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Did you learn STEM with paper books or digital ones?

1 pointsby AHappyCamperover 3 years ago
I am very interested in how people learn STEM, and would love to know about your experience, and how you felt about learning using paper-based books/pen/pencil (analogue, if you will) vs using digital books and resources.

3 comments

raxxorraxover 3 years ago
While I love e-readers, I prefer paper books for learning.<p>I love to hold a book in my hand and if I have access to a computer, I quickly put the book aside. I also like to take notes while reading heavy literature which helps me to focus a lot more on the topic and remember the content.<p>Especially computer science books have the tendency to nudge you to write down and execute examples yourself. I would recommend to not do that. First read the book (or the parts you want to learn) to get a grasp of the larger context. You get a better perspective to start with.
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Bostonianover 3 years ago
Physics -- paper and pencil, in the late 1980s, at Harvard. Books such as Purcell, &quot;Electricity and Magnetism&quot;, Reif, &quot;Fundamentals of Statistical and Thermal Physics&quot;, Liboff, &quot;Introductory Quantum Mechanics&quot;, Sakurai, &quot;Modern Quantum Mechanics&quot;, Ashcroft and Mermin, &quot;Solid State Physics&quot;, Brown and Churchill, &quot;Complex Variables and Applications&quot;, and &quot;Fourier Series and Boundary Value Problems&quot;.
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DubDoubleover 3 years ago
Paper. Pencil.
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