Litcius/Paper detail

Reading from Screen Vs Reading from Paper: Does It Really Matter?

Türkan ÖCAL, Aydin Y. Durgunoğlu, Lauren Twite

2022Journal of College Reading and Learning9 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study investigated whether reading comprehension would differ when the texts are studied and tested on screen or on paper. Participants were 69 college students who were attending a college in midwestern United States. Participants read two expository texts each, under comparable paper and screen conditions and answered comprehension questions. Test forms and the order of the conditions were counterbalanced. The correlations between reading outcomes and reader characteristics were examined. Participants also completed a survey on their views on the two media (paper or screen). The results did not indicate a significant difference on students’ reading comprehension as a function of medium and reader characteristics. However, students reported preferring paper-based reading for complex material.

Topics & Concepts

Reading comprehensionReading (process)Test (biology)PsychologySignificant differenceComprehensionMathematics educationFunction (biology)LinguisticsMedicinePaleontologyPhilosophyInternal medicineEvolutionary biologyBiologyLibrary Collection Development and Digital ResourcesLibrary Science and Information LiteracyGender and Technology in Education