According to a recently completed survey of 500 undergraduate students conducted by Morning Consult on behalf of McGraw Hill, 75% of students have shifted how they study due to COVID-19, with three in five students regularly feeling stressed or overwhelmed due to studying. Students report that they routinely use social media to study and are looking for learning tools that are just as engaging and convenient. Specifically:
- 78% of students reported turning to social media when studying to find supplementary content for their classes.
- 19% of students spend six or more hours per week searching for study content and help with classes on social media.
- Nearly three in four students (74%) say they would study more if their course materials matched the convenience of resources they access via social media.
Students' demand for the engagement and convenience delivered by social media is so strong that they are turning to these platforms en masse despite broad recognition that social media offers imperfect study tools with glaring shortcomings. The McGraw Hill/Morning Consult study indicated that 88% of students do not entirely trust the education-related information on most social media platforms.
"The student experience has undergone tremendous upheaval in recent years," said Justin Singh, Chief Transformation and Strategy Officer at McGraw Hill. "We've closely watched changing student study habits and responded with our new app, SHARPEN, which will help students stay engaged and focused while delivering trusted content they can easily digest. We've proven that you don't need to compromise on delivering high-quality content to provide an engaging learning experience. A number of existing providers focus on textbook and exam answers. SHARPEN is different. It provides to-the-point support designed to help students learn, understand and succeed themselves."
Autym, a sophomore from Montclair State University who was one of the hundreds of students consulted during the SHARPEN app development process, noted, "It is so easy to use, in between classes and work, and it doesn't make me feel like, "ugh, I'm learning.' SHARPEN breaks down my chapters, so I can understand the information as quickly as possible."
Instructors agree. According to Dr. Julia Kalish from the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University, "students are becoming more distracted while in class and having trouble finding time to study. Having engaging content that my students can relate to – and I know I can trust – will help them be better prepared."