Student programming behavior with and without phone notification suppression
Gavin Eddington, Christopher Warren, Seth Poulsen, John Edwards

TL;DR
This study investigates how suppressing phone notifications impacts student programming focus and engagement, revealing varied effects with many students benefiting from reduced interruptions.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that notification suppression can improve programming focus for many students, highlighting a bimodal response pattern.
Findings
Notification suppression reduces break rates and increases focus intervals for many students.
A bimodal effect exists: some students benefit, others are negatively affected.
The study offers insights into how phone distractions influence programming behavior.
Abstract
Background and Context. Computer programming often involves extended periods of sustained activity and mobile phone notifications introduce frequent opportunities for interruption. Prior work demonstrates that suppressing phone notifications may reduce these disruptions. Objectives. Our primary research question is: How does suppressing phone notifications affect students' task engagement and productivity while programming? Method. We report on a replication and methodological extension study conducted in a CS1 course involving 22 students. Using a within-subject design, selected programming assignments were randomly designated for enabling notification suppression. Phone state logs were synchronized with millisecond-resolution IDE keystroke data to measure student attention and focus when in the control and notification-suppression conditions. Findings. Assignments completed with…
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