Exactly How Technology Can Make Reading Better
Exactly How Technology Can Make Reading Better
Reading is just the communication of ideas through alphanumeric symbols. Iām not sure what this represents such hallowed ground for teachers, but it does. Personally Iād be more concerned with reading habits, reasons for reading, the quality of reading materials, etc. Symbols change, forms change, media change. See the gif and memes and language and acronyms that become words and words that become metaphors again. This is your audience, and these are the symbols they gravitate towards.
With more personalization, more access, and more connectivity, we should be creating a generation of close-readers that canāt get enough. So if weāre not, the question is, why isnāt that happening? The pieces are there.
Technology Makes Reading Better. Hereās Exactly How.
1. Social readers are connected readers
Through apps with social components, readers can be connected through texts. Reading groups, reading contests, reasons for reading, book suggestions, building social credibility for the process of reading, and more are possible when reading is, at least on some level, a social act.
No, we donāt always āneed to be connected.ā This isnāt an either/or circumstance, however. We can be alone with our book and then socialize our reaction to the book. We can get an idea for a book and then be alone to read, then socialize again after. We can āsocializeā an idea and gain background knowledge for a certain chapter in a book, then read alone and not āsocializeā at all after. The point is, we can choose who we donāt and donāt socialize with, when, and how.
We have the choice.
2. Adaptive learning algorithms can lead to personalization
With adaptive learning algorithms, readers can have the pace, diversity, complexity, and form of their reading materials personalized instantly.
3. Increased access & choice
Through digital storefronts, free eBooks, RSS feeds, social magazines, and more, there has never been a time where students had more content at their fingertips. Like this book using an eReader like Kindle or iBooks? Here are 25 just like it.
Also, here are 10 other authors that those who liked this book also liked.
And here are 750 reviews that you can sift through to get a feel for what other people think. And please, download a free sample of any book youād like.
And itās easier than ever to publish, so while that means thereās more garbage out there, thereās also more variety. Fanfiction has exploded. If you canāt find something you like, youāre not trying.
4. Technology can distract, technology can focus
Technology can allow readers to annotate texts and share notes, which is physically interactive and āsocial.ā There are also appsāwhite noise apps, for exampleāthat can block out class distractions, and more. Before you blame technology for ādistractingā students, make sure youāre honest with yourself about how focused they were without the tech.
5. Technology makes learning easier
Letās breaking reading up into three separate categories: Before Reading, During Reading, and After Reading.
During each of these times, readers have different needs.
Before Reading: A young reader starting a story set in a different culture may benefit from watching a YouTube video about that culture, or reading a quick Wikipedia overview about it.
During Reading: A high school student reading a poem may want to Google the literary allusions in that poem to make better sense of what theyāre reading.
After Reading: A PhD student may want to check previous studies by that studyās authors to evaluate some claim being madeāor to follow up on some other data point found in the study to learn more.
The point is, technology (used well) improves āsensemaking.ā No, itās not absolutely necessary in the same way that I donāt need to drive a car to drive to Henry County, Kentucky. I could walk if I wantedāand there are benefits to walking. Cars arenāt āsuperior.ā But because of that technology, I have the opportunity.
6. Analytics can personalize the mechanics of reading
Analytics can be, well, analyzed for the practice of readingātime spent reading, how often readers clicked on certain words, etc. I know this is vague. Iām not a reading specialist or an app developer. The point is that data can be used to keep all readers in their āliteracy sweet spot,ā supporting struggling readers, challenging advanced readers, and offering choice to grade-level readers.
7. Texts can have their levels adjusted instantly
Take the data from #6, and youāve got a powerful combination. This means less or more complex sentence structure, syntax, vocab, etc. Platforms like Epic reader and news-o-matic make it easier to match a reader to a text level, as do a variety of apps and desktop programs.
And using eReader apps, students can touch a word and get its definition instantly. Not that they necessarily will, mind youāclose reading is still a matter of will. But they can.
8. Reading speed is more āvisibleā
With apps that allow the practice of sight words, others created expressly to increase reading speed, and others that measure time spent reading, words read per minute, and more, more than ever reading speed is visible, and higher reading speeds generally translates to increased comprehension.