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  1. #1
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    Stimulating Reading

    Stimulating Reading
    By Katha Pollitt

    It's inauguration day as I write this, and joy and hope are breaking out all over. We can do better! Let's get serious! I feel it too--I can't help it. Bidding farewell to Bush and Cheney is huge. Electing an African-American president is immense. I don't expect President Obama to set the world to rights immediately, unlike the 70 percent who, according to an Associated Press poll, expect him to fix the economy in one year. But there is something that belongs on that lengthy to-do list of his, along with rolling back Bush's midnight regulations, putting the torturers on trial and for God's sake brokering a fair and lasting settlement between Israel and the Palestinians.

    Help books. I know it sounds sappy and do-goodish and earnest. But do it.

    The starving of public libraries is just one piece of the problem, though. School libraries are shrinking too--sometimes there's no money for books, sometimes there's no money for staff and sometimes overcrowded enrollments eat up the space itself. Ideally, every public school classroom should have enough books for independent reading during school hours and also to lend out for home reading: vast numbers of low-income students have no other access to books. Instead, teachers who want their students to love reading are forced to beg for donations at websites like DonorsChoose.org: Teachers Ask. You Choose. Students Learn. and fundraisersopportunitys.com.

    Then we wonder why reading scores are so low and why kids enter college unable to deal with challenging texts! And we are expected to cheer the return of PBS's The Electric Company, which claims to "promote" reading by getting kids to watch a TV show.

    We are witnessing a rapid collapse in the economy of reading in both the public and for-profit realms. The print media business is in big trouble. Publishing houses are slashing jobs; Houghton Mifflin recently announced it was no longer accepting manuscripts. As ads dry up, magazines are folding or at least slimming down--pretty soon they'll be able to slip Time and Newsweek under your door, like a takeout menu. Newspapers are crashing all around us, and one of the things they are doing, in a desperate bid to save money, is cutting back their Sunday book review sections. Before long you won't even know about the books that you can't afford to buy and that the library can't afford to stock.

    Most of the discussion of the book crisis focuses on the challenge to print from new technologies--blogs, the Kindle, Google Books Search--and from the ease with which one can buy used, remaindered and hugely discounted books online (sales for which the writer gets no royalties, by the way).

    In this analysis, government support for publishing is a bit like public subsidies for the harpsichord industry. But the book business is also a casualty of the same forces ravaging the rest of the economy: hypercharged multinational corporations, hedge fund schemes and other financial shenanigans. If the government can bail out the banks that are so deeply implicated in our current troubles--and is about to give them another huge helping of cash, even though no one really knows what the banks did with the first installment beyond shoring up their stock prices and making new acquisitions--why can't it help books and other print media?

    Why can't it support libraries and schools and publishing by stocking the public bookshelves with inviting new books and hiring staff to keep the doors open? Let every teacher select a box of new books for the classroom; give every low-income student a dictionary, an atlas and a selection of books to read. Middle-class parents know kids need books of their own: why do we imagine low-income kids need less? Give every school enough textbooks so that each student has what he or she needs for all courses. Stock every school and public library with up-to-date encyclopedias and other research tools.

    "Shovel-ready" is the term of the hour, as the Obama administration prepares to pour billions into construction projects, many of which, like more highways, are of limited social utility. How about some projects that are reader-ready?
    Stimulating Reading
    What a great article, and such truth in it. Considering that ll million adults are nonliterate in English in the U.S.A. According to the National Assessment of Adult Literacy demographics, 12% are below basic on Prose, 12% of adults are below basic on document literacy, and 22% are below basic in quantitative literacy.
    National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) - Demographics - Overall

    As I recall in Obama's platform, one of his main goals was to put $18 billion into early childhood education. Obama wants to change the 2002, No Child Left Behind education law, which ties federal funding to student results on standardized tests. To pay for his education program, Obama would eliminate tax-deductibility of CEO pay by corporations and delay NASA's program to return to the moon and then journey to Mars. I do hope to see this policy in the near future. Obama needs to be giving more money to schools so they can purchase more books.

    "We're not going to have the engineers and the scientists to continue space exploration if we don't have kids who are able to read, write and compute," ~Obama

    Exactly! What do you think of this article/issue?

  2. #2
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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  3. #3
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    I don't agree with the concept of dealing with education from a national level. Education should be delt with both from a standards as well as the funding side of things on a local and state level.

    The real story behind the failing educational system IMHO is that the American family is failing. Not enough parents are really serious about making sure their kids get a good education. I am really not sure how to best address this issue, but I don't think the solution is for the government to take charge of things.

    Also I think the US educational system has been corrupted by the touchy feely folks who have softened up the standards too much in their pursuit of not wanting to hurt the little one's feelings by having teachers give them a failing grade or holds kids back that don't make the grade. There is even a group of touchy feely folks out there that want to abolish the grading system all together - becausee it unnecessarily traumatizes children. This crap has even worked it's way into our colleges and universities. What the fuck is the justification of grading on a curve anyway? IMHO this basically covers up the flaws in the system. It allows both professors and students work the system. Thus allowing some students that should not pass, pass, and allows some professors that should not be teaching to continue to teach.

    As for the book, libraries, and publishing business - they need to be able to stand on their own two feet or be allowed to parish. I am not so sure there is much of a future for any of them in their current form. Technology and more specifically the internet has changed the way the world functions. The future is there not in hardcover books, brick and mortar libraries, or publishing houses that cater to them.
    "Religion is an insult to human dignity. With or without it, you'd have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, it takes religion" - Steven Weinberg

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by phuketbound
    ll million adults are nonliterate in English in the U.S.A.
    And none of them can spell properly.

  5. #5
    Thailand Expat Boon Mee's Avatar
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    ^
    Gotta do better than that!

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