Physical Books, E-Books, and Retention

by Matthew Alfs, M.H., R.H., Author
Copyright 2017 by Matthew Alfs. All Rights Reserved
With the advent of digital publishing, virtual books—often called “e-books”—seem to have become all the rage. Yet, how do they stack up against physical books?
A recent survey from the Pew Research Center demonstrated that while e-books are gaining in popularity, only 23% of 2,252 Americans aged 16 or older had read a book on a tablet or e-reader over the last year, compared to 67% who had read a physical book.
While one might suspect that college students would prefer e-books to physical books as textbooks, a recent survey of college students by Direct Textbook revealed just the opposite: According to that study, 72% of respondents preferred a physical textbook over an e-book, stating that they like to highlight the text, that print text-books are easier to read and that e-readers make their eyes hurt, and that they can’t focus or concentrate when reading e-books like they can when reading printed books. (https://campustechnology.com/articles...)
Perhaps this preference is also because students sense what a 2014 trial of 50 graduate students revealed: that reading a physical book fostered better retention than reading an e-book! But why would this the case? One of the chief trial researchers, Anne Mangen PhD from Norway’s Stavanger University, found that the physical act of turning a page and of sensing the pile of pages to one’s right and one’s left somehow cemented the book’s information into a reader’s brain. (See https://www.shoppersbase.com/thinking....)
This aspect of retention is why I continue to write books with the intention of having them physically published: I want my readers to most effectively retain the information they glean from my books. It is also why I will never buy an e-reader, but continue to add physical books to my 4,000+-vol. home library and my several-hundred-volume working library at my clinical office.
I simply want to perpetuate what James Russell Lowell said so well: "Books are the bees which carry the quickening pollen from one to another mind."
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Published on August 06, 2017 19:00
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