In response to your query on electronics versus paper, I worked in the banking industry for 50 years and it always surprised me that with the advent of computers the volume of paper increased significantly. Whatever happened to the so called paperless office? Maybe your students understand the many benefits and convenience of paper over computer screens. You can read it just about anywhere - in bed, in the bath, on the bus, on the toilet, eating at McDonalds, you name it. Don't overlook the portability of paper and the ability to write on it. Perhaps there's an atavistic, tactile need for paper in us all. Also, it's a fairly inexpensive medium. Why don't you print out your computer screens and provide your students with paper copies, if that's what they want? You may receive faster feedback, too. Peter Warren. ---------- > From: Gregory Smith <[log in to unmask]> > To: [log in to unmask] > Subject: Re: Electronic Textbooks: Yea or Nay? > Date: Monday, September 13, 1999 9:01 AM > > Like many of you, I have grown increasingly dissatisfied with the print textbooks which are available for teaching an introductory media analysis course. For me the difficulty is trying to find a balance between those books which emphasize formal strategies (genre, mise-en-scene, authors) and those which open up broader social questions (ideology, etc.). > > Last year I decided to take the plunge and try to "roll my own" by creating a web-based text for my intro course. The experiment was rocky at times as I was desperately trying to throw content up on the web, staying just a step ahead of my students' reading (surfing?). > > The reaction that surprised me the most was the frustration my students expressed with being unable to "highlight" the "book." This instinct seems to be deeply ingrained in my students. They seem to feel that reading without highlighting just doesn't stick in their minds. I discovered that many students were bypassing the web, that someone was printing up copies of the website and then photocopying them so that the students could then hold a copy of the "text" in their hands and underline it. The ability to cut and paste text into their own personal electronic notebooks didn't seem to help things for them. For study (and particularly for review) purposes, they seemed comforted to have a paper copy. > > I'd be interested to hear if anyone else has had this experience. Is this simply a transitional moment when students still are trying to treat electronic texts more like paper ones, or is there a more lasting need which is more difficult to achieve with electronic texts? > > Greg Smith > Georgia State > [log in to unmask] > > ---- > Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite > http://www.tcf.ua.edu/ScreenSite ---- Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite http://www.tcf.ua.edu/ScreenSite