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Education Books Displays

'A Groundbreaking Study Shows Kids Learn Better On Paper, Not Screens. Now What?' (theguardian.com) 130

In an opinion piece for the Guardian, American journalist and author John R. MacArthur discusses the alarming decline in reading skills among American youth, highlighted by a Department of Education survey showing significant drops in text comprehension since 2019-2020, with the situation worsening since 2012. While remote learning during the pandemic and other factors like screen-based reading are blamed, a new study by Columbia University suggests that reading on paper is more effective for comprehension than reading on screens, a finding not yet widely adopted in digital-focused educational approaches. From the report: What if the principal culprit behind the fall of middle-school literacy is neither a virus, nor a union leader, nor "remote learning"? Until recently there has been no scientific answer to this urgent question, but a soon-to-be published, groundbreaking study from neuroscientists at Columbia University's Teachers College has come down decisively on the matter: for "deeper reading" there is a clear advantage to reading a text on paper, rather than on a screen, where "shallow reading was observed." [...] [Dr Karen Froud] and her team are cautious in their conclusions and reluctant to make hard recommendations for classroom protocol and curriculum. Nevertheless, the researchers state: "We do think that these study outcomes warrant adding our voices ... in suggesting that we should not yet throw away printed books, since we were able to observe in our participant sample an advantage for depth of processing when reading from print."

I would go even further than Froud in delineating what's at stake. For more than a decade, social scientists, including the Norwegian scholar Anne Mangen, have been reporting on the superiority of reading comprehension and retention on paper. As Froud's team says in its article: "Reading both expository and complex texts from paper seems to be consistently associated with deeper comprehension and learning" across the full range of social scientific literature. But the work of Mangen and others hasn't influenced local school boards, such as Houston's, which keep throwing out printed books and closing libraries in favor of digital teaching programs and Google Chromebooks. Drunk on the magical realism and exaggerated promises of the "digital revolution," school districts around the country are eagerly converting to computerized test-taking and screen-reading programs at the precise moment when rigorous scientific research is showing that the old-fashioned paper method is better for teaching children how to read.

Indeed, for the tech boosters, Covid really wasn't all bad for public-school education: "As much as the pandemic was an awful time period," says Todd Winch, the Levittown, Long Island, school superintendent, "one silver lining was it pushed us forward to quickly add tech supports." Newsday enthusiastically reports: "Island schools are going all-in on high tech, with teachers saying they are using computer programs such as Google Classroom, I-Ready, and Canvas to deliver tests and assignments and to grade papers." Terrific, especially for Google, which was slated to sell 600 Chromebooks to the Jericho school district, and which since 2020 has sold nearly $14bn worth of the cheap laptops to K-12 schools and universities.

If only Winch and his colleagues had attended the Teachers College symposium that presented the Froud study last September. The star panelist was the nation's leading expert on reading and the brain, John Gabrieli, an MIT neuroscientist who is skeptical about the promises of big tech and its salesmen: "I am impressed how educational technology has had no effect on scale, on reading outcomes, on reading difficulties, on equity issues," he told the New York audience. "How is it that none of it has lifted, on any scale, reading? ... It's like people just say, "Here is a product. If you can get it into a thousand classrooms, we'll make a bunch of money.' And that's OK; that's our system. We just have to evaluate which technology is helping people, and then promote that technology over the marketing of technology that has made no difference on behalf of students ... It's all been product and not purpose." I'll only take issue with the notion that it's "OK" to rob kids of their full intellectual potential in the service of sales -- before they even get started understanding what it means to think, let alone read.

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'A Groundbreaking Study Shows Kids Learn Better On Paper, Not Screens. Now What?'

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  • I wonder if this is because we associate screens as gateways to a multitude of things (social media, videos, games, etc) most of which are distractions. When we read a book, it's an immersive activity because you can't click away and browse something else for a second. Immersion would help with focus, which helps with retention and learning. But when we read on the screen, maybe the brain thinks "Hey, I'm getting antsy here, get me some dopamine, it's just one click away"
    • The data seems to point to worse outcomes using screens. However the assumption that it is the screen usage causing the problem seems less well established as no mechanism has been offered. Until something is clearly shown, it's right to be sceptical.

  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Thursday January 18, 2024 @05:11AM (#64169319)
    A tablet gives no tactile feedback when typing or drawing on it. Paper and writing implements not only give tacticle feedback, but the feedback changes because the writing surface is somewhat random on a small level. You also end up changing your own physical disposition to the paper as you use it, instead of just using thumbs to scroll on a screen.

    People could have (and in fact did) tell the industry this for years. The object-permanence of the content in a book, as well the diversity of its physical characteristics, has a real effect on immersion, attention, and retention in reading vs. electronic content. Human senses are not extraneous bells and wheels on hearing and vision; all of them feed into our brains on a deep level.
    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      This is one thing I have serious issues with myself. If I have read something in a book I have a rough idea about how deep in the book it was, and a general 'shape' of the text on that page; was it very densely written, or lots of small paragraphs like quick dialogue in a novel?

      I can't use that when scrolling through eg. a large PDF. There's something about the way the next page of text appears in exactly the same spot as the previous page that messes with my mental image of what I am looking for. In a book

      • There's also jumping between multiple places in a book. I can read page 200, while keeping one of my fingers in the book on page 150 and quickly flip between them as needed. I have never found a convenient way of doing that with a pdf, other than copying the file, opening it again in another tab and then switching between the tabs.

    • A tablet gives no tactile feedback when typing or drawing on it. Paper and writing implements not only give tacticle feedback, but the feedback changes because the writing surface is somewhat random on a small level. You also end up changing your own physical disposition to the paper as you use it, instead of just using thumbs to scroll on a screen.

      Unless this study was done with a very unique group of individuals, I think this problem could be a bit more ingrained than the superficial differences.

      Consider the 21st Century modern pavlonian subconscious response from a well-addicted eye by the time the child reaches the age of 10 when exposed to a "screen" vs. a piece of paper.

      The mainstream welcomes rather horrific amounts of addiction via "screens" these days, with lengths that define attention spans now. The last time paper elicited that kind of re

      • Don't forget the LATENCY. Even with an active stylus and 60fps framerate, most people can "outrun" the screen update by an entire letter when writing via stylus.

        To eliminate perceptible lag under a stylus in a system where you're updating the screen within 1 frame of detecting stylus motion, you need a framerate approaching 1000fps. At the present time, there isn't even a display cabling standard that can support something like 3840x2160 with 24 (let alone 30 or 36) bit color at a thousand frames per secon

    • by waspleg ( 316038 )

      I still take handwritten notes when it's something important I need to remember. It's been known for a long time that the tactile interaction means better recall and anecdotally I find this accurate.

      I greatly prefer paper books to ebooks too, notes or not, but I can't say the same thing for that - just reading something doesn't seem to put it in long term, sometimes even after serious repetition. Use or it or lose it comes to mind.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        I still take handwritten notes when it's something important I need to remember. It's been known for a long time that the tactile interaction means better recall and anecdotally I find this accurate.

        It's been shown that handwriting notes involves a lot more of your brain which embeds the notes into your memory much better than simple typing. Both involve reading and understanding the information, but typing you will often just copy it verbatim because it's often easier and requires less processing.

        Handwriti

    • A tablet gives no tactile feedback when typing or drawing on it.

      That's not true. Tactile feedback for drawing is a concept on many tablets both when drawing or typing. It sounds like you may have simply turned this feature off since it is actually incredibly common.

    • Learning is multi-sensory. The more senses you can engage while learning, the better the recall. This is not new.

      Tablets have both advantages and disadvantages in this. Less tactile/smell more color/motion/sound potential. We need to combine methods to engage students on as many levels as possible.

      Also, nothing adequately substitutes for direct human to human interaction. It provides stimulation that cannot be matched by other methods (although other methods can be complimentary) -we are social animals

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )
      I think this might be true for young learners, but suspect that for those of us that grew up with those paper tools, using electronic learning has not hindered us in any way. When it comes to non-fictional reading, I consume vastly more material using a kindle e-reader than I ever did on paperback. My entire knowledge of routing, wan networks, their protocols, programming, VoIP complexities, and even large digital circuits in the PSTN have all been from digital sources. However, I am willing to concede that
  • Are they saying that reading the same thing on digital vs print makes a difference, or is it the quality/style of the text presented on digital vs traditional books? It sounds like the latter, but that is quite different from saying dead trees have a magical quality.

    As for the education system, I just find all these arguments tiresome. Public education systems in most western countries suck for one very simple reason - nobody wants to pay for more teachers with higher qualifications. We know this works beca

    • The US already has some of the highest per-pupil spending in the developed world. What private schools did differently was they spent less time burying kids in busywork, treated them more like human beings, fed them better, and let them actually spend more time being kids.

      • by monkeyxpress ( 4016725 ) on Thursday January 18, 2024 @05:57AM (#64169391)

        Sure but most other comparable western countries have similar public education outcomes as the US. The outlier is Finland which spends about 50% more per pupil. Here in the UK, the govt pays about £6k per student but private school fees are about 3x that.

        There is an exactly parallel here with all the endless 'innovations' around agile/new software languages/frameworks etc. The basic idea is that you can take a bunch of cheap crappy developers, and end up with the same outcome as a bunch of top tier developers. This has never worked, and intuition would suggest it will never work, but you can understand the incentive for pointy heads to keep trying. I just feel the same thing has been happening in education - you just need very good teachers and more of them if you want top outcomes, but nobody wants to spend money on this so we will forever hear about new innovations in teaching.

      • The US already has some of the highest per-pupil spending in the developed world.

        I think part of the problem is about 50% of the politicians brag loudly about how incompetent[*] they are, then half of the population votes for them because of not despite that brag. The politicians then, somewhat unusually for politicians actually deliver on their promises and do a bad job of running things.

        [*]if a politician is telling you that the government is necessarily bad, then they are telling you they are bad at thei

        • Psychopath diktators run efficient governments of sheeple. The free yeomanry do well with minimal government. Think of squalid big-city political machines doling out graft ... compared to mid-west state-sponsored agricultural colleges. Same monies, but big difference in culture -- one parasitic and one productive. 
  • That may be the reason they train a certain skill better. And that _may_ be the skill that opinion leaders _think_ makes them better humans.
    Given, I still like dead tree books. They do force me to stay on topic, have no distraction built in and they don't need electricity and electronics to function. The latter being a very distinct advantage. I still spend money on dead tree copies of writings I consider to be of potential long-term value. All nice, fine and dandy.
    But I also have roughly 500 books as free

    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      I'm pretty sure that books have three dimensions and at least two directions, since you can turn the page BACK to check on something you read earlier.

      Sounds like your smartphone is smarter than you, at least.

    • Believing smartfones are ... smart is your problem. Data is NOT understanding. Like multiplexing is not innovation.
  • by MindPrison ( 864299 ) on Thursday January 18, 2024 @05:52AM (#64169385) Journal

    to write things by hand.

    Essentially you're making little drawings (letters are drawings, technically).
    This may have a profound effect on the way you memorize things.

    1) If you're told, chances are you'll forget it fast.
    2) If you type it, you stand a bigger chance of remembering it.
    3) If you write it by hand, you most likely will remember it.

    • I agree but there's a limit. Writing stuff down helps to memorise it right up until you burn out of whatever resource your consuming to memorise whatever you're writing down. After a point it becomes a mechanical task devoid of conscious thought. I only bring it up because I've had teachers who didn't understand this and sentenced their classes to extended periods of copying. If it was "keep them quiet" busywork I'd at least understand, but the "it will help you remember" fallacy was annoying when it was li
      • I only bring it up because I've had teachers who didn't understand this and sentenced their classes to extended periods of copying.

        This, so much this.

        I have a hard time with math, which sucks because it shot a giant hole through my childhood dream of being an astronaut, I just don't "get" the numbers. I understand the concepts and know how to do the calculations, I just can't do them mentally, which is why I got into computers and now work as a Systems Analyst - I tell the computer to the math for me. ;-)

        No amount of copying times tables ever had me memorizing that 8 x 7 = 56, and yes I had to use the calculator to do that, because my

    • We should go back to the old habit of chiseling the big philosophical truths on stone tablets then. Kids will never learn properly with parchment, it's too fast to write with a quill.
    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )
      when I was a student in Naval Nuclear Power School, they had a very specific learning process. The notes of our content was always in outline format. The instructor would read each passage from the source notes. Then the instructor would write the passage on a chalkboard re-reading as they wrote it down. We students then copied each passage into our notes. Then the instructor would discuss that passage if it needed clarification or a student has a question. This taps into MULTIPLE parts of your brain. We d
  • IMHO it is best of both worlds, but I'm biased. I like it a lot since quite a while ago.

    Less stress, less distraction, and with recent e-book readers, quite an improvement on the note-taking part, responsiveness and even color.

  • Three years ago a study showed writing things down [sciencedaily.com] helps you better remember.

    "Actually, paper is more advanced and useful compared to electronic documents because paper contains more one-of-a-kind information for stronger memory recall," said Professor Kuniyoshi L. Sakai, a neuroscientist at the University of Tokyo and corresponding author of the research recently published in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. The research was completed with collaborators from the NTT Data Institute of Management Consulting.

    Contrary to the popular belief that digital tools increase efficiency, volunteers who used paper completed the note-taking task about 25% faster than those who used digital tablets or smartphones.

    Although volunteers wrote by hand both with pen and paper or stylus and digital tablet, researchers say paper notebooks contain more complex spatial information than digital paper. Physical paper allows for tangible permanence, irregular strokes, and uneven shape, like folded corners. In contrast, digital paper is uniform, has no fixed position when scrolling, and disappears when you close the app.

    Studies from over a decade ago showed the same thing [ascd.org].

    What's old is what's new again.

  • Tech is, after all, only a tool.
    I don't blame the salespeople, nor the firms pushing this. Their goal is to sell shit.

    I fully, completely, and unreservedly blame school boards and administrators for wasting precious school resources and worse - critical years for a generation of young people with whose educational care they were entrusted. In the most charitable formulation, they fell for the snake oil bullshit WE ALL KNEW WAS BULLSHIT (and some of us may have told them so, repeatedly in school board meet

  • It's not paper vs. screen, per se.

    It's just that the screen also gives access to a wealth of information on the Intertubes.

    Including many flashy web sites that will assure you that you do not need to waste years of your life studying a particular subject using a traditional textbook, with an organized, well-developed, logical curriculum that introduces and explains each progressively complicated topic, one chapter at a time, in a disciplined manner.

    No, all you have to do is take a few quizzes, or solve a bu

  • The effect of digital vs paper is relatively small compared to the harm that's been done by decades of faulty reading instruction, under-funding, & general disruption in the name of the free market.
  • The whole notion is complete and utter bullshit. The medium through which words are conveyed has exactly zero effect on reading comprehension. Be it paper, computer, projector, etc., a clear conveyance of words is equally effective as any other.

    The biggest effector (assuming no brain damage that prevents comprehension) is motivation. People who are motivated to read will learn to read.

    • You are full of tekno shite pimping-the-ride for computer-based education ... which is no education at all. Texture  / smell / weight / scribble / sound ... all properties of paper-text are crucial in learning.  Slate & cchalk OKey. Of-course not as important as willing students and bright chatty teachers, but crucial to the learning experience. A small percentage of byteboiz may live in-the-screen,  sterilized data , but no real human.
  • back to teleprinters then

  • When our son's school switched to tablet based learning 10 years ago we immediately moved him to another school.

    Other parents thought we were crazy. I figured it was an insane experiment with an unknown outcome that would affect my children (I also had a pre-schooler) during a critical phase of their education.

    Safe to say, I'm glad we decided to switch back to a more conservative school.

  • This leads to the question: What is 'best'?

  • Read the paper (Score:4, Informative)

    by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Thursday January 18, 2024 @11:15AM (#64169993)

    Here's the paper: https://www.biorxiv.org/conten... [biorxiv.org]

    They showed children text passages on "digitally" and on paper. There is extensive description of the text but no description of how it was actually presented beyond that. Later they measured EEG responses to probe words that were related, not related or in between, to the text. They also measured how well the probe words were rated, reaction time, and a bunch of other text comprehension performance measures.

    There were no significant differences between print and digital on any of the measures. Their conclusions are based on visual inspection of the EEG, which itself seems a bit of a speculative measure regarding reading comprehension, and possibly a differences of differences error where they measured a significant difference between related and unrelated probe words on printed text but not on "digital" text. The actual performance is very close between media in absolute terms as well.

    So, no significant differences, which also agrees with a previous study that found no significant differences in children, although it did find differences in older adults.

  • When we ingest materials / ideas / concepts, written in someone else's style, those concepts get translated by our brains to our inner perception of the world and of the concepts presented. When we write them back down on paper, we're often going to use a different writing style than the author's. In the process, we also pass the materials through our short term memory, and the translated output (which we would write down, if we needed to), is easier for our brains to associate and remember long term.

    In con

  • If any of the possible improvements that tech can bring to schools had been focused on improving the lot of the students the results may have been different.

    instead the focus was solely on making lives easier for the teachers to grade, for the administrators to generate metrics to "prove" their efficacy, for the politicians to enforce their uneducated biases about curriculum content and to reduce costs so far as I can tell

  • I'm convinced the biggest problem we've had with education is the adoption of costly technology for the sake of "bragging rights". It just sounds like a school is providing a "better" quality education when it can point out all the digital white-boards, laptops for every child and anything else "high tech" that's in use.

    Do kids absorb content better reading a book on paper vs on a screen? I'd say it's probably a toss-up, IF you gave them the right digital alternative to the paper book. By that, I mean first

  • Reading on screens is annoying. There are a number of reasons, but the primary one imo is that the user interface is very artificial. You don't do stuff in the world, like flipping pages. Marking things is a pain, you can't thumb through a book; everything on a screen is a nuisance... except making comments!

  • [...] a new study by Columbia University suggests that reading on paper is more effective for comprehension than reading on screens, a finding not yet widely adopted in digital-focused educational approaches.

    Who wrote this in the lead-in paragraph? The study isn't even published yet. Of course its findings are "not yet widely adopted". Why would they be?

    Sheesh. Clearly, whoever wrote this read the article itself on a screen.

    A single study with a sample size of 59 is not decisive, no matter how well don

  • by Murdoch5 ( 1563847 ) on Thursday January 18, 2024 @05:13PM (#64171055) Homepage
    I have daughters in school, one is in primary, and one is secondary, and in both cases I don't see the problem being the format, I see it being the content.

    My younger daughter use to have an electronic Maths textbook, and it was nonsense. It would use abstract ideas to describe simple concepts, then use the most ridiculous examples to try and teach every possible area of mathematics. I can remember one example that was trying to explain fractions and ratios, using boxes, groups, square and bananas. The example was trying to get kids to understand 30% or 1/3, except it made absolutely no sense. I'm an engineer, with two engineering designations, and I couldn't understand the example. I used Octave to model the example, and proved it couldn't work. Furthermore, I ended up modelling a handful of example from that book, none of them, 0% of the examples made sense or could be replicated with a model. I showed her teachers who scuffed, and tried to educate me, without ever being able to explain the examples.

    It could be maths, history, science, geography (oh boy, the geography book, I still shutter to think of that POS), nothing made sense at all. One of the books this year tried to explain racism, got it entirely wrong, like comically Trump speech level wrong, and ended up with a statement to paraphrase: "White people are garbage, disgraceful, bigoted racists, because Native Americans exist." I asked a number of the parents, and only the most left wing nut jobs thought it made sense. Neither kid could explain what racism was, and to this day they still think that racism is being Caucasian.

    It's gotten to the point that Teachers (the ones I've dealt with), can't explain anything. My younger daughter's teach just goes on daily rants about how white people are terrible piles of shit, and has resulted to blaming the students for injustice against "her people". When my daughter asked her to provide an example, the teacher got mad, and said, to paraphrase: "That question offends me, so we won't discuss it.", then made the white kids apologize to her, and when my daughter refused, she got in trouble.

    When I complained to the teacher, principal, and superintended, I got a paraphrased response about minorities and the need for understanding. Education is essentially a guilt trip for people with white skin, and an apology contest.

    I read almost everything they bring home, because I have reteach most of it, and if either kid uses a proper defensible method, that doesn't include feelings, emotions and an apology, even in maths, they get marks deducted (seriously).

    So, how much of the problem is content vs the format?
  • 1. eBooks take a relative ETERNITY to flip between pages, compared to a book where you can hold one or more pages between your fingers and more or less instantly flip back and forth with no lag or latency.

    2. one page vs 2-up view. For literally CENTURIES, the norm for technical books has been, "diagram on one page, text explaining it on the facing page". Most ebooks shoot that paradigm to hell, either by allowing you to see only one page at a time (with non-insignificant delay when flipping back and forth),

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