1 April 2020
Students Learn Better From Printed Books Study Finds
NORWAY—
Printed books beat computer screens
Printed books beat computer screens
 Norwegian study on reading texts on paper versus computer screen and  effects on reading comprehension. Educational reading assessment is increasingly digitized. They compared comprehension of linear texts read on paper and computer screen.  Students reading print performed better than students reading on screen.  Certain features of digitized text display may impede aspects of reading comprehension.
Growing body of evidence on print over screens
Growing body of evidence on print over screens
The students were randomized into two groups, where the first group read two texts (1400–2000 words) in print, and the other group read the same texts as PDF on a computer screen. In addition pretests in reading comprehension, word reading and vocabulary were administered. A multiple regression analysis was carried out to investigate to what extent reading modality would influence the students’ scores on the reading comprehension measure. Main findings show that students who read texts in print scored significantly better on the reading comprehension test than students who read the texts digitally. Implications of these findings for policymaking and test development are discussed.
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