are wholly dependent on digital devices these days. In fact, 98% of the students that participated in the survey had digital devices (Mateo, 2011).
Straumsheim, C. (2016, January 26). Digital Distractions. Retrieved from Inside Higher Ed: https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2016/01/26/study-use-devices-class-nonclass-purposes-rise
The article, “digital distraction” by Straumsheim, (2016) discusses the consequences of the overdependence of students on digital devices. Straumsheim, (2016) reports that the average student uses the digital devices for non-educational purposes. Moreover, the students sometimes use the devices, during class. Such behavior derails their concentration and in fact, harms their grades. As such, Straumsheim, (2016) report’s that the students, end up not paying attention in class, losing grade points, missing instructions, destructing others and also getting called out by their instructor.
Hatch, K. E. (2011). Determining the Effects of Technology on Children. Retrieved from [email protected]:http://digitalcommons.uri.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1212&context=srhonorsprog
Hatch, (2011) analyses the negative as well as the positive sides of technology to children. She argues that even though digital media has its advantages to children, it also has numerous cons.as such, the research reports that the dependence on digital media has health adversities, on the students and it also changes their ...
This document discusses the role of technology in modern education. It argues that technology should be embraced and incorporated into classrooms rather than feared or rejected. Today's students, known as "digital natives," have grown up with technology and rely on it for learning and entertainment. Incorporating technology into lessons can help engage students and improve educational outcomes. While some argue that traditional literature and learning styles should take priority, the document asserts that education must adapt to how current students live and learn to be effective.
Running head STUDENTS AND TECHNOLOGYTHE HARMFUL EFFECTS .docxtoltonkendal
This paper discusses the harmful effects of personal technology overuse on students. It argues that students' overdependence on devices adversely impacts their social skills, education performance, and quality of schoolwork. It also claims technology exposes students to social dangers like obesity, suicidal thoughts, and criminal activities. However, the paper acknowledges technology has enhanced education by providing a variety of resources. It concludes that teachers, parents, and students must work together to monitor technology use and avoid its negative consequences.
This document is a research report submitted by Rijan Upadhyay, a third year student at Kathmandu University School of Arts. The report examines the impact of social networking site usage on KUSOA students. A questionnaire was administered to 30 randomly selected students between ages 19-26.
The findings show that Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube are the most used social media sites, consuming 2-4 hours per day on average. Entertainment was reported as the main purpose of usage by 47% of students. Over 70% of students have used social media for 5+ years. 53% of students agreed that social media has negatively impacted their grades or performance. 16% reported being victims of cybercrimes like password
1. Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2474338
Legal Studies Research Paper Series
Research Paper 14-23
July 30, 2014
The Cure for the Distracted Mind: Why Law Schools Should
Teach Mindfulness
Shailini Jandial George
Professor of Legal Writing, Suffolk University Law School
This paper can be downloaded without charge from the Social Science
Research Network: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2474338
2. Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2474338
THE CURE FOR THE DISTRACTED MIND:
WHY LAW SCHOOLS SHOULD TEACH MINDFULNESS
Shailini Jandial George1
INTRODUCTION
Ian the intern is working on answers to interrogatories. The
supervising attorney asked him to get these done as soon as possible. This
particular attorney makes him nervous, in fact, Ian gets a stomachache
whenever the attorney comes into his cubicle. The attorney has never been
happy with anything Ian has done. Ian is not sure if what the attorney
wants him to say is accurate and he does not know what to do. No law
school class prepared him for this! Ian spins the answer around and
around, when ding!: he receives a text message from his roommate
reminding him to upload his resume to the law school career center for an
upcoming interview. He logs in and sees two rejection letters from the last
interviews. His heart sinks. How will he repay his loans without a high
paying job? Then he notices an email from the attorney, subject: “are you
done yet????” and the stomachache is back. He knows his supervisor
won’t be happy. He glances down at the clock. Half an hour has passed
and he hasn’t even finished one interrogatory answer. He can’t bill the
client for this! Why can’t he concentrate?
This scenario illustrates the intersection of two phenomena affecting law
students and lawyers today: the constant state of distraction in which we
operate and the failure of the traditional law school format to adequately
address skills, ethics, and professionalism. By offering instruction in
mindfulness, law schools can better equip their students to face these two
challenges. If Ian had learned mindfulness techniques allowing him to
focus, concentrate, and deal with this stress and anxiety, he may have
avoided this scenario.
Building on scientific evidence that mindfulness meditation can improve
attention, learning, working memory capacity, academic achievement,
empathy, self-compassion, and creativity, and that it can reduce stress and
1
Professor of Legal Writing, Suffolk University Law School, Boston, Massachusetts.
I would like to thank Suffolk University Law School for encouraging and supporting my
work. I am thankful to have had the help of law librarian Diane D’Angelo, and my
extremely capable research assistant, Christina P. Mott. I am also grateful to my colleague,
Gabriel Tenninbaum, for his input on the content of this article.
3. Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2474338
2 [30-Jul-14
anxiety, this article proposes that mindfulness should be an essential
element in law school curriculum. Part I discusses how distractedness has
impacted attention and learning. Part II describes the last decade of
research showing the cognitive and physical benefits of mindfulness. Part
III discusses the critique of the traditional law school format and advocates
that law schools should follow medicine and industry in using mindfulness
training to address these issues.
I. DISTRACTION NEGATIVELY IMPACTS ATTENTION AND LEARNING.
Today’s students operate in a state of distractedness.2
Many have
blamed the combination of multitasking and the widespread use of digital
devices.3
As “digital natives,” today’s law students have grown up on the
Internet and most have been using computers since before they entered
elementary school.4
In addition to computers, they use many other types of
digital devices, such as smartphones and tablets, often simultaneously.5
2
See Claudia Wallis, genM: The Multitasking Generation, TIME, Mar. 27, 2006,
available at http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1174696,00.html
(observing new levels of multiprocessing among younger generations); see also Shailini
Jandial George, Teaching the Smartphone Generation: How Cognitive Science Can
Improve Learning In Law School, 66 ME. L. REV. 164, 164-71 (2013) (examining
characteristics of current multitasking law students) .
3
Adam Gorlick, The Mental Price of Multitasking, STAN. REP., AUG. 24, 2009,
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2009/august24/multitask-research-study-082409.html
(reporting “heavy media multitaskers are paying a big mental price. ‘They’re suckers for
irrelevancy’”) (internal citation omitted); Eyal Ophir, Clifford Nass, and Anthony D.
Wagner, Cognitive Control in Media Multitaskers, 106 PROC. NAT’L ACAD. SCI. U.S.
15583 (Sept. 15, 2009), http://www.pnas.org/content/106/37/15583.full.pdf+html?sid=890
d90dd-1faf-4edb-98f7-62ef2beffb5e (examining relationship between chronic media
multitasking and cognitive control abilities); Marc Parry, You’re Distracted. This Professor
Can Help, Chron. Higher Educ., Mar. 24, 2013, http://chronicle.com/article/Youre-
Distracted-This/138079/ (cautioning classroom multitasking causes students’ failure to
learn).
4
See Joan Catherine Bohl, Generations X and Y in Law School: Practical Strategies
for Teaching the “MTV/Google” Generation, 54 LOY. L. REV. 775, 779 (2008) (relaying
that 20% of today’s law students started using computers at age five). “Digital natives” are
masters of technology, simultaneously learning the language of computers with English.
See id. at 776.
5
See George, supra note 2, at 170-71 (describing Millenials as multitasking
generation, using numerous technology forms at same time); Gorlick, supra note 3 (noting
“[h]igh tech jugglers are everywhere—keeping up several e-mail and instant message
conversations at once, text messaging while watching television and jumping from one
website to another while plowing through homework assignments.”); Bernard McCoy,
Digital Distractions in the Classroom: Student Classroom Use of Digital Devices for Non-
Class Related Purposes, FAC. PUBLICATIONS, C. JOURNALISM & MASS COMM. (Sept. 1,
2013), http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1070&context=journalis
4. 30-Jul-14] 3
This use of technology often carries over to the classroom.6
While
student use of these devices allows for access to information, “research
shows their use is causing more classroom learning distractions.”7
Nearly
100% of college graduate and undergraduate students have access to the
Internet during class, and many are using that access.8
Many teachers
believe that “constant use of digital technology hampered their student’s
attention spans and ability to persevere in the face of challenging
tasks…[and that] digital technologies did more to distract students than to
help them academically.”9
All of this technology leads students to try to perform many activities at
the same time, and their attention becomes divided.10
In an academic
setting, [d]ivision of attention can have deleterious effects on student
performance.”11
Students often believe they are master multitaskers.12
Research shows, however, that “heavy media multitaskers . . . [are] suckers
for irrelevancy . . . [because] everything distracts them.”13
While many
think they can simultaneously attend to many things at once, research shows
this is not true.14
Rather than simultaneously processing all the information,
mfacpub (analyzing learning effects of today’s students using laptops, tablets, smartphones
while in classroom).
6
See McCoy, supra note 5.
7
Id.
8
McCoy, supra note 5 (citing AARON SMITH, LEE RAINIE & KATHRYN ZICKUHR, PEW
INTERNET & AMERICAN LIFE PROJECT, COLLEGE STUDENTS AND TECHNOLOGY, (July 19,
2011), http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2011/College-students-and-technology/Report.
aspx).
9
McCoy, supra note 5 (citing KRISTEN PURCELL ET AL., , PEW INTERNET AND
AMERICAN LIFE PROJECT, HOW TEENS DO RESEARCH IN THE DIGITAL WORLD (Nov. 1,
2012), http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2012/Student-Research/Main-Report/Part-
1.aspx).
10
See Shauna L. Shapiro, Kirk Warren Brown & John A. Astin, Toward the Integration
of Meditation into Higher Education: A Review of Research, CENTER FOR
CONTEMPLATIVE MIND IN SOCIETY 1, 9-10 (Oct. 2008), http://www.contemplativemind.
org/admin/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/MedandHigher Ed.pdf.
11
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 10 (reporting presence of even one secondary task
caused rote learning) (citing Karin Foerde, Barbara J. Knowlton & Russell A. Poldrack,
Modulation of Competing Memory Systems By Distraction, 103 PROC. NAT’L ACAD. SCI.
U.S. 11778 (Aug. 1, 2006), http://www.pnas.org/content/103/31/11778.full).
12
Parry, supra note 3 (discussing student tendencies to “flit among Words with
Friends, email, Words with Friends, Spotify, Words with Friends, and [a] goofy video of a
cat rolling up against a sake bottle” and that “[s]ome are disturbed to observe that they got
so distracted they forgot to work on the main task they had set out to accomplish, like
reading an article”).
13
See Gorlick, supra note 3.
14
James Hamblin, Study: Meditation Improves Memory, Attention, THE ATLANTIC
5. 4 [30-Jul-14
the brain actually toggles among tasks, “leaking a little mental efficiency
with every switch.”15
There is concern, in particular, about the effect this
multitasking is having on students and “feeding worries that widespread
multitasking practices are comprising learning and attention.”16
In fact,
experts say, “the cost of classroom multitasking can be a failure to learn.”17
Learning theorists agree that this divided attention detracts from the
ability to learn. “Attention is critically important to the mental processing
central to learning.”18
Simply put, adults learn by paying attention,
processing information, and using it.19
Learning involves a complicated
(June 11, 2013) (ruminating “the internet is probably destroying our attention spans and
working memories, but companies still want employees who are able to ‘focus’”); see
Interview by FrontLine, digital nation with Clifford Nass, founder and director of
Communication between Humans and Interactive Media (CHIMe) Lab and professor,
Stanford University (Feb. 2, 2010), available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/
digitalnation/interviews/nass.html (responding “in general, no, our brain can't do two things
at once”).
[W]e all bet high multitaskers were going to be stars at something. . .
[w]e were absolutely shocked. We all lost our bets. It turns out
multitaskers are terrible at every aspect of multitasking. They’re terrible
at ignoring irrelevant information; they’re terrible at keeping information
in their head nicely and neatly organized; and they’re terrible at
switching from one task to another. One would think that, if people were
bad at multitasking, they would stop. However, when we talk with
multitaskers, they seem to think they’re great at it and seem totally
unfazed and totally able to do more and more and more.
Id.
15
See George, supra note 2, at 171 (quoting Sam Anderson, In Defense of Distraction,
N. Y. MAG., May 17, 2009, available at http://nymag.com/news/features/56793
(describing how the brain processes different information types on separate “channels”);
Maria Konnikova, The Power of Concentration, N.Y. TIMES, Dec. 16, 2012, at SR8,
available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/opinion/sunday/the-power-ofconcent
ration.html?_r=0 (discussing why shifting attention from task to task sacrifices the quality
of attention); see also David M. Levy, et al., The Effects of Mindfulness Meditation
Training on Multitasking in a High-Stress Information Environment, GRAPHICS INTERFACE
2012, at 45 (May 28, 2012), available at http://faculty.washington.edu/wobbrock/pubs/gi-
12.02.pdf. Levy et al. discusses students’ concerns for personal health and effectiveness
that are raised by multitasking, as well as studies in cognitive psychology and neuroscience
suggesting that students’ attention is limited. Id.
16
See Levy et al., supra note15, at 45.
17
Parry, supra note 3.
18
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 9.
19
See George, supra note 2, at 173-75 (describing process of information input and
transfer to short-term and potentially long-term memory); see also Hillary Burgess,
Deepening the Discourse Using the Legal Mind’s Eye: Lessons from Neuroscience and
Psychology that Optimize Law School Learning, 29 QUINNIPIAC L. REV. 1, 23 (2011)
(suggesting students must filter environmental stimuli to better pay attention); M.H. Sam
Jacobson, Paying Attention or Fatally Distracted? Concentration, Memory, and Multi-
6. 30-Jul-14] 5
process whereby information is received and briefly registered in the brain’s
working memory.20
Depending upon the attention given to those pieces of
information, they are either forgotten or moved toward long-term memory
by the process of “encoding” or “chunking.”21
Once stored in long-term
memory, the information must be retrieved in order to be used.22
Thus,
short and long-term memory work in a constant exchange.23
Without
attention, however, there is no encoding or chunking, and thus, no
learning.24
“Despite its importance to learning, focused attention is rarely if ever
systematically trained or cultivated in most educational settings.”25
“Parents
and teachers tell kids 100 times a day to pay attention . . . but we never
Tasking in a Multi-Media World, 16 LEGAL WRITING 419, 421 (2010) (defining attention
as “ability to attend to [only those] desired or necessary stimuli”); Michelle D. Miller, What
College Teachers Should Know About Memory: A Perspective From Cognitive Psychology,
59 C. TEACHING 117, 118 (2011) (explaining memory consists of “three components—
sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory—[that] work together much
like an assembly line, with information making stops at each ‘station‘ before being passed
along.”). Adults experience numerous environmental stimuli in different forms: auditory,
visual, tactile, olfactory, and gustatory, all of which are involuntarily stored in sensory
memory. See Burgess, supra, at 23. “Of course, not every bit of information makes it all
the way into long-term memory.” Miller, supra, at 118.
20
See Burgess, supra note 19, at 23; Timothy W. Floyd, Oren R. Griffin, & Karen J.
Sneddon, Beyond Chalk and Talk: The Law Classroom of the Future, 38 OHIO N.U. L.
REV. 257, 265-66 (2011).
21
See George, supra note 2, at 174-75 & nn.87-92 (explaining process of encoding
and chunking involves information traveling from short-term to long-term memory by
rehearsal, memorization, association with prior knowledge); see also Burgess, supra note
19, at 29-30 (defining encoding); Jacobson, supra note 19, at 424 (defining chunking and
providing real-world example of chunking process); Miller, supra note 19, at 119
(explaining encoding process) In short, encoding is the process by which information
travels from short-term to long-term memory and can happen through rehearsal or
memorization, while chunking refers to the creation of associations among similar pieces
of information so that the information collectively becomes one slot in one’s working
memory instead of many. See Burgess, supra note 19, at 29-30; Jacobson, supra note 19, at
424.
22
See George, supra note 2, at 174-75 & nn.94-99 (explaining interplay and exchange
between short-term and long-term memory).
23
See George, supra note 2, at 175; Michael Hunter Schwartz, Teaching Law By
Design: How Learning Theory and Instructional Design Can Inform and Reform Law
Teaching, 38 SAN DIEGO L. REV. 347, 374 (2001). Schwartz writes, explaining this
exchange, that short-term and long-term memory work in a “continuous exchange program
in which learning passes back and forth between them.” Schwartz, supra, at 374.
24
George, supra note 2, at 175-79 (positing key to successfully utilizing short-term
memory is attention); see Burgess, supra note 19, at 24-25; Miller, supra note 19, at 120-
21.
25
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 10
7. 6 [30-Jul-14
teach them how.”26
Mindfulness training improves attention, and could
prove instrumental in addressing the problem of distractedness.
II. ATTENTION AND LEARNING CAN BE IMPROVED WITH MINDFULNESS
MEDITATION.
The good news for both educators and students is that “[a]ttention is a
flexible, trainable skill.”27
A growing body of neuroscience work over the
last ten years has explored how “mindfulness meditation” may improve
learning.28
These studies show that certain forms of mindfulness training
“may lead to cognitive improvements, including the enhancement of one’s
attention, such as the ability to remain focused on an object and to ignore
distractions . . . [and] to improve emotion regulation.”29
There are many
other benefits to mindfulness training as well, making the teaching of
mindfulness essential.30
Mindfulness meditation is a “mental discipline.”31
It has been described
as “moment-to-moment awareness of one’s experience without
judgment.”32
“Mindfulness . . . involves paying attention to what is actually
26
Patricia Lee Brown, In the Classroom, a New Focus on Quieting the Mind, N.Y.
TIMES (June 16, 2007), http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/16/us/16mindful.html?pagewant
ed=2.
27
Sandra Blakeslee, Study Suggests Meditation Can Help Train Attention, N.Y. TIMES,
(May 8, 2007) , http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/08/health/psychology/08medi.html?_
r=0.
28
See Konnikova, supra note 15 (positing (“[m]indfulness may have a prophylactic
effect: it can strengthen the areas that are most susceptible to cognitive decline”); Levy et
al., supra note 15, at 46 (postulating mindfulness training has capacity to improve focus
and ability to ignore distractions).
29
Levy et al., supra note 15, at 46; see Konnikova, supra note 15 (“mindfulness has
been shown to improve connectivity inside our brain’s attentional networks . . . changes
that save us from distraction”).
30
See Amishi Jha, et al., Mindfulness Training Modifies Subsystems of Attention, 7
COGNITIVE, AFFECTIVE, & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE 109 (2007), available at
http://www.amishi.com/lab/assets/pdf/2007_JhaKrompingerBaime.pdf (noting benefits
include treatment of depression, fibromyalgia, chronic pain, substance abuse, binge eating
skin diseases); Catherine Ortner et al., Mindfulness Meditation and Reduced Emotional
Interferences On a Cognitive Task, 31 MOTIVATION AND EMOTION 271 (2007) (reporting
benefits of mindfulness meditation include reduction in chronic pain, psoriasis, anxiety
disorders and improved immune function).
31
Carolyn Schatz, Mindfulness Meditation Improves Connections in the Brain, HARV.
HEALTH PUBLICATIONS, HARV. MEDICAL. SCH., (Apr. 8, 2011, 11:15am), http://www.
health.harvard.edu/blog/mindfulness-meditation-improves-connections-in-the-brain201104
082253.
32
Daphne M. Davis & Jeffrey A. Hayes, What Are the Benefits of Mindfulness? A
Practical Review of Psychotherapy-Related Research, 48 PSYCHOTHERAPY 198, 198
8. 30-Jul-14] 7
taking place in the present moment instead of becoming distracted or trying
to avoid . . . reality.”33
Being mindful allows one to “reclaim focus and
exercises the muscle of attention, which helps us to become more expert at
paying attention.”34
Mindfulness is “like lifting weights. Just as you can
build up your biceps by doing reps . . . meditation can strengthen
attention.”35
While mindfulness is inspired by the ancient practice of meditation, “an
essential element in all of the world’s major contemplative spiritual and
philosophical traditions, [i]n recent years, meditative practices have been
taught in secular forms that do not require adherence to cultural and
religious beliefs.”36
In fact, mindfulness is often practiced “in the East and
the West, in ancient times and in modern societies . . . [and] [f]ocusing our
attention in this way is a biological process that promotes health—a form of
brain hygiene—not a religion”.37
“Mindfulness meditation can lead to new
(2011).
33
Scott Rogers, Stop, Look, and Listen—Regain Your Focus Through Mindfulness,
A.B.A.: YOUNG LAW., Jan. 2011, at 3.
34
Rogers, supra note 33, at 3; see Leonard Riskin, The Contemplative Lawyer: On the
Potential Contributions of Mindfulness Meditation to Law Students, Lawyers, and Their
Clients, 7 HARV. NEGOT. L. REV. 1, 24 (2002). Riskin analogizes mindfulness training to
athletic drills: “just as practice drills help basketball players hone their jump-shots . . .
mindfulness meditation can help people develop an ability to pay attention, calmly, in each
moment, which they can apply in everyday life. It enables us to see how our minds work,
to experience our lives more fully.” Id.
35
Parry, supra note 3; see also Jan L. Jacobwitz, The Benefits of Mindfulness for
Litigators, A.B.A. Litig. J., Spring 2013, at 01-02, available at http://www.americanbar.org
/publications/litigation_journal/2012_13/spring/benefits-mindfulness.html (describing
mindfulness meditation process that involves sitting quietly and focusing attention on the
breath).
Doing so creates a laboratory from within which you notice your mind’s
tendency to wander. So, when you realize that your mind is wandering,
just take note of its wandering, noticing the thought that is distracting
you; then decide to let the thought go for the moment and return to a
focus on the breath. Some people benefit from joining a contemplative
group that sits together in silence or in a guided meditation. Others, . . .
close their office doors and listen to a recorded guided meditation. Still
others prefer solitude and complete quiet.
Jacobwitz, supra, at 2.
36
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 6 (internal citations omitted).
37
Rhonda V. Magee, Educating Lawyers to Meditate? 79 U. MO.–KAN. CITY L. REV.
535, 540 (2011) (quoting DANIEL J. SIEGEL, MINDSIGHT: THE NEW SCIENCE OF PERSONAL
TRANSFORMATION 83 (2010)); see also Davis & Hayes, supra note 32, at 199 (discussing
disciplines, practices, and religions which include mindfulness or meditative practice);
Konnikova, supra note 15 (explaining “though the concept originates in ancient Buddhist,
Hindu and Chinese traditions . . . mindfulness is less about spirituality and more about
concentration: the ability to quiet your mind, focus your attention on the present, and
9. 8 [30-Jul-14
understandings about one’s self and others, and thus is often called ‘insight
meditation.’ . . . [I]t can help people feel better and perform better at
virtually any activity.”38
While there are many types of meditation practiced globally, most can
be categorized into two main types: focused attention and open
monitoring.39
In focused attention, the meditator tries to maintain focus on
a particular thought and decrease thoughts that detract from that focus.40
This is also known as “concentrative attention.”41
In open monitoring, or
mindfulness meditation, there is no specific thought brought to focus;
rather, the mind is allowed to go where it may, but the meditator seeks to
non-judgmentally acknowledge thoughts that may arise, and then bring the
awareness back.42
“Mindfulness refers to a particular quality of attentional
focus, mindful awareness, rather than to any particular practice or
technique.”43
The benefits of mindfulness meditation in improving focus,
attention, and health are now being supported and validated by scientific
research in neuroscience and psychology.44
While mindfulness can certainly benefit everyone, the focus of this
article is on how mindfulness training can enhance legal education, the
quality of lawyering, and the mental well-being of those who practice law.45
dismiss any distractions that come your way”).
38
Leonard L. Riskin, Awareness and the Legal Profession: An Introduction to the
Mindful Lawyer Symposium, 61 J. LEGAL EDUC. 634, 635 (2012) (internal citation
omitted).
39
Casey Helber, et al., Meditation in Higher Education: Does it Enhance Cognition?,
37 INNOVATIVE HIGHER EDUC., 349, 350 (2012), available at http://download.springer.
com/static/pdf/873/art%253A10.1007%252Fs10755-012-92170.pdf?auth66=1391705121_
3103c0bc289a61047b121d4d62043072&ext=.pdf; Jha et al., supra note 30, at 110.
40
See Helber, supra note 39, at 352.
41
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 110.
42
See Ruth A. Baer, Mindfulness Training as a Clinical Intervention: A Conceptual
and Empirical Review, CLINICAL PSYCHOL.: SCI. AND PRACTICE 125, 125 (2003); Helber,
supra note 39, at 350; Levy et al., supra note 15, at 46.
43
Richard Chambers et al., The Impact of Intensive Mindfulness Training on
Attentional Control, Cognitive Style, and Affect, 32 COGNITIVE THERAPY & RES. 303, 304
(2008).
44
See SUSAN L. SMALLEY & DIANA WINSTON, FULY PRESENT 1, 57-64 (2010)
(underscoring positive effects of mindfulness on eating disorders, body issues, immunity,
physical and sensory performance); Blakeslee, supra note 27 (reporting recent research
shows meditation increases gray matter, improves immune system and attention); Hamblin,
supra note 14 (correlating mindfulness training with improved working memory capacity
and increased academic performance); Konnikova, supra note 15 (highlighting mindfulness
training resulted in improved task-specific focus and concentration).
45
See Jacobwitz, supra note 35, at 01-02; Magee, supra note 37, at 540-41; Riskin,
10. 30-Jul-14] 9
A. Mindfulness Training Improves Attention.
As discussed above, there has been much debate about the effect of
multitasking and distraction on the cognitive abilities of students today.46
Not only is multitasking inefficient, research shows that it could be
adversely affecting the part of the brain needed for focused attention.47
Studies in cognitive psychology and neuroscience reveal that “human
attention is a limited resource, and that multitasking requires rapid task
switching, which is costly in speed and accuracy.”48
Research has
confirmed that mindfulness meditation strengthens the very same areas of
the brain affected by multitasking, as it is believed that meditation shares
the same neural pathways needed to complete complex cognitive tasks.49
Attention is central to learning.50
Attentional training is the basis of all
mindfulness exercises.51
Mindfulness training can enhance attentional
skills, “permitting people both to concentrate more deeply and to switch
between objects of attention more fluidly.”52
There are different types of
supra note 34, at 9-10; Rogers, supra note 33, at 3.
46
George, supra note 2, at 180-182; see Burgess, supra note 19, at 4-6, 19-20
(theorizing current law school teaching methods fail to teach students to “think like a
lawyer”); Andrea McAlister, Teaching the Millennial Generation, AM. MUSIC TCHR., Aug.-
Sept. 2009, at 13, 14 (stating interruptions of neural pathway creation undermines students’
“depth of learning”); Anthony Niedwiecki, Teaching For Lifelong Learning: Improving the
Metacognitive Skills of Law Students Through More Effective Formative Assessment
Techniques, 40 CAP. U. L. REV. 149, 157-59 (2012) (explaining focusing on “end product”
inhibits development of students’ metacognitive skills).
47
NICHOLAS CARR, THE SHALLOWS 120 (2010).
48
Levy et al., supra note 15, at 45; see Konnikova, supra note 15. Konnikova explains
why “multitasking is a persistent myth: What we really do it shift our attention rapidly
from task to task…we don’t devote as much attention to any one thing, and we sacrifice the
quality of our attention. When we are mindful, some of that attentional flightiness
disappears as if of its own accord.” Konnikova, supra note 15.
49
See Helber, supra note 39, at 352-53; Konnikova, supra note 15 (reporting study
demonstrating mindfulness meditation associated with enhanced connectivity between part
of brain involved in attention monitoring and working memory, and area of brain
associated with self-monitoring of feelings and thoughts); Schatz, supra note 31 (reporting
MRI scans of volunteers who completed eight-week mindfulness training showed stronger
connections in brain regions associated with attention, auditory and visual processing).
50
See Burgess, supra note 19, at 23 (suggesting students must filter environmental
stimuli to better pay attention); Jacobson, supra note 19, at 421 (defining attention as
“ability to attend to [only those] desired or necessary stimuli”); Miller, supra note 19, at
121 (“Without attention, there is no memory.”); Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 9
(“Attention is critically important to the mental processing central to learning.”).
51
See Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 9
52
Levy et al., supra note 15, at 45.
11. 10 [30-Jul-14
attention, and researchers have been studying them all. For example, in one
hallmark study, three attentional subsystems were evaluated: alerting,
orienting, and conflict monitoring.53
“Alerting involves achieving and
maintaining a state of preparedness, orienting directs and limits attention to
a subset of possible stimulus inputs, and conflict monitoring prioritizes
among competing tasks and responses.”54
All three subsystems are related
to attention and learning.55
Researchers used the Attention Network Test
(ANT)56
to assess the effects of meditation on these three subsystems.57
The study involved three groups of participants and assessed each
group’s response time and accuracy in performing the ANT.58
One group
of novice meditators participated in an eight-week meditation based stress
reduction (MBSR) course that met weekly for three hours, focusing
primarily on concentrative attention.59
Another group of experienced
meditators participated in a full-time one-month meditation retreat.60
The
ANT was performed before and after the meditation program, and
compared with a control group who had no meditation training.61
Pre-test,
the retreat group had better conflict monitoring than the other two groups.62
Post-test, the MBSR group had significantly better ability to orient
attention, while the retreat group had better alerting skills than the other
two.63
“These results suggest that mindfulness training may improve
attention-related behavioral responses by enhancing functioning of specific
53
See Jha et al., supra note 30, at 109-111; Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 7-8
(discussing Jha et al.’s study and results).
54
See Shapiro et al., supra note 15, at 7-8 (citing study by Jha et al.).
55
See Jha et al., supra note 30, at 110.
56
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 110. An Attention Network Test (ANT) is a brief,
computerized battery of tests often used to measure different behavioral aspects of
attention, and it is based on the Attention Network theory. See Shapiro et al., supra note
15, at 7-8 (citing studies discussing ANT). Scientists typically use the test to measure the
tester’s ability to overcome stimuli while doing tasks as well as how well the tester
responds to valid and conflicting cues to complete those given tasks. See J. Fan, et al.,
Testing the Efficiency and Independence of Attentional Networks, 14 J. Cognitive
Neuroscience 340 (2002). The Attention Network theory divides the neural systems of the
brain into three categories: the orientation and selection network, the executive and
conflict network, and the vigilance network. Id. Using reaction time (RT) and conflict
tasks, scientists devised the ANT to measure the response times of these networks as well
as the ability for the aforementioned networks to handle conflict. Id.
57
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 110.
58
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 111.
59
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 111.
60
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 111.
61
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 111.
62
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 114 fig.2, 116.
63
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 114-16 & figs.3-4.
12. 30-Jul-14] 11
subcomponents of attention.”64
Intensive meditation training “can alter the way in which the brain
allocates attentional resources to important stimuli.”65
Another study
involved “attentional blink,” a phenomenon where the brain is so busy
processing initial inputs that it cannot “see” or process subsequent input. 66
Participants were asked to identify two stimuli—in this case, numbers
mixed with letters—and their ability to spot all the targets accurately was
assessed.67
“[T]his task gauges the ability of subjects to allocate cognitive
resources efficiently when multiple stimuli compete for attention.”68
Performance by seasoned meditators was compared before training and
after training, as well as to a control group of novice meditators.69
There
was no meditation performed during the tests.70
Each one of the seasoned
meditators showed improved ability to detect the second target while only
sixteen out of twenty-three of the novice meditators showed such
improvement.71
The authors found “this reduction in the effect of the
attentional blink is consistent with the idea that after training, practitioners
were allocating a smaller proportion of their brains’ resources to the first
target.”72
The researchers also measured the electrical changes associated
with neural responses to sensory stimuli or cognitive tasks, which is
believed to reflect the allocation of resources to the target.73
The authors
concluded that intensive meditation training “can produce lasting and
significant improvements in the efficient distribution of attentional
resources among competing stimuli, even when individuals are not actively
using the techniques they have learned.”74
64
Jha et al., supra note 30, at 109.
65
Rachel Jones, Learning to Pay Attention, 5 PUB. LIBR. SCI. BIOLOGY 1188, 1188
(June 2007), available at http://www.plosbiology.org/article/fetchObject.action?uri=info%
3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.0050166&representation=PDF.
66
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1188.
67
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1188.
68
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1188.
69
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1188. Jones explains that seasoned meditators attended
an intensive three month, ten-to-twelve hour training course while the novice meditators
received only one hour of training. Id.
70
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1188.
71
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1188.
72
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1188.
73
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1189.
74
See Jones, supra note 65, at 1189; see also Antoine Lutz et al., Mental Training
Enhances Attentional Stability: Neural and Behavioral Evidence, 29 J. NEUROSCIENCE
13418, 13418 (2009) (finding three months of intensive mindfulness training enhanced
attentional stability and promoted more efficient processing); Heleen A. Slagter et al.,
Mental Training Affects Distribution of Limited Brain Resources, 5 PUB. LIBR. SCI.
BIOLOGY 1228 (2007), available at http://www.plosbiology.org/article/fetchObject.action?
13. 12 [30-Jul-14
Even short-term mindfulness training can improve attentional skills.75
In another study, participants received five days of meditation or relaxation
training, and were tested before and after training.76
The meditation group
showed significantly greater improvement than the relaxation group in
various tests, including the ANT, and they showed “lower anxiety,
depression, anger, and fatigue, and higher vigor on the Profile of Mood
States scale, a significant decrease in stress-related cortisol, and an increase
in immunoreactivity.”77
Thus, not surprisingly, attention and learning can
benefit from even a short amount of mindfulness training.
B. Mindfulness Training Can Improve Working Memory.
The more information that can be held in working memory, the greater
the potential for learning.78
Thus, improving working memory capacity
improves learning. Mindfulness training can aid in the brain’s ability to
take information held in working memory and convert it to long-term
memory, which is key to learning.79
Mindfulness training can help increase working memory capacity
because it helps strengthen the area of the brain responsible for higher
cognitive functioning, the prefrontal cortex.80
The hippocampus, which
helps convert working memory into long-term memory, is found in the
uri=info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.0050138&representation=PDF (finding
three months intensive mental training resulted in smaller attentional blink, reduced brain
resource allocation to first target).
75
YiYuan Tang, et al., Short-Term Meditation Training Improves Attention and Self-
Regulation, 104 PROC. NAT’L ACAD. SCI. U.S.A. 17152 (2007), available at http://www.
pnas.org/content/104/43/17152.full.pdf+html.
76
See Tang, supra note 75, at 17152-53 (detailing structure of study).
77
See Tang, supra note 75, at 17152; see also Amanda Enayati, Seeking Serenity:
When Lawyers Go Zen, CNN HEALTH: THE CHART (May11, 2011 11:15 am),
http://thechart.blogs.cnn.com/2011/05/11/seeking-serenity-when-lawyers-go-zen/. Enayati
discussed a Harvard study showing that as little “as 30 minutes a day for 8 weeks resulted
in measurable changes in the brain regions involved in learning, memory, emotion
regulation, and stress.” Id. The Profile of Mood States scale, commonly abbreviated as
POMS, is commonly used clinical instrument to assess mood and feeling statesu, and
measure levels of psychological distress. See Shelly L. Curran, Short Form of the Profile
of Mood States (POMS-SF): Psychometric information, 7 PSYCHOL. ASSESSMENT 80, 80-
83 (1995).
78
See supra notes 20-24 and accompanying text (linking working, short-, and long-
term memory to learning capacity).
79
See infra notes 20-21 and accompanying text.
80
SCOTT ROGERS, THE SIX MINUTE SOLUTION: A MINDFULNESS PRIMER FOR
LAWYERS 22-23 (2009).
14. 30-Jul-14] 13
frontal cortex.81
Thus, the effective use of the hippocampus is central to
learning.82
The functioning of the hippocampus can be negatively affected
by emotions and stress.83
The limbic system, which includes the amygdala,
is associated with emotions.84
Daily hassles can fire up the amygdala, a
region of the brain associated with fear, anxiety, and stress.85
The pre-
frontal cortex and hippocampus can be
hijacked by the more primitive [amygdala] … as too much
stress hormone cortisol is released. As a result, attentional
focus drops, along with the smooth functioning of the
hippocampus and [the] capacity to learn. Working memory
is diminished, mental creativity and flexibility are
compromised, and there are fewer resources available to plan
and organize.86
This interplay, known as the “frazzle effect” negatively affects learning.87
Mindfulness exercises can improve the functioning of the prefrontal cortex
and the hippocampus, and tone down the amygdala, helping us to perform
better in high-stress situations.88
81
See ROGERS, supra note 80, at 22; CARR, supra note 47, at 188-90 (equating
hippocampus to “orchestra conductor in directing . . . symphony of . . . conscious memory”
to form long-term memories).
82
See CARR, supra note 47, at 188-90 (teaching hippocampus fixes and merges
various contemporaneous memories, forming single recollection, and links new memories
to old); DANIEL GOLEMAN, SOCIAL INTELLIGENCE: THE NEW SCIENCE OF HUMAN
RELATIONSHIPS 1, 273 (2006) (“The hippocampus, near the amygdala in the midbrain, is
our central organ for learning.”).
83
See GOLEMAN, supra note 82, at 273; ROGERS, supra note 80, at 23.
84
ROGERS, supra note 80, at 23; DANIEL J. SIEGEL, THE MINDFUL BRAIN 1, 33 &
fig.2.1, 34 (2007).
85
See ROGERS, supra note 80, at 22-23; Schatz, supra note 31; see also In the
Journals: Mindfulness Meditation Practice Changes the Brain, HARV. WOMEN’S HEALTH
WATCH, at 6-7 (Apr. 2011 [hereinafter Harvard Health Watch].
86
See ROGERS, supra note 80, at 22
87
See ROGERS, supra note 80, at 22-23; GOLEMAN, supra note 82, at 267-69 (defining
“frazzle” as “neural state in which emotional upsurges hamper . . . workings of . . .
executive center”).
88
See ROGERS, supra note 80, at 22; see also Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85, at
6-7; Lisa A. Kilpatrick et al., Impact of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Training on
Intrinsic Brain Connectivity, 56 NEUROIMAGE 290, 295 (2011) (“Our results demonstrate
that MBSR-trained subjects during mindful awareness of sounds have greater
synergy/positive coherence between a region involved in fine-grained perceptual
processing of auditory information and other auditory-related regions as well as
salience/control regions.”); Schatz, supra note 31.
15. 14 [30-Jul-14
In one study, participants attended an eight-week mindfulness-based
stress-reduction class, which met once a week for two-and-one-half hours.89
They practiced mindfulness meditation in class and were given audio
recordings to guide them in daily practice at home.90
Magnetic Resonance
Imaging tests (MRIs) were taken before and after the training, and showed
that, as compared to the control group of non-meditators who showed no
changes, the meditators had “increased concentrations of gray matter (the
“computing” or processing neurons) in several brain areas, including the
hippocampus . . . and other regions associated with remembering the past
and imagining the future . . . [such as] introspection, empathy, and the
ability to acknowledge the viewpoints of others.”91
In answer to questions,
the meditators also indicated that they felt more capable of acting with
awareness, observing, and remaining non-judgmental.92
In an earlier study
of the same participants, MRIs revealed that the meditators had reduced
gray matter in the amygdala and that this reduction was associated with
lower stress.93
Other studies have shown that working-memory capacity is increased in
proportion to the actual amount of meditation practice.94
For example,
inexperienced meditators who attended an intensive ten-day mindfulness
meditation class were compared with a control group who had no
mindfulness training.95
The mindfulness-training group’s working capacity
increased significantly, demonstrating a statistically significant improved
capacity for sustained attention during tasks.96
Thus, short or long-term
mindfulness training can improve working memory capacity and learning.
89
Kilpatrick, supra note 88, at 290-91; Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85.
90
Kilpatrick, supra note 88, at 290-91; Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85.
91
Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85, at 7.
92
Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85, at 7.
93
Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85, at 7.
94
See e.g., Chambers et al., supra note 43, at 303 (finding meditation group had
significantly better working-memory capacity, attention capabilities during performance
task than control group); Helber, supra note 39, at 349-58; Amishi P. Jha, et al. Examining
the Protective Effects of Mindfulness Training on Working Memory Capacity and Affective
Experience, 10 EMOTION 54 (2010); Marieke K. van Vugt & Amishi P. Jha, Investigating
the Impact of Mindfulness Meditation Training on Working Memory: A Mathematical
Modeling Approach, 11 COGNITIVE, AFFECTIVE, & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE 344
(2011).
95
See Chambers et al., supra note 43, at 304-15 (suggesting mindfulness training has
benefits for psychological functioning).
96
Chambers et al., supra note 43, at 315-16 (noting statistically significant increase in
working-memory capacity helps treat Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, post-
traumatic-stress disorder, schizophrenia).
16. 30-Jul-14] 15
C. Mindfulness Training Can Improve Academic Achievement.
Mindfulness has even been shown to improve academic achievement,
including grades and standardized test scores. 97
For example, researchers
at the University of Southern California randomly assigned forty-eight
undergraduate students to either a mindfulness class or a nutrition class.98
The classes met for forty-five minutes four times per week for two weeks.99
Experts taught the classes, and the mindfulness class provided a conceptual
introduction and practical instruction on how to practice mindfulness in
targeted exercises and daily life.100
The nutrition class taught ways for
healthier eating and required students to log their daily food intake.101
The
students in both classes took a verbal-reasoning section from the Graduate
Record Examination (GRE) and a working memory capacity test before and
after the two weeks of classes.102
The scores of the mindfulness-trained
group improved, but not the nutrition-trained group.103
The mindfulness
students improved both their verbal GRE score by an average of sixteen
percentile points, as well as their scores on the working memory capacity
test.104
The study serves as convincing evidence that mindfulness can
improve working memory and reading, and reduce mind wandering.105
“The research established with greater certainty that some cognitive abilities
often seen as immutable, such as working memory capacity, can be
improved through mindfulness training.”106
In another study involving college students, two groups were studied:
one group attended a one-hour concentration-based meditation class twice a
week and the other group met once a week as a study group, but they were
97
Michael D. Mrazek et al., Mindfulness Training Improves Working Memory
Capacity and GRE Performance While Reducing Mind Wandering, 24 PSYCHOL. SCI. 776,
776- 77 (2013), available at https://labs.psych.ucsb.edu/schooler/jonathan/sites/labs.psych.
ucsb.edu.schooler.jonathan/files/biblio/10.1177_0956797612459659_0.pdf.
98
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 777.
99
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 777.
100
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 777.
101
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 777.
102
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 777.
103
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 778.
104
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 778.
105
Mrazek et al., supra note 97, at 780.
106
Mindfulness Improves Reading Ability, Working Memory, and Task Focus, say UC
Santa Barbara Researchers, U. C. SANTA BARBARA PUB. AFF. & COMM. (Mar. 26, 2013),
http://www.ia.ucsb.edu/pa/display.aspx?pkey=2970 (announcing results of study by
Mrazek et al., supra note 97).
17. 16 [30-Jul-14
not introduced to meditation .107
This meditation class included attentional
focusing and relaxation exercises, and students meditated during the first
and last ten minutes of class, as well as outside of class and before
exams.108
The other group met only as a study group with no particular
exercises.109
Both groups had similar cumulative Grade Point Averages
(GPAs) at the end of the fall semester, but at the end of the spring semester,
the meditation group not only had higher GPAs for the spring semester, but
also had significantly higher cumulative GPAs than the control group.110
This study lends substantial support to the proposition directly linking
mindfulness training to increased academic achievement, and suggests
mindfulness training should be encouraged in academic environments.111
D. Mindfulness Training Can Improve Other Sources of Stress, Which
Interfere with Focus and Learning.
Mindfulness training may benefit people suffering from a variety of
ailments, including chronic pain, fibromyalgia, cancer, heart disease,
anxiety, binge eating disorder, psoriasis, borderline personality disorder,
major depressive disorder, and stress.112
It has also been shown to reduce
anxiety and increase positive emotions.113
Mindfulness has even been
107
Pamela D. Hall, The Effect of Meditation on the Academic Performance of African
American College Students, 29 J. BLACK STUD. 408, 410 (1999); see Shapiro et al., supra
note 10, at 9 (summarizing results of Hall study).
108
Hall, supra note 107, at 411.
109
Hall, supra note 107, at 411.
110
Hall, supra note 107, at 411-13. The meditation and non-meditation groups began
the study with cumulative GPAs of 2.77 and 2.64, respectively. After undergoing
meditation training, the meditation and non-meditation groups had spring semester GPAs
of 2.85 and 2.55, respectively, and cumulative GPAs of 2.93 and 2.48, respectively.
111
See Hall, supra note 107, at 414-15; Hamblin, supra note 14 (linking mindfulness
training to improved academic performance).
112
See Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85, at 6; Jha et al., supra note 30, at 109
(reporting myriad health benefits of MBSR programs); Kimberly Roberts & Sharon
Danoff-Burg, Mindfulness and Health Behaviors: Is Paying Attention Good for You?, 59 J.
AM. C. HEALTH 165 (2010) (suggesting mindfulness training decreases stress, which
contributes to better overall health and health behaviors). See generally SHAUNA L.
SHAPIRO & LINDA E. CARLSON, THE ART AND SCIENCE OF MINDFULNESS: INTEGRATING
MINDFULNESS INTO PSYCHOLOGY AND THE HELPING PROFESSIONS 1, 48-60 (2009) (relating
common mindfulness-based therapies’ application to various illnesses, ailments, and health
conditions).
113
See Richard J. Davidson et al., Alterations in Brain and Immune Function Produced
by Mindfulness Meditation, 65 PSYCHOSOMATIC MED. 564-570 (2003); Tang, supra note
75, at 17152 (reporting even short-term mindfulness meditation training reduced anxiety
and improved overall mood). Positive moods such as enjoyment, joy, interest, and
excitement are typically referred to as being positive affects, while feelings such as anger,
disgust, dissmell, distress, fear, and shame are referred to as negative affects.
18. 30-Jul-14] 17
shown to improve immune function.114
Stated more generally, mindfulness
can improve and enhance health and quality of life, which in turn can
improve academic and cognitive performance.115
1. Mindfulness Can Reduce Stress, Anxiety, and Negative Emotions.
“Since the early 1980s, mindfulness meditation has increasingly found a
place in mainstream health care and medicine because of evidence that it’s
good for emotional and physical health.”116
Mindfulness Based Stress
Reduction (MBSR) is well studied and documented as a useful tool in
medicine and has been widely taught and practiced over the last three
decades.117
Numerous studies have confirmed that an eight-week MBSR
program can significantly reduce stress, negative moods and rumination,
and increase positive moods.118
114
See Blakeslee, supra note 27 (linking meditation practice with increased immunity);
Davidson et al., supra note 113 (demonstrating mindfulness meditation produced
significantly improved immune function); Ortner et al., supra note 30 (noting improved
immune function with mindfulness training).
115
See Hall, supra note 107, at 414-15 (reporting increased GPAs as result of
meditation); Hamblin, supra note 14 (reporting mindfulness training improves academic
achievement); Jha et al., supra note 30, at 109, 116-17(noting meditation training improved
concentration and attention); Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 8-9 (highlighting Hall and
Slagter findings).
116
Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85, at 6.
117
See Jha et al., supra note 94, at 54 (asserting mindfulness training is now “widely
available, with more than 250 medical centers around the United States offering
mindfulness based stress reduction programs”).
118
See Harvard Health Watch, supra note 85; Kilpatrick, supra note 88, at 290-91;
Schatz, supra note 31 (reporting MRI scans of volunteers who completed eight-week
mindfulness training); Maia Szalavitz, Q&A: Jon Kabat-Zinn Talks About Bringing
Mindfulness Meditation to Medicine, TIME, (Jan. 11, 2012), http://healthland.time.com/
2012/01/11/mind-reading-jon-kabat-zinn-talks-about-bringing-mindfulness-meditation-to-
medicine/#ixzz2smGlCmzd (discussing eight-week MBSR training “can actually produce
thickening in particular regions of the brain important for learning, memory, executive
decision-making and perspective-taking”); Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 10 (highlighting
archetypal MBSR studies); Shauna L. Shapiro et al., The Effects of Mindfulness-Based
Stress Reduction on Medical and Premedical Students, 21 J. BEHAV. MED. 581, 592-94
(1998) (discussing results of eight-week MBSR included reductions in self-reported
depression and anxiety, and increased empathy). In 2012, researcher Jon Kabat-Zinn
discussed that eight weeks of MBSR training showed a significant shift in MBSR-trained
individuals’ brains: the MBSR-trained group switched from exhibiting a right-side brain
activation in their pre-frontal cortex (PFC) to a more left-sided activation. Szalavitz, supra.
The shift from right-side to left-side brain activation was a groundbreaking discovery:
the right PFC is more associated with anxiety and discomfort and experiential
avoidance and the left is more associated with, well, the catchword is happiness:
wellbeing, calm and emotional intelligence.
Until we did that study, it was thought that the ratio of right/left activity in the
19. 18 [30-Jul-14
Reducing stress and anxiety has clear implications for improving
learning.119
Stress “handicaps our abilities for learning, for holding
information in working memory, for reacting flexibly and creatively, for
focusing attention at will, and for planning and organizing effectively.”120
In addition to reducing stress and anxiety, mindfulness supports better
regulation of emotional affect.121
This appears to extend beyond mere
relaxation.122
As discussed above, the “[w]hen an individual is able to
PFC was pretty much a fixed trait once you reached adulthood — that you were
the way the you were; if you were a nervous nelly, you were pretty much going to
stay that way, and if you happened to be Ms. Relaxation, you stayed that way, too.
Id.
119
See J. D. Bremner & M. Narayan, The Effects of Stress on Memory and the
Hippocampus Throughout the Life Cycle: Implications for Childhood Development and
Aging, 10 DEV. AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY 871 (1998); Chambers et al., supra note 43, at
303 (noting meditation increases working-memory capacity); Kilpatrick, supra note 88, at
290-91 (finding mindfulness-trained group’s MRIs showed increased concentrations of
gray matter in PFC and hippocampus); Roberts & Danoff-Burg, supra note 112
(demonstrating stress reduction as result of mindfulness training); Maria Konnikova, An
Antidote for Mindlessness, NEW YORKER, (Jan. 29, 2014), http://www.newyorker.com/
online/blogs/elements/2014/01/an-antidote-for-mindlessness.html?utm_source=tny
(explaining studies by Jha, effects of mindfulness training on combating stress); supra
notes 80-87 and accompanying text (explaining brain’s structure, positive mindfulness-
training effects on PFC performance, working memory, and high-stress performance).
“Mindfulness training . . . may work as a protective factor against the typical stresses of
student life—or any stress, for that matter, since it improves emotional equilibrium and
enables people to better handle distractions.” Konnikova, supra.
120
GOLEMAN, supra note 82, at 268; see also Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 9-10
(presenting studies supporting proposition that mindfulness training decreases stress);
Konnikova, supra note 119 (correlating mindfulness training with improved handling of
stress).
121
SIEGEL, supra note 84, at 225, 337 app. III; Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 11-12;
see also ROGERS, supra note 80, at 22-23; Kirkpatrick, supra note 88, at 295; Kirk Warren
Brown et al., Mindfulness: Theoretical Foundations and Evidence for its Salutary Effects,
18 PSYCHOL. INQUIRY 211, 220 (2007) (correlating cognitive and affective mental-health
and well-being indicators with specific trait measures of mindfulness); J.D. Creswell, et al.,
Neural Correlates of Dispositional Mindfulness During Affect Labeling, 69
PSYCHOSOMATIC MED. 560 (2007) (measuring amygdala activation after threatening
emotional visual stimuli); supra notes 86-88 and accompanying text (highlighting “frazzle
effect” and its impact). Brown et al. explain that “[t]he trait MAAS has been associated
with lower levels of emotional disturbance (e.g., depressive symptoms, anxiety, and stress),
higher levels of subjective well-being (lower negative affect, higher positive affect, and
satisfaction with life) and higher levels of eudaimonic well-being (e.g., vitality, self-
actualization).” Brown et al., supra, at 220. In their study measuring amygdala activity in
response to threatening emotional visual stimuli, Creswell et al. found that those with
higher MAAS-assessed mindfulness levels exhibited less reactivity to emotionally
threatening stimuli than those with lower MAAS levels. See Creswell et al., supra.
122
See Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 11; S. Jain et al., A Randomized Controlled
20. 30-Jul-14] 19
successfully self-regulate . . . they experience a release of physical tension
that acts to oppose the stress response and creates a calm state of mind and
body.”123
In one study involving college students, functional MRIs
revealed that those with higher dispositional mindfulness reacted less to
threatening visual stimuli, as evidenced by lower activation of the amygdala
and stronger prefrontal cortex activation, indicative of better executive
control.124
Other studies reveal that mindfulness allows for a quicker
turnaround from negative emotions, as compared to the other common
strategies of distraction and rumination.125
Law school and lawyering are high-stress situations.126
Law school can
be a very demanding environment as students wrestle with complex
material and time pressures they likely have not seen before.127
Likewise,
Trial of Mindfulness Meditation Versus Relaxation Training: Effects on Distress, Positive
States of Mind, Rumination, and Distraction, 33 ANNALS OF BEHAV. MED. 11 (2007)
(reporting month-long mindfulness-meditation and somatic-relaxation programs produced
similar effects on “distress reduction and enhancement of positive mood relative to no-
treatment control students”). While mindfulness training and somatic relaxation both
reduced stress and increased overall emotional well-being, Jain et al. indicates that
“mindfulness meditation may be specific in its ability to reduce distractive and ruminative
thoughts and behaviors, and this ability may provide a unique mechanism by which
mindfulness meditation reduces distress.” Jain et al., supra.
123
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 11
124
See Creswell et al., supra note 121.
125
See Patricia C. Broderick, Mindfulness and Coping with Dysphonic Mood:
Contrasts with Rumination and Distraction, 29 COGNITIVE THERAPY & RES. 501 (2005)
(reporting mindfulness best reduced negative moods and increased relaxation, compared
with distraction and rumination).
126
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 1, 4 (discussing high levels of unhappiness, stress, and
depression among law students and lawyers); see also More on Lawyer Stress,
FUTUREVISIONS.ORG, http://www.futurevisions.org/law_crr_stress_more.htm (last visited
Feb. 23, 2014) (describing environmental and occupational stressors of lawyers).
Among the primary complaints that lawyers cite as contributing to their stress are time
pressures, work overload, and inadequate time for themselves and their families.
Simple statistics as well as descriptive accounts suggest that many legal workplaces
are like working class (or blue collar) sweat shops. The typical City/Wall Street lawyer
is expected to log a minimum of 1800 billable hours per year; many lawyers are
expected to far exceed this figure. An 1800 hour minimum translates into almost 7
hours per day, 5 days per week, 52 weeks a year. Since this does not include, eating,
socializing, going to meetings, reading mail, seeking new clients, etc., it has been
estimated that to bill 7 hours one must work 9-12 hours. Thus, it is common for
lawyers to take work home, to work on weekends, and to not take their allotted
vacation or holiday time.
More on Lawyer Stress, supra.
127
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 10. Riskin reasons that pervasive rates of depression
and mental illness are common among lawyers because “law schools tend to over-
emphasize analytical reasoning at the expense of developing interpersonal skills, and they
21. 20 [30-Jul-14
“it is common knowledge . . . the practice of law is stressful.”128
Research
reveals that lawyers are more prone to depression than members of any
other profession, and that as many as twenty percent of lawyers abuse
alcohol or other substances.129
Because mindfulness training is linked with
helping many conditions that negatively affect law students and lawyers,
law schools should include it as part of their academic requirements, giving
students and practicing lawyers tools they can use to combat these
conditions.
2. Mindfulness can enhance creativity.
Creativity is essential to learning.130
“Creativity traits and capacities
include perceptual skill, ideational fluency, openness to experience, and
emotional flexibility.”131
While essential to learning, unfortunately
creativity has been on the decline, with some blaming technology and the
devaluation of creativity in education.132
incline students to seek satisfaction from external sources—such as ‘winning’ in general,
and especially through grades, awards, and prestigious jobs—rather than from internal
sources, such as a secure sense of self.” Id.
128
J. Patton Hyman, The Mindful Lawyer: Mindfulness Meditation and Law Practice,
33 VT. B.J. 40 (2007) (referencing studies confirming depression, substance abuse,
domestic difficulties more common among lawyers than general public); Riskin, supra note
34, at 10-11 (noting “lawyers have higher rates of depression and anxiety, divorce, and
substance abuse than the general population and members of other professions”).
129
See Enayati, supra note 77 (referencing American Bar Association statistics on
lawyer alcoholism, substance abuse). See generally G. Andrew H. Benjamin et al., The
Prevalence of Depression, Alcohol Abuse, and Cocaine Abuse Among United States
Lawyers, 13 INT'L J.L. & PSYCHIATRY 233 (1990) (discussing alcoholism and other
substance abuse rates of American lawyers); LAWYERS WITH DEPRESSION (last visited Feb.
23, 2014), http://www.lawyerswithdepression.com/ (providing online resource for lawyers
with depression, and highlighting disproportionate depression rates among lawyers).
130
See Samantha A. Moppett, Lawyering Outside the Box: Confronting the Creativity
Crisis, 37 S. ILL. U. L.J. 253, 261 (2013) (articulating that “the unprecedented challenges
and frantic page of change today renders creativity an indispensable trait”).
131
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 12; see Moppett, supra note 130, at 266-86.
132
See Moppett, supra note 130, at 290-92 (discussing effect of technology and No
Child Left Behind Act in stifling creativity); see also Peter Gray, As Children’s Freedom
Has Declined, So Has Their Creativity, in Freedom to Learn, PSYCHOL. TODAY, (Sept. 12,
2012), http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/freedom-learn/201209/children-s-freedom-
has-declined-so-has-their-creativity (describing decline in children’s creativity, noting
largest decline in “Creative Elaboration” measure). Gray explains that a recent research
report documenting this continuous creativity decline among American school children
indicates that over the past two to three decades,
‘children have become less emotionally expressive, less energetic, less talkative
and verbally expressive, less humorous, less imaginative, less unconventional, less
lively and passionate, less perceptive, less apt to connect seemingly irrelevant
22. 30-Jul-14] 21
Research and experts point to mindfulness meditation as being able to
increase creativity, and thus, improve learning. 133
One study compared two
groups of undergraduate students: one received meditation training and the
other received relaxation training.134
The meditating group exhibited
improvements in creativity, specifically, by showing greater consciousness
of problems, invention, sensory experience, expression of emotion, feeling,
humor, and fantasy.135
Mindfulness training ultimately has the potential to
address the decline in creativity and improve learning.
3. Mindfulness can enhance empathy, compassion and counseling skills.
Mindfulness can enhance other skills such as empathy, compassion, and
counseling, skills that are valued and needed to practice good lawyering.136
Many critics have cited the lack of these skills as indicative of a problem
with the current state of legal education.137
things, less synthesizing, and less likely to see things from a different angle.’
Gray, supra (quoting Kyung Hee Kim, The Creativity Crisis: The Decrease in Creative
Thinking Scores on the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking, 23 CREATIVITY RES. J.
285-95 (2011)).
133
Ernest L. Cowger, Jr. & E. Paul Torrance, Further Examination of the Quality of
Changes in Creative Functioning Resulting from Meditation (Zazen) Training, 7 CREATIVE
CHILD & ADULT Q., 211, 211-17 (1982); Eric Hoover, Filmmaker Wants Students to Chill
Out with Transcendental Meditation, CHRON. OF HIGHER EDUC., (Aug. 5, 2005)
(“Proponents [of meditation] say that meditating also can improve students’ academic
performances and foster their creativity.”).
134
See Cowger & Torrance, supra note 133, at 212.
135
Cowger and Torrance, supra note 133, at 213-17 (discussing results and comparing
with prior study of U.S. and Japanese students). Cowger and Torrance described parallels
between their research and a previous study of U.S. and Japanese students where U.S.
students worked faster but with less accurate results than their Japanese counterparts, who
were raised in a Zen culture. Id.
136
See Davis & Hayes, supra note 32, at 202 (highlighting empathy, compassion,
counseling skills, and decreased stress and anxiety as benefits); Charles Halpern, The
Mindful Lawyer: Why Contemporary Lawyers are Practicing Meditation, 61 J. LEGAL
EDUC. 641, 641 (2012) (“A growing body of scientific evidence suggests that meditation
affects brain structure and function and that it improves concentration, empathy and
listening skills—all important to the effective practice of law.”); Magee, supra note 37, at
563 (“mindfulness has been shown to increase feelings of empathy and compassion:”);
Rogers, supra note 33, at 3 (“By practicing mindfulness you will become a more effective
attorney able to better cope with stress, listen more deeply to clients, and obtain greater
perspective on your work and the challenges presented in daily life.”); Shapiro et al., supra
note 10, at 12-14 (supporting claims that mindfulness training enhances interpersonal
relationship skills, empathy, and compassion).
137
See infra note 148 and accompanying text (noting twin concerns with current legal
education system).
23. 22 [30-Jul-14
Mindfulness training has been shown to improve empathy in
therapists.138
Two studies of medical students and graduate psychology
students showed that those who received eight or ten weeks of mindfulness
training experienced increased levels of self-reported empathy.139
The
studies showed that therapists were able to “develop their ability to
experience and communicate a felt sense of clients’ inner experiences, be
more present to client’s suffering; and help clients express . . . their
feelings.”140
Mindfulness training also increases self-compassion, and may help deal
with negative life events.141
Self-compassion has been defined as “being
kind and understanding toward oneself in instances of pain or failure;
perceiving one’s experiences as part of the larger human experience; and
holding painful thoughts and feelings in balanced awareness rather than
over-identifying with them.”142
It is connected to other positive
psychological characteristics including “wisdom, personal initiative,
curiosity, and exploration, happiness, optimism, and positive affect.”143
Two studies showed that mindfulness meditation increased self-
138
See generally Davis & Hayes, supra note 32; Shauna L. Shapiro, et al.,
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Health Care Professionals: Results from a
Randomized Trial, 12 INT’L J. STRESS MGMT. 164 (2005).
139
See Davis & Hayes, supra note 32, at 202-03 (reporting mindfulness training
improved therapists communication and empathy with clients’ situations, helped clients
express themselves); Shapiro et al., supra note 118, at 589-90, 594 (evidencing
mindfulness training caused improved empathy among medical students); Shapiro et al.,
supra note 10, at 13 (citing multiple studies supporting proposition that mindfulness
training encourages empathic tendencies).
140
Davis & Hayes, supra note 32, at 202.
141
See Davis & Hayes, supra note 32, at 202 (strongly correlating elements of MBSR
training with developing self-compassion); Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 14 (citing
relevant studies demonstrating mindfulness cultivates self-compassion); see also M. R.
Leary et al., Self-Compassion and Reactions to Unpleasant Self-Relevant Events: The
Implications of Treating Oneself Kindly, 92 J. PERSONALITY AND SOC. PSYCHOL. 887-904
(2007) (finding, among college students, self-compassion more beneficial than self-esteem
in dealing with negative life events).
142
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 14 (citing K. D. Neff et al., An Examination of Self-
Compassion in Relation to Positive Psychological Functioning and Personality Traits, 41
J. RES. IN PERSONALITY 908 (2007)).
143
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 14; see also K. D. Neff et al., An Examination of
Self-Compassion in Relation to Positive Psychological Functioning and Personality Traits,
41 J. RES. IN PERSONALITY 908 (2007); Shauna L. Shapiro, Kirk Warren Brown, & Gina
M. Biegel, Self-Care for Health Care Professionals: Effects of MBSR on Mental Well
Being of Counseling Psychology Students, 1 TRAINING & EDUC. IN PROF. PSYCHOL. 105
(2007).
24. 30-Jul-14] 23
compassion.144
In one study, self-compassion helped college students deal
with negative personal and interpersonal events in a way that may be even
more helpful than self-esteem.145
In a second study, health-care
professionals demonstrated a twenty-two percent increase in self-
compassion after undergoing an eight-week MBSR intervention.146
The
research suggests that mindfulness training “contributes to qualities that
produce well-rounded persons, reflected in higher creativity and greater
capacities for positive interpersonal behavior and social relationships.”147
III. LAW SCHOOLS SHOULD TEACH MINDFULNESS.
Educating law students in mindfulness has the potential to address the
twin concerns of the multitasking but shallow-thinking mindset, as well as
the critique that the conventional law school curriculum does not adequately
address or teach professionalism and ethics.148
Critics argue that traditional law school curriculums fail to “focus on the
ethical development of students in an integrated and pervasive way.”149
144
See Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 14 (noting positive effect of mindfulness
training on positive interpersonal behaviors and relationships); Shapiro, et al., supra note
138, at 164 (reporting significant increases in self-compassion among health care
professionals who underwent MBSR training); Shapiro et al., supra note 143, at 105
(finding enhanced rates of self-compassion among graduate students after completing
mindfulness training).
145
See Leary et al., supra note 141, at 887-904; see also Shapiro et al., supra note 10,
at 14.
146
See Shapiro et al., supra note 138, at 164, 170.
147
Shapiro et al., supra note 10, at 14
148
While the focus of this article is on how mindulness can help students, research also
reveals that mindfulness can improve teaching as well. See Vicki Zakrzewski, Can
Mindfulness Make Us Better Teachers?, GREATER GOOD: THE SCIENCE OF A MEANINGFUL
LIFE, (Oct. 2, 2013), http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/can_mindfulness_make
_us_better_teachers (describing eight-week mindfulness study of teachers). Zakrzewski
reports on this study of the effects of mindfulness training on teachers, which found that
those who completed the training enjoyed a myriad of personal benefits, including
elevated levels of self-compassion and a decrease in psychological ills such as anxiety,
depression, and burnout. In comparison, a group of teachers placed on a wait list for
the course actually increased in their stress and burnout levels, But what made this
study unique is that it also looked at the participants’ classroom performance, such as
their behavior management skills and their emotional and instructional support of
students. What it discovered was this: The practice of mindfulness made them more
effective teachers, possibly by buffering them from the impact of stressful experiences
as they were happening.
Id.
149
Magee, supra note 37, at 568 (citing WILLIAM M. SULLIVAN ET AL., EDUCATING
25. 24 [30-Jul-14
The authors of the Carnegie Report call for education reforms “which
would assist in the ‘moral development of practitioners,’” that combine
professionalism with knowledge and skills, and which allow students more
opportunities for self-reflection, and allow students to develop a habit of
self-assessment.150
Critics also argue that law schools suppress
creativity.151
Mindfulness training would enable law students and lawyers
to address these shortcomings, while simultaneously addressing the issue of
the decline in attention and concentration that is affecting learning. While
some may think mindfulness training is too “new age” for law school, its
acceptance and use in many other situations show that law schools are
behind in the trend toward teaching mindfulness.
A. Mindfulness Training Is Widely Used In Medicine, Industry, and Other
Educational Settings.
Mindfulness training is “common in hospitals, corporations,
professional sports and even prisons, [but] is relatively new in . . .
education.”152
As discussed above, it is offered in more than 250 medical
centers and has been used in the medical setting for over thirty years.153
In
the corporate sector, mindfulness meditation has experienced a “great surge
of interest.”154
“Major corporations like Google . . . have . . . instituted
mindfulness programs for their employees.”155
The Chicago Bulls and L.A.
Lakers basketball teams use mindfulness to improve focus and work on the
LAWYERS: PREPARATION FOR THE PROFESSION OF LAW 30-31 (2007)).
150
Magee, supra note 37, at 568-75 (citing WILLIAM M. SULLIVAN ET AL.,
EDUCATING LAWYERS: PREPARATION FOR THE PROFESSION OF LAW 132 (2007)); see also
WILLIAM M. SULLIVAN ET AL., EDUCATING LAWYERS: PREPARATION FOR THE
PROFESSION OF LAW (2007) [HEREINAFTER CARNEGIE REPORT]. The authors of the
Carnegie Report underscore that, “[u]nder today’s conditions, students’ great need is to
begin to develop the knowledge and abilities that can enable them to understand and
manage these tensions in ways that will sustain their professional commitment and personal
integrity over the course of their careers.” CARNEGIE REPORT, supra, at 128.
151
See, e.g., Moppett, supra note 130, at 294.
152
Brown, supra note 26.
153
See supra, notes 117-118 and accompanying text.
154
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 4 & n.6 (noting some 300 books published on the
subject).
155
Stephanie West Allen, More Mindfulness Events for Lawyers and Law Students,
Including an Ethics Course Incorporating Mindfulness, IDEALAWG, (Nov. 4, 2009
2:35pm), http://westallen.typepad.com/idealawg/2009/11/more-mindfulness-events-for-
lawyers-and-law-students-including-an-ethics-course-incorporating-mindfu.html.; Tony
Schwartz, More Mindfulness Less Meditation, N.Y. TIMES DEALBOOK, http://dealbook.
nytimes.com/2014/01/31/more-mindfulness-less-meditation/?_php=true&_type=blogs&
_r=0 (proclaiming “mindfulness as a practice is sweeping through Silicon Valley”).
26. 30-Jul-14] 25
team aspect of the game.156
Environmental organizations, philanthropists,
journalists, and prisoners have all found a use for some form of mindfulness
training.157
Relatively recently, secondary, undergraduate, graduate, and
professional schools have added components of mindfulness training to
their curriculums.158
Educational experts recognize that “the real
educational potential of mindfulness lies . . . in addressing some of the . . .
intractable problems of education such as the flexible transfer of skills and
knowledge to new contexts, the development of deep understanding, student
motivation and engagement, the ability to think critically and creatively,
and the development of more self-directed learners.”159
For example, about
3000 students in Britain have been taught mindfulness techniques through
the Mindfulness in Schools program as a way to improve students’
concentration, test taking, and focus.160
In Piedmont, California, one school
experimented with a five-week mindfulness-training class for its elementary
students, while in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, one district taught mindfulness
in twenty-five classes each week at eight schools.161
At the Middlesex
School in Concord, Massachusetts, incoming freshman students are
156
Riskin, supra note 34, at 4 & n.9 .
157
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 5-6 & nn.11-16 (discussing numerous mindfulness
programs used by environmental sector, leaders, philanthropists, journalists, prisoners, and
green berets).
158
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 5 & nn.17-18 (calling attention to programs used in
medical schools, graduate, undergraduate, and professional schools); see also Brown,
supra note 26 (highlighting fifth graders at Piedmont Elementary School in Oakland, CA);
Parry, supra note 3 (discussing mindfulness elements used at University of Washington).
159
Ron Ritchhart & David N. Perkins, Life in the Mindful Classroom: Nurturing the
Disposition of Mindfulness, 56 J. SOC. ISSUES, 27, 29 (2000); see also Jamie L. Burns, et al,
The Effect of Meditation on Self-Reported Measures of Stress, Anxiety, Depression, and
Perfectionism in a College Population, 25 J. C. STUDENT PSYCHOTHERAPY, 132, 136-37
(2011), available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/87568225.2011.556947 (describing inner-
city high-school “quiet time” program increased graduation rates, self-concept, academic
performance, and reduced stress, school violence). See generally DEBORAH
SCHOEBERLEIN, MINDFUL TEACHING AND TEACHING MINDFULNESS: A GUIDE FOR
ANYONE WHO TEACHES ANYTHING (2009) (presenting teachers implementation strategies
for mindfulness to improve students’ mental focus, academic performance, emotional
balance).
160
See Oenone Crossley-Holland, Could Beditation Be the Answer to Exam Nerves?,
THE GUARDIAN, (Mar. 4, 2013 2:30pm), http://www.theguardian.com/education/2013/mar/
04/mindfulness-based-stress-reduction-meditation (revealing mindfulness techniques
taught to British secondary students). For example, “beditation,” the practice of meditation
while lying down, is one technique incorporated in the “Stop, Breathe, and Be” curriculum
of the Mindfulness in Schools program developed by two UK teachers that is now taught in
twelve countries. See id.
161
Brown, supra note 26 (describing effect of mindfulness on elementary students).
27. 26 [30-Jul-14
required to take a mindfulness course, which meets for forty minutes per
week for nine weeks.162
At the University of Washington, one professor
starts every class with a few minutes of meditation.163
These are just a few
examples of the growing trend.164
B. Mindfulness Training is Essential to the Law School Curriculum.
Given that law students are operating with a multitasking mindset, and
the criticism that law schools are not teaching students the skills of self-
reflection and self-assessment, any activity which can foster better attention,
learning, empathy, creativity, self-compassion, stress reduction, and general
overall well-being should be taught.165
In fact, “[m]indfulness meditation
has [already] entered the legal community.”166
Programs introducing
mindfulness to the legal community articulate a myriad of goals, such as
162
See Mindfulness, MIDDLESEX SCHOOL, https://www.mxschool.edu/mindfulness
(presenting students’ reports that mindfulness course helped their schoolwork and sports
focus, reduced stress, improved relationships). The Middlesex school uses the Mindfulness
in Schools program highlighted in Crossley-Holland, supra note 160.
163
See Parry, supra note 3 (describing Professor Levy’s beginning-of-class mindfulness
ritual at University of Washington).
164
See Penny Cunningham, Mindfulness in the Classroom: A Growing Trend, NAT’L
INST. FOR STUDENT-CENTERED EDUC., (Oct. 3, 2013), http://nisce.org/blog/features/
mindfulness-in-the-classroom-a-growing-trend/. Cunningham describes how “more and
more teachers are introducing contemplative or mindful based practices into their
classrooms” and how “using these approaches . . . [sets] a routine that supports self-
regulation and creates a positive emotional climate.” Id. Not surprisingly, school
curriculums have started incorporating mindfulness programs, “teaching kids as young as
five years old how to use body scans, mindful breathing and attention to their thoughts and
emotions to become more focused.” Id. (citing Carolyn Gegoire, Mindfulness Programs in
Schools Reduce Symptoms of Depression Among Adolescents: Study, HUFFINGTON POST,
(Mar. 13, 2013), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/15/mindfulness-in-schools-
re_n_2884436.html).
165
See R. Lisle Baker & Daniel P. Brown, On Engagement: Learning to Pay
Attention, Suffolk Univ. L. Sch. Res. Paper No. 13-15, at 1, 45-50 (June 7, 2013), available
at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2269726 (advocating mindfulness
training during law school important for developing successful lawyering skills); Katherine
Larkin-Wong, A Newbie’s Impression: One Student’s Mindfulness Lessons, 61 J. LEGAL
EDUC. 665, 670 (2012) (“Mindfulness is challenging for law students because living with
mindful awareness is almost the direct opposite of the way many students live their
lives.”); Riskin, supra note 34, at 38-40 (presenting mindfulness curriculum elements,
workshops, seminars at numerous law schools).
166
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 33, 33-45 (tracing legal community’s incorporation of
mindfulness training since 1989); Law Schools Involved in Mindfulness and the Law,
MINDFULNESS IN LAW, http://mindfulnessinlaw.org/Law%20Schools/index.html (listing
law schools which offer mindfulness courses or integrate it into their curricula).
28. 30-Jul-14] 27
spiritual enlightenment to just lightening up, and include
feeling and performing better as a law student or lawyer or
other conflict resolver (e.g., judge, mediator, negotiator);
developing a deeper understanding of ourselves, each other,
and the nature of reality; enhancing one’s ability to cope
with stress; developing emotional intelligence competencies
[like self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills];
and promoting ethical behavior.167
Mindfulness programs began to take off in the late 1980s and early
1990s.168
In 1989, Jon Kabat-Zinn, the director of the Center for
Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care and Society at UMass Hospital
offered a session on mindfulness based stress reduction (MBSR) training to
trial court judges.169
Mediators for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit attended meditation training in the mid-1990s.170
In 1998 and 1999,
Boston’s Hale and Dorr (now Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP)
and Nutter, McClennan and Fish, LLP offered their lawyers MBSR training
that included before and after program interviews, eight weekly two-hour
classes, homework assignments, and a daylong retreat teaching both formal
and informal meditation practices, among other features.171
In fact,
growing numbers of attorneys are embracing some form of practice to
167
Riskin, supra note 38, at 635; see also Larkin-Wong, supra note 165, at 672-73.
Larkin-Wong similarly describes the numerous advantages to law students including
increasing their ability to pay attention and focus, improving their strategies for dealing
with anxiety and stress, helping them learn to slow down and be more calm, and bettering
their capacity to recognize what makes them happy. See Larkin-Wong, supra note 165, at
672-73.
168
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 33-34.
169
Riskin, supra note 34, at 33 & n.137 (citing JON KABAT-ZINN, FULL CATASTROPHE
LIVING: USING THE WISDOM OF YOUR BODY AND MIND TO FACE STRESS, PAIN, AND
ILLNESS 125-26 (1990)); see also Magee, supra note 37, at 548 (noting groundbreaking of
Jon Kabat-Zinn’s MBSR training to trial court judges); Mindfulness for Lawyers, Judges,
and Prisoners, MINDFULNET.ORG, http://www.mindfulnet.org/page8.htm (describing use of
mindfulness by the judiciary). Jon Kabat-Zinn’s book provides an especially relevant
example:
There was a famous trial in Massachusetts a few years ago. After the jury had been
selected, the judge delivered instructions on how to listen to evidence. It was pure
mindfulness teaching: moment-to-moment, dispassionate, non-judgmental awareness -
listening mind. The lawyer approached the judge later and asked, “Where the hell did
you get that?” The judge replied “Oh, I'm taking the mindfulness stress reduction class
at the U. Mass, Medical Center, and it seemed we could use a little more mindfulness
in our judicial proceedings.”
Mindfulness for Lawyers, Judges, and Prisoners, supra.
170
Riskin, supra note 34, at 33 & n.138; see also Magee, supra note 37, at 549-550.
171
Riskin, supra note 34, at 33-34.
29. 28 [30-Jul-14
achieve mindfulness.172
Their reasons for doing so are varied, but chief
among them are stress management and improved mental and physical
health.173
The American Bar Association (ABA) has been promoting mindfulness
for the past five years.174
The ABA sponsored a book, Transforming
Practices: Finding Joy and Satisfaction in the Legal Life, by Steven Keeva,
which includes discussions of mindfulness practices for lawyers.175
The
ABA also sponsors discussions and Continuing Legal Education (CLE)
seminars based on the book and its principals.176
Various other bar
associations and organizations have organized events centered on
mindfulness and meditation around the country, including in Boston, MA;
Silver Spring, Maryland; New York City, NY; Kansas City, MO; and in
various cities in Northern California.177
Leonard Riskin, a leading advocate
and proponent of mindfulness training has taught workshops on
mindfulness and negotiation, mediation or lawyering at events in
Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Austria, Denmark, Southern Methodist
University, Missouri, California, and Alabama.178
“Legal historians will
likely mark 2002 as the seminal year . . . [when] the Harvard Negotiation
Law Review hosted a forum to discuss the implications of mindfulness
meditation for legal practice and alternative dispute resolution, in
conjunction with its publication of a symposium relating to an article by
Professor Leonard L. Riskin. . . .”179
The University of California’s Berkeley School of Law first hosted a
conference called The Mindful Lawyer in October of 2010 to explore the
172
See Enayati, supra note 77; Riskin, supra note 34, at 36-38.
173
See Enayati, supra note 77. “[S]ome form of reflective silence, active and open
attention on the present, and freedom from judgment on a regular basis” will produce
positive effects linked with mindfulness training. Id.
174
See Becky Beaupre Gillespie, Mindfulness in Legal Practice is Going Mainstream,
ABA JOURNAL, (Feb. 1, 2013), http://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/mindfulness_
in_legal_practice_is_going_mainstream/ (explaining within past five years, mindfulness in
law has reached “almost mainstream perspective”).
175
See STEVEN KEEVA, TRANSFORMING PRACTICES: FINDING JOY AND SATISFACTION
IN THE LEGAL LIFE (2009) (exploring strategies for incorporating mindfulness into law
practice); Riskin, supra note 34, at 34.
176
See Jacobwitz, supra note 35, at 2;Riskin, supra note 34, at 34.
177
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 34 (describing programs organized by ABA section on
Dispute Resolution, Shambala Meditation Center, City University of New York School of
Law, Kansas City Holistic Lawyers group); Riskin, supra note 38, at 638.
178
Riskin, supra note 34, at 34-38 & nn.143-163 (chronicling mindfulness training
seminars and events throughout U.S.).
179
Magee, supra note 37, at 549.
30. 30-Jul-14] 29
development of meditation as it relates to lawyering.180
Over 180 “lawyers,
judges, professors and law students from twenty-three states and two other
countries . . . convened to explore the development of meditation as it has
grown over the last decade in law schools and law practice.”181
Sponsored
by Berkeley Law, and law schools at the University of Buffalo, The
University of California, Hastings, the City University of New York, the
University of Florida, and the University of San Francisco, the conference
turnout reflected the attention mindfulness and meditation has received over
the past years.182
The conference “looked at the ways that lawyers and
judges have brought a meditative perspective to their work, enhancing their
empathy, effectiveness, and creativity. It has made them happier in their
work and less stressed.”183
It was so successful that it became an annual
event, and inspired the Dean of Berkeley Law, Christopher Edley, to
establish the Berkeley Initiative for Mindfulness in the Law in the fall of
2011 while “expand[ing] course offerings grounded in mindfulness, to
explore the relevance of mindfulness to law practice and legal education,
[and] to make mindfulness a more substantial presence in the Berkeley law
community.”184
Mindfulness meditation has begun appearing on law school curricula as
well, sometimes as a course on its own or often as part of another course.185
Yale, Columbia, and U.C. Berkeley were the first to offer mindfulness
programs as meditation retreats for law students.186
These programs began
to be offered at more law school campuses, including for-credit classes
primarily teaching some form of mindfulness as well as clinics and other
classes that integrate aspects of mindfulness into their curriculum.187
Law
school offerings that include a mindfulness component include courses on
emotional intelligence at the University of Miami and the University of
Missouri, professional responsibility courses the University of Miami, and
180
Halpern, supra note 136, at 641.
181
Halpern, supra note 136, at 641.
182
Halpern, supra note 136, at 641; Riskin, supra note 38, at 631.
183
Halpern, supra note 136, at 646.
184
Halpern, supra note 136, at 642. Materials from this conference, including links to
guided meditations, books and articles on meditation and mindfulness training, course
materials, syllabi, and YouTube clips of speakers and lectures are available online at
http://www.mindfullawyerconference.org/resources.htm.
185
Halpern, supra note 136, at 643-44 (distinguishing some of first mindfulness
programs in New York, Hawaii, and California law schools); Riskin, supra note 34, at 3,
38-40 & nn. 164-174.
186
Riskin, supra note 38, at 636.
187
Riskin, supra note 38, at 637; see also Baker & Brown, supra note 165, at 45 &
app. at51-55 (introducing controlled concentration training exercises in law classes to
improve students’ attention).
31. 30 [30-Jul-14
dispute resolution courses at the University of Florida and Northwestern.188
The University of Buffalo Law School offers a class entitled “Mindfulness
and Professional Identity: Becoming a Lawyer While Keeping Your Values
Intact.”189
Other law schools offer mindfulness training in not-for-credit
classes.190
“Examples include the Lawyer in Balance Program at
Georgetown, Vanderbilt’s Supportive Practices Group, Mindfulness-Based
Stress Reduction Programs and weekly meditation sessions at several law
schools.”191
Law students and lawyers of all experience levels are likely to
benefit from learning mindfulness tools alongside a refresher course on
legal ethics.192
A few law schools offer more than just a course or two incorporating
mindfulness. At the University of Miami, for example, Professor Scott
Rogers directs the Mindfulness in Law Program, which integrates
mindfulness through courses and workshops based on “Jurisight,” a system
that Rogers “developed to teach mindfulness to law students and lawyers,
using legal terms of art to explain mindfulness-related concepts.”193
This
188
Riskin, supra note 38, at 637.
189
See Charles Anzalone, Law School to Cultivate Peaceful and Ethical Lawyers
Through 'Mindfulness' Techniques, UNIV. AT BUFFALO NEWS CTR., (Aug. 23, 2010),
http://www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/2010/08/11656.html (describing course).
The curriculum includes readings from the vast literatures on lawyering and the legal
profession, and visits from lawyers and judges who take holistic approaches to
resolution of legal disputes. These, in conjunction with training in “mindfulness”
techniques, will help future lawyers understand and empathize with their clients, along
with developing skills that can reduce stress, manage the emotional ups and downs that
lawyers consistently face, and stay connected to their “sense of humor and deepest
ethical and professional ideals,” according to the course syllabus . . . Teaching young
lawyers the skills to be compassionate and self-reflective in their professional lives
will serve their personal lives as well. Through mindfulness practices, law students,
attorneys and judges develop equanimity, along with the ability to pay attention to the
actual person or situation presented . . . without allowing prejudices or preconceptions
to distort the process.
Id.
190
See Riskin, supra note 34, at 39 (citing meditation seminar and retreats at CUNY,
Yale, and Columbia did not provide academic credit).
191
Riskin, supra note 38, at 637; see also Magee, supra note 37, at 549-52 & n.78;
192
See Alan Lerner, Using Our Brains: What Cognitive Science and Social Psychology
Teach Us About Teaching Law Students to Make Ethical, Professionally Responsible,
Choices, 23 QUINNIPIAC L. REV. 623 (2004). Lerner suggests that experiential learning
activities would be useful learning tools because “[i]nevitably, we look for solutions to
problems we face by first scanning our memories for similar situations, and applying the
principles and methods that we used in those situations. In the case of lawyers, particularly
newer lawyers, our memories for solving legal problems were created in law school.” Id.
at 652.
193
ROGERS, supra note 80, at 1; see SCOTT L. ROGERS, MINDFULNESS FOR LAW
32. 30-Jul-14] 31
program has gained some support since its inception, and undoubtedly
inspired the City University of New York’s Contemplative Urban
Lawyering Program, the University of California at Berkeley’s Berkeley
Initiative for Mindfulness and the Law, and the University of Florida’s
Initiative on Mindfulness in Law and Dispute Resolution.194
Given this growing trend, and the clear evidence that mindfulness
training improves attention, learning, working memory capacity, academic
achievement, empathy, self-compassion, and creativity, and that it can
reduce stress and anxiety, more law schools should be developing and
offering courses or instruction on mindfulness.
CONCLUSION
Mindfulness training can address the twin concerns of distracted
students and the call for law school reform. Lawyers and law students are
beginning to discover the benefits of mindfulness. By making mindfulness
training a core concept in the law school curriculum, law schools will
enable and empower their students to better handle the pressures of working
in a distracted society where complex situations are the norm.
Ian takes a deep breath after the supervising attorney leaves his office
before he begins to work on the answers to interrogatories. He notes the
time and contemplates what he was asked to do. As he breathes, he reminds
himself that this attorney can be brusque but that this attitude is not
directed at Ian. Ian must only do what he was asked to the best of his
ability. He begins reviewing the file in order to draft the answers. He
hears his phone: ding! But he does not take it out of his desk or look at it.
He knows it can wait the half an hour it will take him to work on this
discovery. Ian is not sure what the attorney wants him to say is accurate, so
he does his best to work with what the client said and what he knows the
attorney wants. In half an hour, the attorney calls to ask if the answer is
done, and Ian is happy to respond that it is. While he knows the attorney
may not be completely pleased with the answer, Ian is satisfied that he did
the best he could. He hands the work off to the attorney, and checks his
phone. Time to work on his resume before anyone asks for him! Ian is
STUDENTS: USING THE POWER OF MINDFULNESS TO ACHIEVE BALANCE AND SUCCESS IN
LAW SCHOOL 23, 30-32 (2009); Scott L. Rogers, Jurisight, INST. FOR MINDFULNESS STUD.,
(last visited Feb. 9, 2014), http://jurisight.com/index.html (providing list defining all
Jurisight terms).
194
See Magee, supra note 37, at 550-51 & n.83; Riskin, supra note 38, at 637-38.
33. 32 [30-Jul-14
thankful that he learned to focus his attention in a law school class that
prepared him for such situations.
Do not dwell in the past.
Do not dream of the future
Concentrate the mind on the present moment.
The Gospel of Buddha