While the following article zeroes in on the humanities, I think the same can be said for any field. Reading isn’t being approached in the same way anymore, and learning isn’t either. Maybe it’s not a terrible thing that the next generation learns and absorbs differently than we did, they will also process and use information differently than we did. To everything there is an evolution.
But will they have lost the ability to focus long enough to disappear into a novel and escape into the worlds that the characters live in? Will they have lost the ability to digest a poem and mull over the multitude of meanings that the author may have been injecting?
One of the best books I read in many years was gifted to me by a friend who is a lover of the great literary writers. One day when we were having lunch at her home and poring over her library (her husband knocked a wall in their house out and turned two bedrooms into a full library, I’m so jealous), our conversations slipped from reading to boats and back again. She suggested I read Jerome K. Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat (to Say Nothing of the Dog) and said, “You must read it, it’s very funny, and very good”.
Unfortunately she had given her copy to another. That’s the thing with real book lovers, when we read something we enjoy we don’t hide it away for ourselves, we tend to pass it on. Good books must be set free. I always hope my copies of loaned books will come home, but sometimes they don’t, and I’ve bought another copy of more than one book so I could read it again. Sometimes, if I really love a book and just can’t bear the thought of not having it on my shelf, I’ll buy another copy to give to a friend instead.
Orilea is a lover of words, and I know she would never steer me wrong, so I ferreted out a copy of the book and wasn’t disappointed.
Written in 1889, the language is so different from today’s. The main character takes up several pages just describing the advantages of cheese as a travelling companion. The words flow and produce a wonderful dance on the pages. But by today’s standards, readers might find it failing to get to the point.
But isn’t that the point of a novel anyway? To lead you ever deeper and keep you hungering for more? There is nothing so pleasant than disappearing into a book and losing oneself in the story. A well written novel is a cherished treasure and sometimes it’s such a sad moment when a really good book ends.
How E-Reading Threatens Learning in the Humanities
By Naomi S. Baron
(from The Chronicle of Higher Learning – July 14, 2014)
The student was angry. Why hadn’t I mentioned there was a shorter version of the book I assigned for this week’s class? After brashly announcing she had unearthed an earlier article by the author (“Same thing, right?”), she instructed me that anything said in a book could be reduced to an article. The rest is just padding.
For some years, the amount of reading we assign university students has been shrinking. A book a week is now at best four or five for the semester; volumes give way to chapters or articles. Our motivation is often a last-ditch attempt to get students to actually read what’s on the syllabus. Other factors include the spiraling cost of textbooks and copyright limitations on how much we may post digitally.
Replacing the whole with the part is sometimes a reasonable move. In that fateful course, few students actually worked through Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone. (In retrospect, I took solace that my peeved student had at least read Putnam’s shorter piece.) Yet in some fields—particularly in the humanities—original texts are not interchangeable with synopses or condensations. SparkNotes or even more scholarly versions don’t substitute for Paradise Lost, History of the Peloponnesian War, or Philosophical Investigations.
Are students even reading Milton or Thucydides or Wittgenstein these days? More fundamentally, are they studying the humanities, which are based on long-form reading?
There has been much talk of late about the humanities being in crisis. Undergraduates who once flocked to literature courses are now studying economics to prepare themselves for Wall Street. Graduate programs in the humanities are thinning out as students turn to “practical” advanced degrees with more certain employment prospects and, at least initially, higher salaries. The 2011 Freshman Survey from UCLA’s Higher Education Research Institute found that the top reason for attending college was “to be able to get a better job” (86 percent of respondents, up from 70 percent just five years earlier).
But there is another essential consideration affecting interest in humanistic inquiry: how we are doing our reading. I contend that the shift from reading in print to reading on digital devices is further reducing students’ pursuit of work in the humanities. Students (and the rest of us) have been reading on computers for many years. Besides searching for web pages, we’ve grown accustomed to reading journal articles online and mining documents in digital archives. However, with the coming of e-readers, tablets, and smartphones, reading styles underwent a sea change.
Amazon’s Kindle launched in late 2007. The Apple iPad (not initially hyped as a book platform—but tell that to millions of users today) made its debut in 2010. Screen resolution on mobile phones improved, and even those of us with imperfect eyesight can decipher The New York Times on our iPhones. With remarkable speed, publishers turned out e-books alongside printed ones. The revolution began with the way many people do leisure reading. (Adult fiction remains the best-selling category of e-books in both the United States and Britain.)
But increasingly, e-books are causing a pedagogical reboot. Administrators and instructors, working with kindergartners through graduate programs, are progressively encouraging students to read on digital screens. Offering the promise of convenience and reduced cost, publishers are the main impetus behind the migration from print to e-books, although academics are buying into the transition with little thought for educational consequences.
What’s the problem? Not all reading works well on digital screens.
For the past five years, I’ve been examining the pros and cons of reading on-screen versus in print. The bottom line is that while digital devices may be fine for reading that we don’t intend to muse over or reread, text that requires what’s been called “deep reading” is nearly always better done in print.
Readers themselves have a keen sense of what kind of reading is best suited for which medium. My survey research with university students in the United States, Germany, and Japan reveals that if cost were the same, about 90 percent (at least in my sample) prefer hard copy for schoolwork. If a text is long, 92 percent would choose hard copy. For shorter texts, it’s a toss-up.
Digital reading also encourages distraction and invites multitasking. Among American and Japanese subjects, 92 percent reported it was easiest to concentrate when reading in hard copy. (The figure for Germany was 98 percent.) In this country, 26 percent indicated they were likely to multitask while reading in print, compared with 85 percent when reading on-screen. Imagine wrestling with Finnegan’s Wake while simultaneously juggling Facebook and booking a vacation flight. You get the point.
Several open-ended questions on my survey were particularly revelatory. I asked what people liked most (and least) about reading in each medium. Common responses for what students liked most about reading in print included “I can write on the pages and remember the material easier” and “it’s easier to focus.” When asked what they liked least about reading on-screen, a number of Japanese students reported that it wasn’t “real reading,” while respondents from all three countries complained that they “get distracted” or “don’t absorb as much.”
My all-time favorite reply to the question “What is the one thing you like least about reading in print?” came from an American: “It takes me longer because I read more carefully.” Isn’t careful reading what academe was designed to promote?
Which brings us back to the humanities.
Readings in the humanities tend to be lengthy, intellectually weighty, or both. The challenge of digital reading for the humanities is that screens—particularly those on devices with Internet connections—undermine our encounters with meaty texts. These devices weren’t designed for focused concentration, reading slowly, pausing to argue virtually with the author, or rereading. Rather, they are information and communication machines, best used for searching and skimming—not scrutinizing.
Teachers and scholars must look beyond today’s career-mindedness in talking about challenges to the humanities. We need to think more carefully about students’ mounting rejection of long-form reading, now intensified by digital technologies that further complicate our struggle to engage students in serious text-based inquiry.
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Naomi S. Baron is a professor of linguistics and executive director of the Center for Teaching, Research & Learning at American University. Her book Words Onscreen: The Fate of Reading in a Digital World will be published by Oxford University Press later this year.
27 comments
Lovely photo! I did a shot like this for my 365 project too.
What book is this?
They also added this photo to their favourites
Thank you, It’s Dan Brown – The Lost Symbol. Seemed appropriate.
great shot! Reading the same book!
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Seen next to a fellow photo of the group "365 Community". (?)
Read it! Good book….I like the twists he always has in his stories.
Sorry – I read The Lost Symbol and thought it the most awful book I’ve read for a long time…….. Starts well but by the end I just couldn’t be bothered which is not what you expect in a thriller.
I then read Kate Mosse’s ‘Sepulcre’ – now there’s a good read.
Great photo all the same – I too love the feel of books and if i buy many more ‘Mouse will be sinking………………
SWEEP!
Please add your photo to Our Pool
Excellent!!! Your photo unanimously won and it is eligible to compete in*Game Challenge Group
Please also add it to Sweep Showcase
I remember getting hunter audiobooks in grade 3 and 4 so he could read with the class assignment. He was completely unable to have a movie play in his mind when he read. It just did not happen for him. That changed over the years and he’s read The Lord of the Rings trilogy and the Hobbit in grades 6 and 7. I don’t think I would,d ever dismiss something that as a way to draw youth into reading. It lit a torch in him and I was glad. I also am a voracious reader, but I now listen to unabridged audiobooks. I don’t have the time, working full time mom to two boys, running a house, to sit and read. But I still read amazing books and I’m glad this avenue is open to me now.
Oh, I’m not dismissing it. Kirk bought me a Kobo reader and, although it’s certainly not my go to, it’s been useful when flying as it weighs less and takes up less space.
Certainly the digital age has provided access to learning for those who don’t respond well to conventional/traditional materials. Our brains aren’t all the same, and that’s a great thing!
But I’ll always prefer paper. I don’t read books as often as I used to for similar reasons, just so darned busy now. But even when I’m reading scientific papers I download them as a pdf, but I’ll print them to read them and make notes. Then I’ll catalogue them in a database with my notes, and recycle the paper.
No more outdated text books
It’s funny you should say that. Every year my online students ask me about textbooks, I don’t use them for that reason. They are often outdated as soon as they are printed, particularly in the higher level courses. They still have use at the lower (1st and 2nd year) levels, and I still always keep a couple of copies of first year biology textbooks at my own desk for quick reference. The basic materials haven’t changed much in a very long time.
I’ve always been a reader and I love books but I must say that my Kobo has been a god send while travelling.
I believe both the economics and practicality will soon drive all technical references to digital. It may take a generation but I think that generation is already in school!
As for reading; I have quickly adapted to reading on my phone. It’s just so convenient: it’s not practical to always carry a book with me but my phone is. I may have a few minutes here & there to read a chapter or whatever and it’s instantly available, in any light/night and is a terrific substitute instead of checking FB & forum updates! I like holding a book but the reality is; I’m doing it less & less and not noticing it’s missing as much. Hyperlinks,bookmarks, dictionaries, source references etc are fantastic too!
There was an interesting article in Scientific American about a year ago on this topic that I found fascinating. i’ve dug it out, and it’s worth a read.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/reading-paper-screens/
So does splitting wood with an axe. 😉
Ahhh, that brings back memories of chopping, hauling, splitting, piling….
Exercise for the mind and body.
Yes; memories of chopping wood…for most now only recalled when visiting a museum or watching an old movie…much like books will be someday soon!
Ok; now that I’ve given my opinion…I guess I should read the article! };->
Going to have to disagree with you. Having lived beyond the 100 mile distance from the border (outside of a big city) and spent time on farms and at cabins, I know that there is still a large percentage of the population who actually knows what to do with an axe and a block of firewood…and that’s not going anywhere any time soon.
And I don’t think books are either.
By the way…have you noticed that vinyl has made a comeback?
I think there is a percentage of the population that will keep certain things alive, and not every book will be digitized. If we forget how to access that information…what else do we lose in the process? It’s important to move forward, but we can’t dismiss what’s behind us.
There’s a large percentage of New York school children that believe milk comes from a fridge!
You’re letting your retro-interests cloud the bigger picture! 🙂 It’s true there will always be an element that remains behind and thankfully so but mainstream will change because they were weaned on the changes, accept and thrive on them and the economics will make the decision for the majority except for the hobbiests & collectors.
Gotta go! This is fun but the paper on my desk is growing! It would be nice if it was all digital: I’d look all organized! Lol!
Ooooh, whole other topic…appreciation of where food really comes from….
Well thanks to you we know salmon come from a lady in gumboots giving a..um..’service’ to the fish in mating season! ;D
Not all of them, most still do it as nature intended 🙂
There’s a big percentage of kids in the UK that think milk comes from the supermarket, not only that, but they’ve never seen a cow on real life…..I blame the parents!
This is in my unfinished basement. I always travel with 5+ books. Maybe that makes me old but I don’t like electronic books. Tried on my iPad and didn’t like it at all. Bah humbug! 🙂
Totally jealous 🙂
It’s 100% scifi and fantasy so no heavy reading there. Lol. 🙂
Mary & Bill, I spent time as a kid milking cows too, and collecting eggs, and basically being child labour on my grandparents farm and orchards. I suppose knowing where the milk, the eggs, the fruit & veggies, …and even the meat… came from gave me a better appreciation of what’s on my plate.
It popped up so I’ll pass it along: