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Survey: Children like e-books, parents not so much

2010-09-29 05:32:48

By HILLEL ITALIE, AP National Writer Hillel Italie, Ap National Writer Wed

Sep 29, 12:02 am ET

NEW YORK Children are ready to try e-books, with some thinking that a bigger

selection of electronic texts would make reading for fun even more fun,

according to a new study. But a solid majority of parents aren't planning to

join the digital revolution.

The 2010 Kids and Family Reading Report, released Wednesday and commissioned by

Scholastic Inc., offers a mixed portrait of e-books and families. Around six

out of 10 of those between ages 9 and 17 say they're interested in reading on

an electronic device such as the Kindle or the iPad. Around one out of three

from the same age group say they'd read more "for fun" if more books were

available on a digital reader.

Among the books that can't be downloaded: the "Harry Potter" series, published

in the U.S. by Scholastic. J.K. Rowling has said she prefers her work to be

read on paper.

The e-market has grown rapidly since 2007 and the launch of Amazon.com's Kindle

device, from less than 1 percent of overall sales to between 5 to 10 percent,

publishers say. But the new report is also the latest to show substantial

resistance. Just 6 percent of parents surveyed have an electronic reading

device, while 76 percent say they have no plans to buy one. Sixteen percent

plan to have one within the following year.

In a recent Harris Poll of adults, 80 percent said they were not likely to get

an e-reader.

"I'm not surprised to know that. I think we're still at the beginning of

e-books," said Scholastic Book Club president Judy Newman, adding that the

expense of digital devices was a likely problem for potential e-book fans.

The 2010 report shows, as other studies have, a decline in reading for fun as

children grow older. More than half read for fun between ages 6 and 8, but the

percentage drops to around 25 percent by ages 15 through 17 and just 20 percent

for boys in that age group. Newman sees technology as both a problem and

possible solution.

"We know that around age 8 they (children) start to lose interest in reading,"

Newman says. "Obviously, digital media is competing for kids' attention. It's

very important that we as publishers make sure we're engaging kids in reading

for fun. There's an opportunity to use technology to engage kids. ... We can

have great content presented in a digital way."

The Kids and Family report was compiled by the Harrison Group, a marketing and

research consulting firm. The survey was conducted in the spring of 2010, with

1,045 children and 1,045 parents interviewed. The margin of error is plus or

minus 3.2 percentage points.