Â鶹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾ç

Academic Skills Blog - Digital Wellbeing

Let us shine a light on tips and tools to support your research process. This week: digital wellbeing.

hands typing into Google on a laptop

It is Love Your Library week here at Wolfson, with a focus on well being, and so we wanted to highlight ways of healthy online engagement.

Do you get anxious when your phone is low on battery? Why is that? In many cases it is because we worry about being out of contact. We are social beings. While there are many reports about phone-zombies, with heads buried in a phone rather than smiling at passers-by to say hello, it could be argued that digital technology has only sought to encourage our desire to communicate and stay in touch.

What people want from being online is often what they want from their face-to-face world. We seek out ways to connect, find information, relax, learn, de-stress and participate with others.

Digital wellbeing is less about the act of disconnecting from technology and more about the simplicity of understanding that you are in control of your digital destiny. Technology doesn't have to cause problems if we use it responsibly and to aid and assist us in our goals. So engage with what you read but stay critical. This isn't just using being alert to 'fake news' but also questioning why you agree with something rather than simply bolstering your views about what you disagree with. It is easy to follow like-minded people on social media and we can run the risk of not exposing our selves to alternative perspectives.

That said, it is easy to become distracted when online. This may be keeping in touch on social media or it may be about following up links on an academic webpage, googling things we read about in an article, or checking email while simultaneously trying to write an essay or thesis. Now that the boundary between work and leisure has been eroded by 24/7 access to the online environment, it can be healthy to lay down parameters.

So if you are looking for ways to turn off consider:

  • Leaving your phone at home or keeping it on silent and in a drawer at night
  • Scaring yourself by registering with * to see how often you use it
  • Using to collate and read your links at a later date
  • Unsubscribing from services you don’t use and emails you don't want
  • Finding a focused place to work, such as a library or Shut Up and Write session, where peer pressure will stop you checking your phone
  • Prioritising and organising your tasks using apps like
  • Block out distracting sites for a set time (and plant virtual trees!) using
  • Saving time and automating processes with

To find out more, look at the .

*please note that we do not endorse the content of external apps.

What's on

Orchid - Sophy Ricket

Art Exhibition: 'On Being One'

16/11/2024 at 10.00

Visit Wolfson's latest exhibition 'On Being One' featuring work by visual artist Sophy Rickett.

WolfWorks logo

WolfWorks - Critical Reading and Note Making

16/11/2024 at 10.00

Do you feel overwhelmed by the amount of reading you have?  Do you have a good system in place for making succinct and useful notes?

A young man plays a grand piano on stage during a performance, focused on the keys.

Lunchtime Concert Series: Themes and Variations

16/11/2024 at 13.30

Join us for a recital by student pianist Peter Ng and baritone Sergi Savanelli

Hands on a laptop keyboard

Why writing at PG level is hard (and what you can do to make it a bit easier)

19/11/2024 at 17.30

Having difficulty writing at the postgraduate level? Join Professor Karen Ottewell as she discuss the steps you can take to make your writing more effective.

A city skyline silhouetted against a vibrant orange and yellow sunset.

Egypt’s New Republic: From Tahrir’s Euphoria to Sisi’s Authoritarianism – what went wrong?

19/11/2024 at 17.30

Why do Egyptians in deprived communities accept a more authoritarian social contract under Sisi after their high hopes for democracy in Tahrir Square?