3. Have you ever considered how surfing the internet, hyper-texting, and reading e-books affect: Your thinking process? Your child’s thinking process? Your brain? Your child’s brain?
4. The Problem Digital reading leads to a decrease in sustained attention and an inability to perform in-depth thinking.
5. Purpose of the Research To understand how three computer-based reading behaviors interfere with: Sustained reading In-depth thinking abilities Development of critical thinking skills
7. There is a vast increase in browsing, scanning, and keyword-spotting vs. in-depth reading. Most readers read the first screen of text only.
8. Younger people do not have the patience to read every word. They skim and look for needed information only. Picture-reading is increasing. Readers search for illustrations to explain charts, graphs, and tables. Source: http://www.benschweitzer.org/WORK/eyetrackingpapers/Liu-reading%20behavior%20in%20the%20digital%20environment.pdf
10. Hyper-texts (links) within a text contribute to fragmented reading. A document on the web has an average of nine links. This creates nine decisions that the reader must make while reading a single document – and access to nine other documents. Clicking a mouse and scrolling interrupt a reader’s focus, whereas, turning pages create a reading experience.
11. Readers are exploring more topics, and reading more, but at a more superficial level. Jumping from text to text through links, distracts the reader from thinking deeply about a single subject. Hyper-text discourages sustained reading (absorption) and reflection, two characteristics of literacy reading.
13. Learning requires time and mental exertion and the new media do not allow for that. According to Liu (2005), a majority of people understand and retain more information when they read printed media.
14. In Liu’s study, 80% of participants preferred to read a digital piece of text in print in order to understand the text with clarity. A majority of people like to highlight and annotate when reading, common activities with print.
15. A Quick Summary Source: http://www.benschweitzer.org/WORK/ eyetrackingpapers/Liu-reading%20behavior%20in%20the%20digital%20environment.pdf
16. Change Over The Past Ten Years in Percentage of Time Spent on:
18. Students develop critical thinking skills through sustained reading and reflection. Digital reading behaviors discourage readers from sustained reading and reflection. The effects of digital reading behaviors will ripple throughout society. Teachers, educators, and parents must consider digital reading behaviors when planning curricula/lessons/reading experiences, especially those that are intended to develop critical thinking skills.
19. Conclusion Throughout history the introduction of each new technology has changed how we process information—in essence, has changed our brains. The introduction of digital media is no different. It is not a matter of digital media versus print media, but of how we, as educators and parents, will integrate digital media and print media to develop each child’s critical thinking skills in order to reach his or her maximum potential.
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21. Greengard, S. Are We Losing Our Ability to Think Critically? Communications of the ACM, Vol. 52 No. 7, Pages 18- 19. 10:1145/1538788.1538796 Hafner, K. (2009, May 25). Texting May Be Taking a Toll. New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/26/health/26teen.html Liu, Z. (2005). Reading Behavior in the Digital Environment. Journal of Documentation, 61, no. 6 , 700. Retrieved from http://www.benschweitzer.org/WORK/eyetrackingpapers/Liu-reading%20behavior
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