Saturday, June 11, 2016

Literacy = Freedom





IMO, WE MUST BEGIN TO READ AND NEVER STOP!

Not an unusual story across our nation...

Mary Willingham (a learning specialist and tutor) was in her office when a basketball player at the University of North Carolina walked in looking for help with his classwork. He couldn't read or write...even about himself in the local sports page!

"I kind of panicked. What do you do with that?" she said, recalling the meeting.

Willingham's job was to help athletes who weren't quite ready academically for the work required at UNC, one of the country's academically elite public universities. But she was shocked that one couldn't read or write.

And then she found he was not unusual:

35% of Americans read below a 5th grade level.

19% of high school graduates (how did they graduate...is this immoral?!?) can't read...This is on top of the fact that 22% of students nationwide do not graduate from high school.

An estimated 20% of college athletes read below an 8th grade level.

33% of high school graduates never read another book after high school.

In the USA, the average person spends 4 hours per day watching television and less that 20 minutes reading.




One of the functions of The National Association of Adult Literacy is to measure the English literacy of adults across the United States. They define literacy as the ability to “search, comprehend, and use information from continuous texts,” and categorize literacy into four levels:



Below Basic- the most simple skills ranging from non-literate to being able to follow simple written instructions. (14% of population)



Basic- the ability to perform simple everyday literacy tasks like reading and understanding simple texts and documents, being able to read the TV schedule, etc. (29% of population)



Intermediate- the ability to summarize, make simple inferences, compare and contrast, determine the author's purpose, locating information in complex reading materials, identifying locations on a map, etc. (44% of population)



Proficient- skills to perform moderately challenging and complex literacy  such as reading lengthy abstract prose, integrating, synthesizing, and analyzing multiple pieces of information, making inferences, etc.



In an extensive NAAL survey, only 13% of adults attained the proficient level (compared to estimates of 20% in 1776).


We must do better...these statistics are an unacceptable truth!










How to improve your reading:


1. Find something interesting to you and at or slightly above your current reading level.


2. Find a quiet place where you can read.


3. Have a regular routine/ schedule to practice your reading.


4. Take your time, concentrate, sound out words, look up difficult words (it is a good idea to read while listening to the audio version...this especially helps for pronunciation).


5. Determine context clues, implied messages, symbolism, etc...read and reread if necessary.


6. Keep reading...soon your vocabulary will become larger and more sophisticated, your ideas and imagination will broaden, and you will notice your grades change for the better in school. You will also become a better writer due to your more advanced vocabulary.


7. Have fun...because reading is fun!









Some of the books I plan to read this summer!


















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