Study: E-readers improve boys' reading

Dara Williams-Rossi, lecturer and director of undergraduate programs at SMU's Annette Caldwell Simmons School of Education and Human Development, conducted a study finding that, when it came to reading, middle-school boys valued reading more after using e-readers while girls preferred actual books.

DALLAS, March 27 (UPI) -- Boys who are reluctant readers find reading a more valuable activity after two months of using an e-reader, researchers in Texas say.
 
Scientists at Southern Methodist University reported the findings based on a study of 199 middle school students who struggled with reading and participated in a reading improvement class that employed Amazon's Kindle e-reader.
 
Boys consistently had a higher self-concept of their reading skill than girls both before and after using e-readers, researcher Dara Williams-Rossi said.
 
After use of the e-readers, boys' attitudes about the value of reading improved, while girls' attitudes declined, she said.
 
"The technology appeared to motivate the boys to read while many girls preferred the actual books," Williams-Rossi said.
 
"It may be that they prefer curling up with actual books and that they enjoy sharing their reading with their friends."
 
Students generally liked using e-readers and many felt using them helped their reading improve, the researchers found.
 
The e-readers sparked excitement among the students, they said, resulting in positive attention for the students in the reading improvement classes, with students who weren't in such classes asking how they could join "the Kindle classes."

Read more: http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2012/03/27/Study-E-readers-improve-boys-reading/UPI-13831332881008/#ixzz1r6jkspbU