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University of Maryland (2017) – Digital vs Print Reading

July 21, 2017

Full Citation

Singer, L. M., & Alexander, P. A. (2017). Reading on Paper and Digitally: What the Past Decades of Empirical Research Reveal. Review of Educational Research, 87(6), 1007-1041.

Publication Type

Comprehensive literature review (decades of research)

What They Studied

Researchers reviewed decades of empirical research comparing reading on paper versus digital devices to understand when and why the medium matters.

Key Findings

The medium effect is real:

  • Paper reading generally leads to better comprehension than screen reading
  • The difference is more pronounced for complex texts requiring deep understanding
  • Time pressure increases the paper advantage – under time constraints, paper readers comprehend more
  • Metacognition (awareness of one’s understanding) is better with paper – people are more accurate at judging whether they understood what they read

Why screens reduce comprehension:

  • Shallow processing: Screens encourage skimming and scanning rather than deep reading
  • Navigation issues: Scrolling and lack of physical landmarks make it harder to form a mental map of the text
  • Distractions: Digital environments have more competing stimuli
  • Multitasking temptation: Screens invite task-switching

Why This Matters for Schools

This comprehensive review confirms that digital reading is not equivalent to print reading for educational purposes. Schools cannot simply replace textbooks with tablets and expect the same learning outcomes.

The finding about metacognition is particularly concerning: students reading on screens may not even realise they’ve understood less, creating a false sense of competence.

What Parents Should Know

Your child may feel they’re learning just as well from screens (“it’s fine, Mum, I can read on the iPad”) but research shows they’re likely comprehending less and less aware of their reduced comprehension.

This is particularly problematic for:

  • Exam revision (time pressure increases paper advantage)
  • Complex subjects requiring deep understanding
  • Longer texts (novels, textbook chapters)

Access the Research

Disclaimer: We’ve created this overview to help busy parents quickly grasp the key findings. It should not be considered a substitute for reading the original study. For accuracy and complete context, please consult the source document.