La. Martin et Mw. Platt, Printing and screen reading in the medical school curriculum: Guttenberg vs. the cathode ray tube, BEHAV INF T, 20(3), 2001, pp. 143-148
Integrating computer-based learning into the medical school curriculum is h
ampered by students' propensity to print all digitally available material.
The research presented here examines print vs. on-screen consumption of inf
ormation. In interviews with medical school students variables-Time/ Conven
ience Issues; Habituated Learning Styles and Document Formatting-emerged as
patterns repeated by five or more subjects when asked 'why do you print in
stead of reading material on the screen?' These variables suggest there may
be both hardware and software applications that could enhance the utility
of student laptops. For example, less cumbersome computers with software al
lowing simultaneous multi-document use and annotating might be valuable fea
tures for students. Several variables, however, are outside the control of
academic computing; for example, habituated learning from print and student
time constraints. These findings provide a foundation to develop hardware
and software design that would encourage on-screen use of information.