When given a reading list for the first time, first-year students have a certain expression. Somewhere around the third unfamiliar name on the page—Foucault, Baudrillard, Stuart Hall—something behind those eyes silently turns off. That look is familiar to all lecturers who have stood in front of a seminar room. It’s not being lazy. The feeling of receiving a map written in a language you have never seen before is more akin to actual overwhelm.
David Gauntlett, a media professor, made the decision to address this issue. Neither a simplified textbook nor a new lecture format was his answer. A deck of cards was involved. Each of these tiny, tangible cards has a picture, a brief synopsis of a theorist’s concepts, important publications, and biographical information. A similar set was later created by Bournemouth University as a teaching tool especially for first-year students, and by most accounts, the response was unexpected. They were picked up by students. In fact, they read them.

It sounds almost too easy, which is probably why it works. A PDF just cannot capture the feeling of holding a card in your hand, flipping it over, reading the back, or placing it next to another. Physical objects draw attention in a different way. They cause the eye to slow down. They cause the brain to pause and recognize something as valuable. This is exactly what is being solved for anyone who has ever spent twenty minutes scrolling through reading material and remembered very little.
The larger body of research supporting this is not brand-new. Students who were rewarded with physical cards during class exercises demonstrated noticeably higher engagement and retained more from the experience, according to a study that was published years ago in the Mustang Journal of Law and Legal Studies. This phenomenon was dubbed the “Trading Card Effect.” Similar reading quizzes were conducted by a school in Shrewsbury, where kids who finished books were rewarded with their own card game. Boys, who had previously been the most difficult group to get interested in reading, began to finish books at rates comparable to those of girls. In a single term, a gap that teachers had battled for years was closed.
Students do not oppose ideas; rather, they oppose the perception that ideas are being forced upon them from a distance. This is what theory trading cards seem to intuitively understand. A command is a reading list. An invitation is a card. This seemingly insignificant difference could be crucial. Collecting implies agency. You’re constructing something. What works together is what you are selecting. The way the material lands is altered by this change in psychological framing.
Additionally, the format seems to respect students’ intelligence without presuming that they already possess the vocabulary. Instead of acting as a wall, each card serves as a doorway. After reading two brief paragraphs about Foucault, you are intrigued enough to want the longer version. From reluctant participant to genuinely interested reader, that is the transformation that scholars have always found difficult to engineer.
It is difficult to ignore the fact that the global trading card market reached $15.8 billion in 2024 and is expected to continue growing. It’s obvious that the culture is returning to tangible, tactile objects. Simply put, theory cards present concepts that students might not otherwise come across in a format they already comprehend. It remains to be seen if that will be sufficient to replace the unread PDF on a laptop somewhere. However, compared to most reading lists, it is a better beginning.
