Why Students Get Bored in Class and What to Do About It
Learning why students are disengaged in class along with creating different learning environments can help curb boredom for everyone.
America has a problem: More and more people are finding themselves bored. It happens in the workplace, and it happens even more in the classroom. Students feel under-stimulated, disengaged, and simply aren’t interested in what’s going on in the classroom.
Several studies have tried to uncover both the reasons why students are bored in the classroom, with some studies suggesting that students feel bored 1/3 of the time they’re in the classroom and others suggesting that only 25% of 11th graders feel engaged by school. Either way, this is not good news for faculty, who work hard to create a stimulating experience for students. The results of boredom can be quite detrimental; bored students will likely skip class, pay less attention to important material, skip assignments, get lower grades, and have a likelihood to drop out of the class, a program, or College altogether because of lack classroom engagement.
Major Causes of Boredom in the Classroom
- The subject matter isn’t interesting
Often, students have to take a variety of courses to fulfill university requirements for a degree, but many of those courses don’t interest or seem relevant to the student. A marketing major might not be interested in Accounting, for example, or an Engineering student might find English to be out of their field of interest. If there’s no connection between the course and the student’s career aspirations, they may not be compelled to engage. - The class is too easy
When students feel they already know the subject matter, they get bored if they aren’t stimulated. Maybe they had a similar AP-level class in high school, or perhaps they read the book ahead of time and already know the material. Regardless, they don’t feel there’s anything new to learn and their attention wanders. - The class is too difficult
If there’s something that’s too challenging, students might simply “give up” if they feel they can’t grab onto the key concepts and important material. - It might be the professor’s fault
Professors try really hard to make a class meaningful but sometimes they’re doing more harm than good. Professors might use PowerPoint presentations that break all the rules – they’re too wordy, cluttered with too many images, are poorly laid out, or simply can’t convey the material in a meaningful way. Or, a professor’s delivery and explanations simply aren’t engaging – they speak in a monotone voice, don’t enunciate, or rush through the presentation because they have too much material to cover. And most commonly, a lecture-only format for class, where a professor talks without inviting questions or discussions within the class period is often a key reason students tune out.
But knowing the problem is only half the solution. What can professors do to alleviate boredom? Several things, actually. Professors can utilize technology, consider individualized experiential learning, and build small group and team-based exercises to increase engagement. Consider these approaches:
- Interactive Classrooms
Use a personal response system that allows students to respond to questions and polls by using a clicker device, their smartphone, a tablet, or a laptop. Students are already trying to use these devices in class, especially if they’re bored and need stimulation, so giving them an appropriate reason to engage might actually make them more interested in the class. - Hold Discussions
Rather than 55 minutes of lecturing, get the students involved in discussing relevant events that relate to the subject matter being taught. If the class is smaller, these discussions are easy to implement but consider breaking larger classes into groups where they discuss among themselves and then share with the entire class. - Provide Experiential Learning Activities
These activities can include mini business simulations or other types of technology-based activities that allow students to make decisions based on a variety of scenarios. They can also include case studies that require students, both individually and in groups, to come up with solutions to real-world scenarios.
Boredom in the classroom is probably inevitable, regardless of the amount of group work, discussion, or any other active learning elements built into the syllabus. But instructors can help mitigate the problems of boredom by reaching their students in a way that makes the class as a whole more interesting, engaging, and relevant to their careers.