Bi-Literate Reading

Paper or screen? There’s a battle in your brain. The more you read on screens, the more your brain adapts to the “non-linear” kind of reading we do on computers and phones. Your eyes dart around, you stop half way through a paragraph to check a link or a read a text message. Then, when you go back to good old fashioned paper, it can be

harder to concentrate. “The human brain is almost adapting too well to the particular attributes or characteristics of internet reading,” says Maryanne Wolf of Tufts University. She says we have to develop a ‘bi-literate’ brain if we want to be able to switch from the scattered skimming typical of screen reading to the deeper, slow reading that we associate with books on paper. It is possible. It just takes work. One person who has done it well is Maria Popova, founder of Brainpickings.org. In this episode, Manoush visits her home, marvels at the piles of books everywhere, and learns how Maria manages to read about a dozen books a week and still retain the information, organize ideas around a myriad of themes, and churn out multiple smart, insightful, original posts every day. She does it using a mix of digital and analog tools and techniques to help her read better. Story from NPR’s New Tech City and their delightfully peppy host, Manoush Zomorodi.