Do Students Lose Depth in Digital Reading?

Do Students Lose Depth in Digital Reading?
Paper or tablet? Creative Commons/Megan Trace
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Do students learn as much when they read digitally as they do in print?

For both parents and teachers, knowing whether computer-based media are improving or compromising education is a question of concern. With the surge in popularity of e-books, online learning and open educational resources, investigators have been trying to determine whether students do as well when reading an assigned text on a digital screen as on paper.

The answer to the question, however, needs far more than a yes-no response.

Reading in Print Versus Digitally

In my research, I have compared the ways in which we read in print and onscreen. Between 2013 and 2015, I gathered data from 429 university students drawn from five countries (the U.S., Japan, Germany, Slovenia and India).

The students in my study reported that print was aesthetically more enjoyable, saying things such as “I like the smell of paper” or that reading in print is “real reading.” What’s more, print gave them a sense of where they were in the book—they could “see” and “feel” where they were in the text.

Print is easier on the eyes. (Creative Commons/H. Moon)
Print is easier on the eyes. Creative Commons/H. Moon
Naomi Baron
Naomi Baron
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