
E-book QuickStudy
Key Tags: e-book, QuickStudy, research, NYSCI, families, intergenerational, coviewing, iPad
In line with our previous research on coviewing and intergenerational play, the research team at the Joan Ganz Cooney Center wants to get a sense of how interactions between adults and children are taking place when reading electronic books, or e-books. How do adults and children read e-books compared to print books? Is someone more in charge on one format over another? Does one format encourage more conversation between adults and children? Which design features of e-books appear to support parent-child interaction? Do any features detract from these interactions?
From late 2011 through early 2012, we conducted an exploratory study at the New York Hall of Science's (NYSCI) Preschool Place with 24 pairs of adults (parents, grandparents and caregivers) and children (ages 3-5). We wanted to explore e-book use on the iPad, an increasingly popular platform among families with small children. In our process of choosing which e-books to use for this study (which gave a few of us on the team the opportunity to spend our work days playing on new apps with titles from Dr. Seuss and The Magic School Bus) we came to discover that there are really different standards developing in the levels of interactivity available among e-books. We began to refer to some as enhanced e-books -- these are options with bells and whistles like games, videos and interactive characters from the story embedded within a page. Alternatively, basic e-books are print books put into a digital format with minimal features like highlighting text and audio narration. We also found that the majority of e-books that came highly recommended by bloggers and iTunes popularity indexes were incredibly enhanced to the point of resembling interactive movies more than traditional reading experiences. After a long search, we were able to find two titles with science themes that are available in print, enhanced, and basic e-book formats.
Each pair read a print book followed by either an enhanced or basic e-book (and vice versa for half of the sample) while researchers videotaped their interactions and took observational notes. Following the co-reading task, researchers interviewed parents about their reading practices at home and elsewhere. And of course, we had plenty of Sesame Street stickers and coloring books to share with our new literary friends.
More details and results will become available later this spring.
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Teachers College Educational Technology Conference
May 19 - 20, 2012 | New York, NY - Columbia University
TCETC 2012 will take place on Saturday, May 19 and Sunday, May 20, 2012 at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY. This conference will serve as a multi-disciplinary forum for graduate students to discuss and exchange information on the research, development and applications of emerging technologies in PK-12 classrooms, at home environments and afterschool programs, distance learning settings, higher education, and corporate learning environments. Lori Takeuchi, the Joan Ganz Cooney Center's Director of Research, will be a guest speaker at the conference. http://blogs.tc.columbia.edu/tcetc/
May 20 - 22, 2012
For the third year, designers and researchers interested in children’s apps will meet at Asilomar Conference Grounds on the Monterey Peninsula for the Dust or Magic Children’s App Design Institute. The three-day event includes sessions on child development, demos, critiques, testing and brainstorm sessions, including time with children talking about what they like and hate when it comes to app design. Speakers have been carefully selected to include relevant reviewers and designers with a track record in shaping the children's interactive space. http://www.childrenssoftware.com/dustormagic/
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