Misc,

COST E-READ Stavanger Declaration Concerning the Future of Reading

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(2019)

Abstract

We live in an era of ever more swift and pervasive digitisation. Digital technologies offer tremendous opportunities with respect to the production, access, storage and transmission of information, at the same time as they challenge a number of long-established reading practices. Over the last four years a group of almost 200 scholars and scientists of reading, publishing, and literacy from across Europe, have been researching the impact of digitisation on reading practices. Paper and screens each afford their own types of processing. In today's hybrid reading environment of paper and screens, we will need to find the best ways to utilize the advantages of both paper and digital technologies across age groups and purposes. Research shows that paper remains the preferred reading medium for longer single texts, especially when reading for deeper comprehension and retention, and that paper best supports long-form reading of informational texts. Reading long-form texts is invaluable for a number of cognitive achievements, such as concentration, vocabulary building and memory. Thus, it is important that we preserve and foster long-form reading as one of a number of reading modes. In addition, as screen use continues to grow, it will be one of the urgent challenges to discover ways in which to facilitate deep reading of long-form texts in a screen environment.

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