• ssu
    8.7k
    The bureaucrats responsible for education want desperately to be progressive. Hence my city it has gone so far, that they have banned physical books to be used in the Gymnasium. Not only everything is studied is online and the final exams are done by computer, but one teacher wanting to buy books for her pupils was forbidden to do that.

    There are many advantages in having a book than to watch something on screen or listening someone reading a book. And my question here is the following: what are the longer term impact of people when we literally take the physical books out of the hands of students? Also now that audiobooks have finally reached popularity with the net and cloud based memories (older people might remember physical tapes etc.), what happens when we don't use anymore books?

    At least in Finland the educational levels have gone down measured by PISA results.

    (Finland going down)
    00602b11-kuva-1-niemi-06-23.jpg

    Yes, that's a stretch and an argument that this would be even a partly cause. Yet the question is more general? What happens to our society when we don't read as many books as we used to? Antiquarian bookshops are disappearing and old books aren't sought after as they were. And it isn't just that we use our smartphones more, because on average we read less. And this isn't just Finland, it's also the US:

    (Gallup pole from 2023) Americans say they read an average of 12.6 books during the past year, a smaller number than Gallup has measured in any prior survey dating back to 1990. U.S. adults are reading roughly two or three fewer books per year than they did between 2001 and 2016.

    The decline is greater among subgroups that tended to be more avid readers, particularly college graduates but also women and older Americans. College graduates read an average of about six fewer books in 2021 than they did between 2002 and 2016, 14.6 versus 21.1.

    I fear there's long term effects on our societies with this. What do people think about this?
  • fdrake
    6.7k
    (Gallup pole from 2023) Americans say they read an average of 12.6 books during the past year, a smaller number than Gallup has measured in any prior survey dating back to 1990. U.S. adults are reading roughly two or three fewer books per year than they did between 2001 and 2016.

    My completely unreasonable hunch is that this poll was answered by book readers rather than the general populace. 1 book a month is a lot for almost everyone I know - including non-dense fiction readers!

    I fear there's long term effects on our societies with this. What do people think about this?ssu

    My second completely unreasonable hunch is that the decline of book reading is a symptom rather than cause of declining levels of education.
  • javi2541997
    5.9k
    We went down too, although we always had a very low mark on PISA. What scared me the most is that the level of comprehensive reading is actually very low amongst Spanish students aged 12 - 18. I think this is related to the point of your OP.

    We also have recent laws which forbid people to buy or share textbooks and overall all kinds of papers, with the aim of facing climate change.

    The long term effects of replacing physical books with 'devices' or audiobooks are devastating. I believe that by doing this, we private thinking and dreaming for ourselves. It is not the same to read a text (each phrase after phrase, carefully attending to each paragraph), than to 'listen' to how this text is read by another person. We limit the art of speaking and dialoguing in our consciousness with ourselves.
    By the way, those apps and devices don't help at all, because it decreases the level of attention to whatever. If we are starting to get used to someone reading for us, we will start to be lazy or unconcerned in other areas as well.

    College graduates read an average of about six fewer books in 2021 than they did between 2002 and 2016, 14.6 versus 21.1.

    And this is another symptom of my generation, so nothing to be surprised about. Most young people tend to prefer to watch TV rather than reading a book. But this is no longer surprising for a generation who was already born with a PC and other devices at home.

    What happens to our society when we don't read as many books as we used to?ssu

    People will be easily manipulated, but beyond this, I guess people will become 'conformist' because of the lack of brain training.
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    There are other consequences besides level of knowledge. There are cognitive changes: short memory retention, because new information is coming in too fast to process; shortening attention span, diminution of awareness of one's surroundings.
    I think the most damaging aspect is loss of quiet contemplative solitude. Their world is far too busy, too noisy for long term health.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    My second completely unreasonable hunch is that the decline of book reading is a symptom rather than cause of declining levels of education.fdrake
    Declining levels of education is something very alarming. Irrelevant of what is the symptom or the cause. But here the point is that really, reading everything from a phone, tablet or computer is at least for me very uncomfortable. I think the issue is worth a thread. And you simply learn to disregard books.

    We also have recent laws which forbid people to buy or share textbooks and overall all kinds of papers, with the aim of facing climate change.javi2541997
    Spain too? This is simply crazy.

    To make matters worse, naturally a student studying his course book from the computer at least here is as costly for the schools as one textbook would be. But the problem is that you then cannot reuse the computer service and you have to pay a new one for a new student. Reshuffling old textbooks isn't allowed!

    The long term effects of replacing physical books with 'devices' or audiobooks are devastating. I believe that by doing this, we private thinking and dreaming for ourselves. It is not the same to read a text (each phrase after phrase, carefully attending to each paragraph), than to 'listen' to how this text is read by another person. We limit the art of speaking and dialoguing in our consciousness with ourselves.javi2541997
    I agree. The worst thing is the loss of imagination. If you read a book, you have to imagine the story, the people and the events yourself. Listening is different, you have to concentrate on the listening. And watching a movie and you don't have to use your imagination at all.
  • javi2541997
    5.9k
    Spain too? This is simply crazy.ssu


    Yeah, and what actually bothers me is that the public administration is promoting this crap rewarding tax cuts or compensation... Pathetic.

    To make matters worse, naturally a student studying his course book from the computer at least here is as costly for the schools as one textbook would be. But the problem is that you then cannot reuse the computer service and you have to pay a new one for a new student. Reshuffling old textbooks isn't allowed!ssu

    Exactly! Another big issue here. Politicians take for granted that most Spanish students have access to computers, but this is a terrible lie. There are families with low incomes (or unemployed) who cannot afford technological devices for their children. Even the continuing cost of maintaining a device which was born to be replaced by another modern one in the future. But, with the aim of keeping promoting the study by using PCs only, textbooks have become expensive goods too.

    Can't believe, nowadays, textbooks are less affordable than in my parents' era! And I am referring to the end of the 1960s and beginning of the 1970s...
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    It would be nice if books could be printed on flax or hemp or some other fibre. We're losing trees fast enough to fire every summer; we shouldn't be pulping them for books. Especially college textbooks. We used to sell those things - they were so heavy, carrying three would just about cripple a non-athletic student, and that size was completely unnecessary: in 1920, they could cram the same amount of Algebra or Chemistry into a book that fit in a pocket. The print was small, the paper was thin and matte, and the book featured no 3" margins, sidebars or big glossy pictures.

    So, if the early 21st century version is the only textbook format legislators know and publishers can imagine, I understand why they would not want students to have to shell out $100-250 for one that will be displaced by a new edition within three years. Nor will I miss hard cover copies of trendy business success books or faddish self-help and inspirational books. Pulp fiction can safely be relegated to entertainment media, as far as I'm concerned.

    But for reference, poetry and literature, I like having real books. I also see an important place for children's picture and story books - something they can own, return to and cherish.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    There are other consequences besides level of knowledge. There are cognitive changes: short memory retention, because new information is coming in too fast to process; shortening attention span, diminution of awareness of one's surroundings.
    I think the most damaging aspect is loss of quiet contemplative solitude. Their world is far too busy, too noisy for long term health.
    Vera Mont
    Luckily there are long format podcasts etc, but then you have to have the time and the interest. But what is marketed to us is to watch shorts, and short replies. Length of a comment on the social network. Everything else than what you need to read a book.

    It would be nice if books could be printed on flax or hemp or some other fibre. We're losing trees fast enough to fire every summer; we shouldn't be pulping them for books.Vera Mont
    Printing books on paper isn't actually a problem. Deforestation happens because forests are turned to farmland. Some of the biggest global paper companies come from Finland and the country isn't deforested. Actually the first laws on preventing deforestation were given in the 17th Century. There's ample amount of forest in the Tundra, you don't use rain forest trees to make pulp.

    But for reference, poetry and literature, I like having real books. I also see an important place for children's picture and story books - something they can own, return to and cherish.Vera Mont

    I think the real problem is if people simply don't learn to read a lot of books. They surely can read, but to read long books is the challenge. You can read far quicker that you can listen to someone reading. Once when a person can read quickly, he can go through a book in a few days. If the reading is slow, the effort itself distracts from people reading books. They might have to read in school some books, but basically it's an ordeal. Then when you don't have any necessity to read books, you simply won't read them. You will just read articles, newspapers, magazines.
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    You can read far quicker that you can listen to someone reading.ssu
    Maybe, but while someone is talking or reading to you, especially if it's recorded, you can do something else at the same time. A book requires you complete attention.

    I'm not minimizing the importance of listening. For example, sewing or pasta-making circles where women's hands were busy, but their minds were idle. Taking turns reading aloud brought a little knowledge and pleasure into their lives. Reading to preschool children is even more important; as they crave independence, they're motivated to read for themselves. It was a good idea, too, to have students read aloud - it promoted reading facility and comprehension.
  • baker
    5.7k
    And my question here is the following: what are the longer term impact of people when we literally take the physical books out of the hands of students?ssu
    I think the scenario actually resembles oral culture the most.

    In the computer learning scenario you describe above, people read things mostly just once and have to work with that, however much or however little they remember or misremember. Which is the same thing that happens in oral culture -- one has one chance to hear something and has to make the most of it.

    Of course, the amount of study matter that can effectively be studied that way is not much, for most people. So the computer learning scenario enforces competition between people: those who can handle a lot of new information at once vs. those who can't. This competition has always existed, but the physically written word form has allowed many slower people to catch up and keep up. In an oral culture or a culture functionally the same as oral culture, these slower people will fall behind.


    What happens to our society when we don't read as many books as we used to?ssu
    Society becomes less romantic.


    Then when you don't have any necessity to read books, you simply won't read them. You will just read articles, newspapers, magazines.ssu

    Which isn't necessarily bad. This trend is a trend that counteracts the plebeification of education and culture.

    The idea that has permeated the public school system for the last hundred years or so (depending on the country) was that all children should get the same basic education. Which meant that all children, regardless of their socioeconomic background, should read Homer and Shakespeare etc., study history in detail, mathematics to considerable intricacy etc., ie. the classical educational canon. This has led to the plebeification of education and culture 1. in that the classical canon has to be dumbed down in order to make it teachable even to students who have no basis for such learning in their socioeconomic background, and no prospect for using such learning ever in their lives either; and 2. in that the socioeconomic class of people who traditionally had no access to this canon (and who never contributed to it) now got it for free.

    Computerization is reversing this. The upper classes who want their children to receive a classical education will make sure they do so. For the rest, it should remain the luxury it has always been.
  • Hanover
    13k
    Have they banned electronic books too? Is it a matter of just changing from paper to computer, or are you saying no one reads anymore?

    I also don't see how this data establishes causation between book reading and educational levels. You just are showing two data sets that might have nothing to do with each other. Have they shown that current paper book readers do better than current electronic book readers?

    I think I probably read and write more with the arrival of the internet because there's just more information out there to digest.
  • Leontiskos
    3.2k
    But here the point is that really, reading everything from a phone, tablet or computer is at least for me very uncomfortable.ssu

    I agree with your thesis in general, but I have found that e-ink devices do the trick (Kindle, Nook, etc.). I still buy books and prefer them in certain ways, but as notes, there is a difference between the eclipse of paper books and the eclipse of reading.

    I think the real problem is if people simply don't learn to read a lot of books. They surely can read, but to read long books is the challenge.ssu

    I think books are the highest intellectual medium, and that as they begin to go by the wayside there will be a more homogenous intellectual landscape. But if you look at the stuff that the average person reads, this has already been happening for a very long time. Magazines, radio, television, and the internet have all cut into the real estate of books.

    To give one example, in the 19th century John Henry Newman initially published his Apologia Pro Vita Sua in installments as a series of pamphlets (opposite Charles Kingslry, who opposed him). The general public ate it up. Granted, it was juicy and appealing in its own way, but it was also extremely high English prose, which most modern-day English speakers would simply be unable to read. Don't even get me started on "literacy." Ironically, I don't think we any longer know what the word even means.
  • Tom Storm
    9.2k
    I think I probably read and write more with the arrival of the internet because there's just more information out there to digest.Hanover

    I think I do too.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    Have they banned electronic books too? Is it a matter of just changing from paper to computer, or are you saying no one reads anymore?Hanover
    Oh no, basically they are all electronic books. But then again, a lot of the courses are simply a mish-mash of books and a web course. It's actually hard to find the actual "book" of the course, because there isn't one. There's just chapters you do, some exercises. Some when I've looked at them are quite difficult to read as there aren't in a form of a book and opening chapters you have to stroll from start to end to find a specific issue. But I think that's my generation X stupidity with these issues, I guess.

    Have they shown that current paper book readers do better than current electronic book readers?Hanover
    What has been clearly shown is the fact that in Finland the overall reading ability and reading has declined. And the differences have become larger, especially with children. At first grade you have children that are just trying to learn to read and then some that are avidly reading Harry Potter books. In youth those who have reading problems has basically doubled. Here class differences are quite obvious to see.

    Also what hasn't happened is that books have been replaced by e-books, because overall buying of books has gone down and increased e-book sales don't replace the aggregate fall.

    Especially with children and the basic reason is the smartphone has truly taken over reading books, and basically surfing in the social net is very different from reading a book. They simply read less than in the 1980's or 1990's.

    Of course, this is (still) the country where people are one of Europe's most avid bookworms with Poland and Estonia and Norway with other countries coming well after the three. 16,8% of Finns say that reading books is one of their main activities. So when you have one of the most book reading countries in the World reading less, that may be an indicator of something.

    1080x608_cmsv2_c8b21dbf-dede-5a72-abbf-4b8d3ebd86f4-7438526.jpg

    1080x608_cmsv2_464f3fa3-ac80-5b0e-ad31-758aa56a434d-7438526.jpg
  • ssu
    8.7k
    Don't even get me started on "literacy." Ironically, I don't think we any longer know what the word even means.Leontiskos
    This might surely be the problem. I would also take with the grain of salt the above graphs that I represented of what the actually tell us.
  • Hanover
    13k
    That shows me that Finns read books on average 12 or so minutes a day, but it doesn't tell me what it used to be, so how can I look at this and know it's been declining over time?

    Also, it specifically says "books," which means that as books decline in supply, so does reading them, but not in reading overall. I read far more than 12 minutes a day. I think the logs at TPF would reveal that.

    I'm not disputing that today we're stupider than yesterday because that does seem generally true, but I'm just questioning whether it reveals itself in the amount of reading we do.

    One thought I have had is that the information age has increased the educational and intelligence gap between people. Now that all this information is generally available to anyone who wants it, instead of everyone taking advantage of it equally, some have a far greater thirst for it and they find themselves way ahead of their peers. There's a race for success going on in the world whether people realize it and they're getting left behind and not even knowing it.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    That shows me that Finns read books on average 12 or so minutes a day, but it doesn't tell me what it used to be, so how can I look at this and know it's been declining over time?Hanover
    There's ample stats from the Finnish Statistical bureau (Statistic Finland). By their stats ALL kind of reading (not only books) has decreased from over 50 minutes in the late 1980's to 37 minutes (in the 2020's). Book reading hasn't been so dramatic, but still it too has gone down. In all age groups, among both men and women.

    I think this is an issue were many different stats and surveys show this.

    One way this change can be seen is in the libraries. Earlier libraries were indeed places where you had a lot of books and then small cabinets for reading newpapers and other to read books. Now the library system has seen the change and changed to more of a meeting place institution with large libraries having events, art performances and to be places to meet, work, study. The actual books seem like a blast from the past in many places. And smaller libraries are basically places you can go in with your library card, and there's no personnel there, so you can use the automatic machines to borrow books. This even when Finns appreciate a lot the library system.

    Just for example from my cities own website about the city libraries:

    Libraries are meeting places and cultural centres, open to everyone. They offer newspapers, magazines, books, music, films and other materials that you can enjoy at the library or borrow and take home with you. Libraries have spaces where you can study, take part in recreational activities or just spend some time. Libraries also provide information and guidance services and arrange events and exhibitions.

    I think this change has something to do with the change in reading books.
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    In the computer learning scenario you describe above, people read things mostly just once and have to work with that,baker
    Why? Once you've downloaded something, it's available all the time. You can go back to it, or parts of it, as often as you need to.
    Which is the same thing that happens in oral culture -- one has one chance to hear something and has to make the most of it.baker
    Not so. A lay or ballad would be sung over and over; a legend would be told around the campfire on many nights; people tell their children the same story many times. Don't you have any young children? They demand the favourite stories, familiar stories, again and again. There may be minor changes from from one telling to the next, but stories from several thousand years ago are still being told.
    The idea that has permeated the public school system for the last hundred years or so (depending on the country) was that all children should get the same basic education. Which meant that all children, regardless of their socioeconomic background, should read Homer and Shakespeare etc., study history in detail, mathematics to considerable intricacy etc., ie. the classical educational canon.baker
    I haven't seen much of that. Usually, the complexity and sophistication of the material is graded: basic levels of every subject in the early grades; heavier subject matter and more choice in the later ones. It's actually okay for the plebes to read Shakespeare - that's the audience he was writing for.
    This has led to the plebeification of education and culturebaker
    I can live with that. Actually, I can manage without patricians altogether.

    Quite a lot of the reading people used to do was for entertainment, rather than learning. Reading a book is a private, solitary pursuit. It's possible we have less quiet, solitary time than we used. (I only read books in bed anymore, before falling asleep. Nearly all of my research is done on the internet. Since the advent of Covid, I haven't been inside a library.)
    The pervasiveness of televised entertainments simply make it easier to be enjoy passively, in a way that leaves one's hands free to eat, or do tasks that don't require much mental effort. It's also a medium that people can share, comment on and discuss, having seen the same show at the same time. Even since television, there have times when one has free time, but "there's nothing on". Streaming gives us flexibility to watch a prime time show of our choice whenever in the day we have a free hour or half hour. Books are not always convenient; electronic devices are.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    Books are not always convenient; electronic devices are.Vera Mont
    That's the peril, Vera, our devices are too convenient. With the computerized feed back of the customers to those who make the apps and the algorithms, this ease and conveniency will just get better.

    With "classic" books you have requirements for their easy use things like a) knowing the language well, b) being able to read quickly and effortlessly and c) being able to use one's imagination.

    Traits not so convenient to the 21st Century human?
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    That's the peril, Vera, our devices are too convenient.ssu

    Oh, I know that. And there is a far deeper down-side to convenience: they [somebody, some agency, some commercial interest - you don't know who] can keep track of you all the time. Know what you like, what your weaknesses are, what you'll probably buy - and they keep offering you the same kind of thing, so you may never - inconveniently - discover anything different, hear any dissenting voices, be confronted by uncomfortable ideas.

    Books offer no positive reinforcement; they don't balk at making the reader cringe or cry or search his soul.

    It happens that I do have a Kindle, though I can't take it to places where I have to wait because it doesn't hold a charge. On it, I have a couple of novels I haven't read yet and a reference book I dip into from time to time. They were a lot cheaper than hard copies+postage. For the same reason, we put all the books we write and publish in e-format before we get any hard copies. It's convenient and it's inexpensive. Money is a huge factor.
  • baker
    5.7k
    In the computer learning scenario you describe above, people read things mostly just once and have to work with that,
    — baker
    Why? Once you've downloaded something, it's available all the time. You can go back to it, or parts of it, as often as you need to.
    Vera Mont
    Like I said, I'm talking about the computer learning scenario described in the OP. Those electronic didactic texts are not permanently available. If they are of the question and answer type, you need to start the session all over if you want to reread something. Depending on the program, of course. The idea of digital learning is that a person is supposed to read a text once, answer questions based on it, thus learn what is required, and then never look at the text again.

    The idea that has permeated the public school system for the last hundred years or so (depending on the country) was that all children should get the same basic education. Which meant that all children, regardless of their socioeconomic background, should read Homer and Shakespeare etc., study history in detail, mathematics to considerable intricacy etc., ie. the classical educational canon.
    — baker
    I haven't seen much of that. Usually, the complexity and sophistication of the material is graded: basic levels of every subject in the early grades; heavier subject matter and more choice in the later ones. It's actually okay for the plebes to read Shakespeare - that's the audience he was writing for.
    Look at the part of my previous post you're quoting here that I bolded.

    See, such are the effects of reading stuff from screens. People easily miss out on what is right in front of them.
  • baker
    5.7k
    I would also take with the grain of salt the above graphs that I represented of what the actually tell us.ssu

    The actually relevant questions should be something like,
    When people read, what are they actually reading?
    Should reading a play by Shakespeare count the same as reading a modern Scandinavian thriller?
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    See, such are the effects of reading stuff from screens. People easily miss out on what is right in front of them.baker

    Having read it twice more, I still conclude that it differs from my experience of the last hundred years. I agree up to :the same basic education, and Shakespeare played his part in high school Eng. Lit. but intricate math and detailed history has not been forced on every student under 16. I suppose it varies more greatly by country than I realized, and I have heard the European education is more demanding than North American - which is why I spoke from personal observation.
  • Sir2u
    3.5k
    I agree. The worst thing is the loss of imagination. If you read a book, you have to imagine the story, the people and the events yourself. Listening is different, you have to concentrate on the listening. And watching a movie and you don't have to use your imagination at all.ssu

    Here I have to disagree, at least for me.
    I had to stop doing so much reading years ago because of eye problems. I spend a lot of time on a computer for work and the strain was getting too much to sit around and read after work or while traveling. So I found a source of audio books.

    Depending on how much free time I have I used to read two to four paperback books a week. As you say, part of the enjoyment of reading is putting the faces and scenes in place while reading, but I still do it even when listening to stories.
    Maybe it is because I learned to do it while reading from a book that I continue to do it now, but I am sure that it can still be done even if you have only ever listened to stories.

    I think much has to do with the method used to teach understanding of the words, it must be difficult to try and teach someone the sense on a sentence without being able to point to it and show how it works.
    I only ever used audio-books as a compliment in reading classes. In bilingual teaching it is much easier for the students to listen to the words being pronounced as they read them in the book.
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    As you say, part of the enjoyment of reading is putting the faces and scenes in place while reading, but I still do it even when listening to stories.
    Maybe it is because I learned to do it while reading from a book that I continue to do it now, but I am sure that it can still be done even if you have only ever listened to stories.
    Sir2u
    We humans invented story-telling long before we invented writing. A good story-teller or reader is far more evocative than anything on a printed page. For audio books, they usually hire actors who can really produce individual voices for each character - which may influence your image of them.
    My sister-in-law used to record books for my brother when he was driving long distances.
    The only potential drawback is that you can do something else while you're listening and have to divide your attention.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    Here I have to disagree, at least for me.
    I had to stop doing so much reading years ago because of eye problems. I spend a lot of time on a computer for work and the strain was getting too much to sit around and read after work or while traveling. So I found a source of audio books.
    Sir2u
    Reading a lot does have effects, hence the stereotype that those that read much have glasses. And audio books are a great way to use time for instance when you doing something like driving long distance, jogging etc.

    However I don't think that the majority of people have problems of reading too much. At least in the global perspective.

    I only ever used audio-books as a compliment in reading classes.Sir2u
    I think the question is what happens when the things that should only compliment reading take over reading.
  • GrahamJ
    43
    Books are not always convenient; electronic devices are.Vera Mont
    Once you've downloaded something, it's available all the time.Vera Mont

    Not true for me. I made the mistake of buying licencing some maths/science books for Kindle.

    A couple of months ago I found I was unable to open the Kindle books on my computer. I could open them on my phone, but many had mathematical equations or diagrams that were too small to decipher on the phone. I spent a while trying to restart and reinstall things, then half an hour talking to customer support. This resulted in "As we have discussed, i have successfully created a ticket for the books not opening on PC, ...". Over the next ten days or so they gradually stated 'working'.

    The maths display is still terrible, but decipherable. When things like this occur in the text

    I have to change the font size to huge to make them clear, then back again to read normally.

    The problem of displaying maths on a computer screen was solved by the 1990s. I know that the authors of the books have beautifully typeset copies of their books as PDFs. In one case I have the PDF and can compare directly.
  • Vera Mont
    4.4k
    Not true for me. I made the mistake of buying licencing some maths/science books for Kindle.GrahamJ
    Yes, I see that!
    Somebody found yet another way to extract money from defenceless people. Another problem with downloads is that sometimes the vendor goes out of business, or changes format, or has a newer version, and stops supporting programs already in use.
    Buy a book, it's yours to do with as you like: highlight, dogear, scribble in the margins... I'll call you terrible names if I buy it at a fund-raising book sale, but it's absolutely your right to abuse that book.
    Anything you download from amazon is still amazon's.

    The upside of that, of course, that you can use it like a lending-library. And the downside of that is the loss to actual libraries. Any loss to public libraries, whether it's non-attendance or theft or vandalism, is a loss to the community and the culture. So there's another benefit of hard copy: support of the shared culture.
  • baker
    5.7k
    And audio books are a great way to use time for instance when you doing something like driving long distance, jogging etc.ssu

    Do you listen to audiobooks that way? If yes, how do you retain any of the heard (given that you can't make notes when driving or jogging)?
  • ssu
    8.7k
    Do you make notes when you listen? It's a good way, especially when listening to a person giving a longer response or a lecture. At work I do that, but not usually. On listening to audiobooks, simply where does one find that +14 hours to listen a book? A very good book you read far more quicker than you listen to,

    But naturally while for example driving, your listening to something that you don't have to memorize or your already familiar with, like history. Driving and listening to Kant wouldn't work!
  • jgill
    3.9k
    I retired as a math prof 24 years ago, so practices may have changed. No one in the department used the internet as a substitute for a required text, although those texts cost a great deal. Of course, the WWW was fledgling.

    I once experimented using Schaum's Outline in my complex variables course, partly to reduce the cost of the course text from $80 to $18, but also to provide an easy source of facts to accompany my lectures. Mixed results. When students missed class they had to consult with a fellow classmate to get notes or visit my office. Others appreciated the easy access to basic facts and examples.

    For a professional these days research depends greatly on one's ability to access preprints in one's area. Books are still useful for grad coursework, but beyond that it's keeping in contact with peers and using the internet to try to stay abreast in one's discipline.

    Having said that, in my old age I frequently go to my library and pick out a text published 60 years ago to refresh my dwindling memories.
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