(by saralonde)
“Pride and Prejudice,” by Jane Austen
My response in rebloggable (that can’t be a word) format:
So, in order for librarians to really exercise their...
When you visit the NYC Transit Museum store, t-shirts are available for every subway line. Almost all of them boringly describe the train’s...
“A new ‘QuickStudy’ – so named for its short duration and the small size of its sample group – from the Joan Ganz Cooney Center observed 24 families with children ranging in age from three-to-six reading both print and e-books in the Summer and Fall of 2011. Most of the children in the study preferred reading an e-book to a print book and comprehension between the two formats were the same…
Enhanced e-books – those that have more bells and whistles than e-books, like interactive features and games – were also compared in the study with their regular e-book counterparts. Children recalled fewer of the details of the content of enhanced e-books versus the same e-book.”
Thoughts?