Wednesday, September 29, 2010

NY Times Timely Article on What We Partly Discussed Today

In Study, Children Cite Appeal of Digital Reading

Many children want to read books on digital devices and would read for fun more frequently if they could obtain e-books. But even if they had that access, two-thirds of them would not want to give up their traditional print books.

These are a few of the findings in a study being released on Wednesday by Scholastic, the American publisher of the Harry Potter books and the “Hunger Games” trilogy.

The report set out to explore the attitudes and behaviors of parents and children toward reading books for fun in a digital age. Scholastic surveyed more than 2,000 children ages 6 to 17, and their parents, in the spring.

Parents and educators have long worried that digital diversions like video games and cellphones cut into time that children spend reading. However, they see the potential for using technology to their advantage, introducing books to digitally savvy children through e-readers, computers and mobile devices.

About 25 percent of the children surveyed said they had already read a book on a digital device, including computers and e-readers. Fifty-seven percent between ages 9 and 17 said they were interested in doing so.

Only 6 percent of parents surveyed owned an e-reader, but 16 percent said they planned to buy one in the next year. Eighty-three percent of those parents said they would allow or encourage their children to use the e-readers.

Francie Alexander, the chief academic officer at Scholastic, called the report “a call to action.”

“I didn’t realize how quickly kids had embraced this technology,” Ms. Alexander said, referring to computers and e-readers or other portable devices that can download books. “Clearly they see them as tools for reading — not just gaming, not just texting. They see them as an opportunity to read.”

Milton Chen, a senior fellow at the George Lucas Educational Foundation, said the report made the case that children want to read on new digital platforms.

“The very same device that is used for socializing and texting and staying in touch with their friends can also be turned for another purpose,” Mr. Chen said. “That’s the hope.”

But many parents surveyed also expressed deep concerns about the distractions of video games, cellphones and television in their children’s lives. They also wondered if the modern multi-tasking adolescent had the patience to become engrossed in a long novel.

“My daughter can’t stop texting long enough to concentrate on a book,” said one parent surveyed, the mother of a 15-year-old in Texas.

Another survey participant, the mother of a 7-year-old Michigan boy, said, “I am afraid my son’s attention span will only include fast-moving ideas, and book reading will become boring to him.”

More than half the parents surveyed said they were concerned that as their children spent more time using digital devices, they would be less interested in recreational reading. The study did not try to measure whether the digital devices actually did detract from time spent reading.

The study also examined the effect of parents and teachers on children’s reading habits. Children ages 9 to 11 are more likely to be frequent readers if their parents provide interesting books to read at home and set limits on time spent using technology like video games, the report said.

The report also suggested that many children displayed an alarmingly high level of trust in information available on the Internet: 39 percent of children ages 9 to 17 said the information they found online was “always correct.”

Notes here

Thursday, September 23, 2010

An interesting take on the digital human from my second-favorite periodical of all time:

I've been interested in The Shallows (Nicholas Carr) for a while now, but I haven't gotten around to reading it. It's apparently generated something of a buzz. They're coming out with a lot of research which is showing how multitasking and cyberspace alter the ways in which we think, and I'm not sure that I like the direction in which it's being altered, if the research is valid. Which, as I said, I haven't had time to look into as deeply as I would like.
notes from last week in case the invite did not work..

https://www.iwork.com/document/?a=p1090816266&d=iPad_9-15.pages&u=cmlanger@loyno.edu&p=F607396CD82944D0BC4C

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Cruz E-Reader... Bizarrely looks like the iPad...

What is Borders trying to pull here?

http://www.borders.com/online/store/MediaView_cruz-reader

Monday, September 20, 2010

Sunday, September 19, 2010

The Case for Books

Please read chapter 2 in the Darnton text for this Wednesday, 9/22.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

the scribe

hey guys i'm actually typing this on my laptop cause I can't figure out a way to get to the body part of the post from my ipad. give me some comments if you know how. I sent all you guys an invite to iwork.com which is the pages application way to share documents. it is actually really cool and you guys will be able to download it as either a pdf or as a word document. that is one thing down that i won't have to use my laptop for, but now this whole blogging thing has come up. hopefully we can tackle it together.

anyway. let me know if somebody did not get that email with the invitation and i will re send it to all. today is my first time using it and it worked when i sent it to myself but then again i know my email by heart and had to look all yours up. anyway to have a group of people to send it to via the ipad? i'll be searching for it. thanks guy

An interesting application of the device

Light painting with the iPad

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

The Case for Books

As some of you have mentioned in your blog posts below, Robert Darnton's The Case for Books: Past, Present, and Future is a recent text (2009) which considers both the printed and "e" word. As "The Nation" reviews it, The Case for Books is "a worthy guide to the tremors created by the Kindle and electronic reading." This is just part of its charm or challenge. So please download an electronic copy of Darnton's book and read both the Introduction and the first chapter from Part 1, "Google and the Future of Books." We will discuss these chapters in class next Wednesday (9/15).

Enjoy!

Monday, September 6, 2010

The Case for Books

I recently came across this book at B&N the other day, and I was wondering if anyone had heard anything about it? From what I can tell, I think it's pretty on topic with our class.
http://www.amazon.com/Case-Books-Past-Present-Future/dp/1586488260#reader_1586488260
Interestingly enough, there is an eReader version available.

Friday, September 3, 2010

It's a book

This is a preview of a children's picture book that discusses the debate between analog and digital reading.

First Date: Me and my E-Reader

Upon going to Barnes and Nobles to look at the Nooks with my brother, he actually bought me a Nook. AHHH!

With that said, I already have 33 books in my library (which cost me maybe $15 total), and about 16 documents (meaning I copied several PDFs from my computer over to my Nook folder via a USB cord. That means you can download E-books for free from the Gutenberg project, purchase books not available in your respective E-reader catalogue (how annoying, some E-books can be bought off Amazon, some on BN.com), and even upload your school documents and put them on your E-reader for use anywhere. The two year warranty from BN will allow you to replace your Nook for software malfunction or even spilling OJ on your Nook. It does not, however, cover "mysterious disappearance" or theft. So let's pray I learn how to keep up with this gadget.

Now, I must say that if I wasn't going to be traveling for the next year, I wouldn't have purchased the E-reader. As cool as it is, I love my bookshelf. I still love the weight and smell and process of aging that a book possesses. I am, however, curious of the ecological value of an E-reader vs. a large collection of books, and that is something I plan to do research on for my nature blog Contemplating Nature. Perhaps E-readers will be a good investment ecologically, just as Mp3's are a little more efficient than Cds that only get scratched and thrown away. (I say this, and I still have CDs littering my car) I'll let you know what I find. I do know, however, that all these gadgets (Ipods, Ipads, E-readers, computers) are pretty difficult to "throw away," and might be doing just as much damage as cutting down lots of trees for printing.

I'll report back to you guys soon. I'll also test out my E-reader in various locations (air planes, canoes, French cafés) and let you know how they fare. I'm also excited to see the difference in traveling with an E-reader versus the 10+ books I typically manage to cram inside my bags for two week trips.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

To add to our discussion

I found this interesting story while looking at the NY Times on the iPad.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/02/technology/02couples.html?ref=technology
I remembered where I had read the story about Pandora and Netflix 'if you like this...' math engine: It was Time Magazine. So it's not too indepth, but still an interesting read, especially imagining something similar with E-books. Here's a link to the story: Time Story