Off the wire
Urgent: Brazilian Senate decides to hold impeachment trial for Rousseff  • Phillippines' boxer Pacquiao confirms comeback fight with Vargas  • Results of equestrian eventing team jumping final at Rio Olympics  • Thailand keen to prevent possible accidents due to Pokemon Go craze  • Beijing police launch operation against cyber crime  • Indian stocks open flat  • Results of men's 4x200m freestyle relay final at Rio Olympics  • Four teams unbeaten in Olympic men's volleyball  • Russia may lift food embargo against Turkey by end of 2016  • Indonesia a key partner in joint fight against terrorism: Aust'n attorney-general  
You are here:   Home

Online games can boost school scores: study

Xinhua, August 10, 2016 Adjust font size:

Students regularly playing online video games tend to have higher school scores, an Australian study released on Monday suggested.

Video games could boost teenagers' analytical and problem-solving skills, therefore improving their scores in math, science and reading, found Alberto Posso, a researcher with the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, after testing more than 12,000 Australian 15-year-olds.

"Students who play online games almost every day score 15 points above the average in math and 17 points above the average in science," Posso said.

The research also indicates that students who used social media like Facebook every day score 20 points worse in math than students who never used it.

"Students who are regularly on social media are, of course, losing time that could be spent on study," Posso said.

The research has been published in the International Journal of Communication. Endi