1 / 17

An E-book Primer for English Instructors

An E-book Primer for English Instructors. What are e-books? How can I read e-books? How can I create e-books? What should I consider when using e-books for English instruction?. Prepared by Catherine Roop For English 513, Spring 2010. What are e-books ?.

Download Presentation

An E-book Primer for English Instructors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An E-bookPrimer forEnglishInstructors What are e-books? How can I read e-books? How can I create e-books? What should I consider when using e-books for English instruction? • Prepared by Catherine Roop • For English 513, Spring 2010

  2. What are e-books? • Books that exist in an electronic format rather than on the printed page • In general, can be read on computers, dedicated e-book readers, and some phones • Sometimes are limited to specific devices

  3. How do e-books differ from print books? • Exist only as files; can be downloaded, stored on a hard drive, and deleted • Can sometimes be copied and moved easily, but can sometimes only be used on a single device without the ability to lend or resell • Can become corrupted or lost

  4. How can I read an e-book? • Some formats can be read on a computer, phone, or any e-book reader • Some formats can only be read on specific e-book readers

  5. Some devices on which e-books can be read

  6. How do e-book readers work? • E-book readers use a technology called E Ink that looks like ink on a page • E-book readers differ from standard computers and phones, whose screens emit light, can cause eye strain, and are difficult to read in bright light

  7. The Sony Reader Daily Edition uses E Ink technology

  8. How do I get an e-book? • E-books can be downloaded from a number of sites online: • Project Gutenberg • Fictionwise • Sites for specific e-book readers, like the Amazon Kindle page and the Sony Reader store • Some e-book readers let you download directly into the device, while others require you to download first onto a computer and then transfer to the device

  9. How do I read an e-book? • Some e-books can be read on almost any computer, e-book reader, or phone (particularly .txt and .pdf files) • Some e-books can only be read on a specific e-book reader (for instance, .azw files only work on the Amazon Kindle; .epub files bought in the Sony Reader store can only be read on Sony Readers)

  10. Various e-book readers and preferred formats

  11. The Apple iPad is not a dedicated e-book reader, but it is often used to read e-books

  12. The Barnes and Noble Nook

  13. How can I create an e-book? • Some file formats can be used as e-books without special processing (.txt and sometimes .doc) • To preserve formatting, saving a document as a .pdf will allow it be read on most major e-book readers

  14. What are some benefits of e-books? • Title availability (even for out-of-print and limited-audience books) • Cost (generally cheaper than print books) • Portability (can carry thousands of books on a single device)

  15. What are some drawbacks to e-books? • Incompatibility (some e-books will only work in particular devices) • Copy protection (often e-books can’t be lent or resold) • Layout and formatting (change when a book is ported into an e-book format)

  16. Products mentioned

  17. Image Credits

More Related