In this paper we compare the affordances of presenting educational material on a tabletop display with presenting the same material using traditional paper handouts. Ten pairs of undergraduate students used digital or paper materials to prepare for exams during four one-hour study sessions over the course of a term. Students studying with the tabletop display solved problems on their own before resorting to answer keys and repeated activities more often than students studying with paper documents. We summarize study activities and discuss the benefits and drawbacks of each medium. Author Keywords Tabletop, paper, education, affordance, collaboration, study ACM Classification Keywords H5.2. User Interfaces, H.5.3. Collaborative Computing
Anne Marie Piper, James D. Hollan