Doctoral Candidate Brochure: Adam M. Novelli

Doctoral Dissertation Defense
of
Adam M. Novelli

For the degree of

Doctor of Education
Interprofessional Leadership, Educational Technology

Understanding Student Mobile Digital Distraction

March 3, 2026
9:00 a.m.
Microsoft Teams

Understanding Student Mobile Digital Distraction

Mobile phones have become ubiquitous in secondary school classrooms, creating new opportunities for learning while simultaneously introducing persistent sources of distraction. Despite widespread policy responses that range from permissive integration to outright restriction, comparatively little research has examined how students themselves understand and experience mobile digital distraction during instructional time. This study investigates student attitudes toward in-class mobile phone use and explores the psychological, behavioral, and contextual factors that shape those attitudes. 

Using a quantitative design, survey data and self-reported measures of phone use were analyzed to examine relationships among perceived distraction, minutes of mobile engagement, problematic smartphone use, and motivational constructs related to autonomy and self-regulation. Quantitative findings identify key predictors of both perceived and behavioral distraction, providing deeper insight into students’ reasoning about when, why, and how they choose to use their devices during class. 

Findings contribute to the growing literature on digital distraction by clarifying how student beliefs align with observable behaviors and by offering practical recommendations for educators and school leaders. Results support the development of balanced, autonomy-supportive instructional practices and policies that reduce off-task phone use while preserving the potential benefits of mobile technology for learning

About the Candidate

Adam M. Novelli

M.A., Instructional Design
Western Governors University, 2020

B.S., Integrated Social Studies Education
Ohio University, 2014

Adam has twelve years of experience as a high school social studies and family consumer sciences teacher. His professional work and scholarship focus on the intersection of student mobile phone use, school policy, and instructional practices, with particular attention to how classroom environments can support both student autonomy and sustained academic engagement.

Through both scholarship and practice, Adam aims to contribute to thoughtful, research-informed conversations about technology, motivation, and adolescent learning in secondary education.

Doctoral Dissertation Committee

Director

Richard E. Ferdig, Ph.D.
Summit Professor of Learning Technologies
School of Engineering
College of Aeronautics and Engineering

Co-Director

Enrico Gandolfi, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Emerging Media and Technology
College of Communication and Information

Member

Karl Kosko, Ph.D.
Professor, Mathematics Education
School of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum Studies
College of Education, Health and Human Services

Graduate Faculty Representative

Aryn C. Karpinski, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Evaluation and Measurement
School of Foundations, Leadership and Administration
College of Education, Health and Human Services