[Air-l] The No-Book Report: Skim It and Weep
Ken Friedman
ken.friedman at bi.no
Fri May 18 22:05:29 PDT 2001
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(C) 2001 The Washington Post Company
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A23370-2001May13.html
Monday, May 14, 2001; Page C01
The No-Book Report: Skim It and Weep
More and More Americans Who Can Read Are Choosing Not To.
Can We Afford to Write Them Off?
By Linton Weeks
Washington Post Staff Writer
Jeremy Spreitzer probably wouldn't read this story if it weren't about
him.
He is an aliterate -- someone who can read, but chooses not to.
A graduate student in public affairs at Park University in Kansas City,
Mo., Spreitzer, 25, gleans most of his news from TV. He skims required
texts, draws themes from dust jackets and, when he absolutely, positively
has to read something, reaches for the audiobook.
"I am fairly lazy when it comes to certain tasks," says Spreitzer, a
long-distance runner who hopes to compete in the 2004 Olympics. "Reading
is one of them."
As he grows older, Spreitzer finds he has less time to read. And less
inclination. In fact, he says, if he weren't in school, he probably
wouldn't read at all.
He's not alone. According to the survey firm NDP Group -- which tracked
the everyday habits of thousands of people through the 1990s -- this
country is reading printed versions of books, magazines and newspapers
less and less. In 1991, more than half of all Americans read a half-hour
or more every day. By 1999, that had dropped to 45 percent.
A 1999 Gallup Poll found that only 7 percent of Americans were voracious
readers, reading more than a book a week, while some 59 percent said they
had read fewer than 10 books in the previous year. Though book clubs seem
popular now, only 6 percent of those who read belong to one. The number
of people who don't read at all, the poll concluded, has been rising for
the past 20 years.
The reports on changes in reading cut to the quick of American culture.
We pride ourselves on being a largely literate First World country while
at the same time we rush to build a visually powerful environment in
which reading is not required.
The results are inevitable. Aliteracy is all around. Just ask:
* Internet developers. At the Terra Lycos portal design lab in Waltham,
Mass., researcher William Albert has noticed that the human guinea
pigs in his focus groups are too impatient to read much. When people look
up information on the Internet today, Albert explains, they are
"basically scanning. There's very little actual comprehension that's
going on." People, Albert adds, prefer to get info in short bursts, with
bullets, rather than in large blocks of text.
* Transportation gurus. Chandra Clayton, who oversees the design of road
signs and signals for the Virginia Department of Transportation, says,
"Symbols can quickly give you a message that might take too long to read
in text." The department is using logos and symbols more and more. When
it comes to highway safety and getting lifesaving information quickly,
she adds, "a picture is worth a thousand words."
* Packaging designers. "People don't take the time to read anything,"
explains Jim Peters, editor of BrandPackaging magazine. "Marketers and
packagers are giving them colors and shapes as ways of communicating."
For effective marketing, Peters says, "researchers tell us that the
hierarchy is colors, shapes, icons and, dead last, words."
Some of this shift away from words -- and toward images -- can be
attributed to our ever-growing multilingual population. But for many
people, reading is passe or impractical or, like, so totally unnecessary
in this day and age.
To Jim Trelease, author of "The Read-Aloud Handbook," this trend away
from the written word is more than worrisome. It's wicked. It's tearing
apart our culture. People who have stopped reading, he says, "base their
future decisions on what they used to know.
"If you don't read much, you really don't know much," he says. "You're
dangerous."
Losing a Heritage
"The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who
cannot read them."
-- Mark Twain
One thing you can say for illiteracy: It can be identified, nailed down.
And combated. Scores of programs such as the Greater Washington Literacy
Council and the International Reading Association are geared toward
fighting readinglessness in the home, the school and the workplace.
Aliteracy, on the other hand, is like an invisible liquid, seeping
through our culture, nigh impossible to pinpoint or defend against. It's
the kid who spends hours and hours with video games instead of books, who
knows Sim Cities better than "A Tale of Two Cities."
It's the thousands of business people who subscribe to executive book
summaries -- for example, Soundview's easy-to-swallow eight-page
pamphlets that take simply written management books such as "Secrets of
Question-Based Selling" by Thomas A. Freese and make them even simpler.
It's the parent who pops the crummy movie of "Stuart Little" into a
machine for his kid instead of reading E.B. White's marvelous novel
aloud. Or the teacher who assigns the made-for-TV movie "Gettysburg"
instead of the book it was based on, "The Killer Angels" by Michael
Shaara.
There may be untold collateral damage in a society that can read but
doesn't. "So much of our culture is embedded in literature," says Philip
A. Thompsen, professor of communications at West Chester University in
West Chester, Pa. Thompsen has been watching the rise of aliteracy in the
classroom for 20 years, and "students today are less capable of getting
full value from textbooks than they were 10 years ago."
He adds that these aliterate students are "missing out on our cultural
heritage."
That literature-based past included a reverence for reading, a
celebration of the works and a worshipful awe of those who wrote.
To draw you a picture: Where we once deified the lifestyles of writers
such as Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald, we now fantasize about
rock-and-roll gods, movie starlets or NBA super-studs (e.g. MTV's
"Cribs"). The notion of writer-as-culture-hero is dead and gone. Comedic
monologuists such as Jay Leno or David Letterman have more sex appeal
than serious fiction writers. The grail quest for the Great American
Novel has ended; it was a myth after all.
Where we once drew our mass-cult references from books ("He's a veritable
Simon Legree"), we now allude to visual works -- a Seinfeld episode (not
there's anything wrong with that . . .) or "The Silence of the Lambs"
(the movie, not the book). A recent story in Salon speaks of "learning to
read a movie."
Where we once believed that a well-read populace leads to a healthy
democracy, many people now rely on whole TV broadcast operations built
around politics and elections. Quick, name a Wolf Blitzer book.
Non-readers abound. Ask "Politically Incorrect" talk show host Bill
Maher, who once boasted in print that he hadn't read a book in years. Or
Noel Gallagher of the rock band Oasis, who has been quoted as saying he'd
never read a book. You can walk through whole neighborhoods of houses in
the country that do not contain books or magazines -- unless you count
catalogues.
American historian Daniel Boorstin saw this coming. In 1984, while
Boorstin was serving as librarian of Congress, the library issued a
landmark report: "Books in Our Future." Citing recent statistics that
only about half of all Americans read regularly every year, he referred
to the "twin menaces" of illiteracy and aliteracy.
"In the United States today," Boorstin wrote, "aliteracy is widespread."
Several of the articles in the report alluded to the growing number of
non-readers. In one essay, "The Computer and the Book," Edmund D.
Pellegrino, a former president of Catholic University who is now a
bioethicist at Georgetown University, observed: "The computer is simply
the most effective, efficient and attractive form for transmittal of
processed information. Added to the other nonbook devices like films,
tapes, television and the popular media, the computer accelerates the
atrophy of the intellectual skills acquired for personally reading the
books from which the information is extracted."
Reading for Bliss
Kylene Beers has talked about the evils of aliteracy for so long and so
loud, she's losing her voice. Today she's in the lecture hall of Oakton
High School bending the ears of 100 or so middle school teachers.
If someone graduates from high school and is aliterate, Beers believes,
that person will probably never become a habitual reader.
One of the few academics who have written about the phenomenon, Beers, a
professor of reading at the University of Houston, says there are two
types of reading: efferent and aesthetic.
Efferent, which comes from the Latin word efferre (meaning to carry
away), is purposeful reading, the kind students are taught day after day
in schools. Efferent readers connect cognitively with the words and plan
to take something useful from it -- such as answers for a test.
Aesthetic is reading for the sheer bliss of it, as when you dive deep
into Dostoevski or get lost in Louisa May Alcott. Aesthetic readers
connect emotionally to the story. Beers believes that more students must
be shown the marvels of reading for pleasure.
On this late afternoon, she is mapping out strategies for teachers who
hope to engage reluctant middle school readers. Teaching grammar and
parts of speech, such as dangling participles, is the kiss of death, she
says. "You don't want to talk about dangling anythings with
middle-schoolers," she says in her Texas drawl. And the room laughs.
Aliteracy, she continues, is no laughing matter. Using an overhead
projector, she explains that aliterate people just don't get it. Unlike
accomplished readers, aliterates don't understand that sometimes you have
to read efferently and sometimes you have to read aesthetically; that
even the best readers occasionally read the same paragraph over and over
to understand it and that to be a good reader you have to visualize the
text.
To engage non-reading students -- and adults -- she proposes reading
strategies, such as turning a chapter of a hard book into a dramatic
production or relating tough words to easier words.
She writes the word "tepid" on the acetate sheet. Then she asks the
audience to supply other words that describe water temperature. "Hot,"
someone calls out. "Freezing," somebody else says. Others suggest: cold,
warm and boiling. Beers arranges the words in a linear fashion, from the
coldest word, "freezing," to the hottest, "boiling." "Tepid" falls in the
middle of the list. This method, she says, will help reluctant readers to
connect words they don't know to words they do know. "Aliterates," she
tells the teachers, "don't see relationships."
Apparently, teachers don't always see the relationships either. Jim
Trelease is concerned that teachers do not read. The aliteracy rate among
teachers, he says, is about the same, 50 percent, as among the general
public.
There is some good news on the reading front, according to Trelease and
others. The Harry Potter series has turned on a lot of young readers and
megabookstores, such as Barnes & Noble and Borders, are acrawl with
people.
But there is plenty of bad news, too. Lots of aliterates, according to
Trelease, say they just don't have time to read anymore. "The time
argument is the biggest hoax of all," he says. According to time studies,
we have more leisure time than ever. "If people didn't have time, the
malls would be empty, cable companies would be broke, video stores would
go out of business. It's not a time problem, it's a value problem. You
have 50 percent in the country who don't value reading."
Like Beers, Trelease believes that youngsters should be encouraged to
read aesthetically. Reading aloud to children, according to Trelease and
other reading specialists, is the single best way to ensure that someone
will become a lifelong reader.
"Even Daniel Boorstin wasn't born wanting to read," Trelease says.
"Michael Jordan wasn't born wanting to play basketball. The desire has to
be planted."
Surfing Through Grad School
Trelease and Beers and others are scrambling for ways to engage
aliterates. For all kinds of reasons. "What aliteracy does is breed
illiteracy," Beers explains. "If you go through school having learned to
read and then you leave school not wanting to read, chances are you won't
put your own children into a reading environment."
"What you have to do is play hardball," says Trelease. He suggests
running public awareness campaigns on TV. "That's where the aliterates
are."
Trelease says we should try to eradicate aliteracy in the way we went
after tobacco. We should let people know, Trelease says, "what the
consequences are to your family and children if you don't read."
"Aliteracy may be a significant problem today," says Philip Thompsen.
"But on the other hand, a narrow view of literacy -- one that defines
literacy as the ability to read verbal texts -- may be a significant
problem as well."
Many of the messages that we have to interpret in day-to-day life,
Thompsen says, "use multiple communication media. I think it is important
to realize that as our society becomes more accustomed to using
multimedia messages, we must also expand our thinking about what it means
to be 'literate.' "
Olympic hopeful Jeremy Spreitzer plans to become a teacher and maybe go
into politics someday. For now, he's just trying to get through graduate
school.
He watches a lot of television. "I'm a major surfer," he says. He watches
the History Channel, A&E, Turner Classic Movies and all of the news
stations.
"I'm required to do a lot of reading," he says. "But I do a minimum of
what I need to do."
But how do you get through grad school without reading? Spreitzer is
asked.
He gives an example. One of his required texts is the recently published
"Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community" by Robert
Putnam. In the book, Putnam argues, among other things, that television
has fragmented our society.
Spreitzer thumbed through the book, dipped into a few chapters and spent
a while "skipping around" here and there.
He feels, however, that he understands Putnam and Putnam's theories as
well as if he had read the book.
How is that? he is asked.
Putnam, he explains, has been on TV a lot. "He's on the news all the
time," Spreitzer says. "On MSNBC and other places. Those interviews with
him are more invaluable than anything else."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A23370-2001May13.html
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(C) 2001 The Washington Post Company
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
More information about the Air-L
mailing list