Uploaded by Joseph Dath
On a gut level, you might say that kids today just don’t read and write like we used to…or most adults just don’t read books.
However, when you dig into it a little what’s really evident is that reading and writing have changed so much that comparing the past to today is comparing apples to oranges.
Here’s what I mean. It used to be that you wrote long letters to friends and family and dropped them in the mail box. In fact, a lot of history is recorded letters. The civil war is a great example because it is one of the most documented wars because of all the letters. The big change is not a decline in writing but a decline in using a paper and pen. If you added up all the emails, text messages and posts on social networking sites, the amount of writing is massively greater. Think about when congress wants another departments emails and the get several million emails to look at.
Well what about newspapers. No one reads newspapers like they used to. This is an absolutely true statement. The reality is that people are probably more engaged and interested in their world, but news print just doesn’t cut it. I could wait for old news to appear on my door step or I could just go to Yahoo news and see what’s happening right now. A newspaper might offer you two or three columnists on a subject while you can go on line and get a hundred different points of view. Newspapers also have to compete with 24/7 cable news and sports. I remember rushing to the paper to get the sports scores in the morning. Now I can watch the ticker on ESPN or call them up on my cell phone.
I know you’ll say, what about books. No one reads books any more. I’d say some one has the be reading books because the number of books in print each year has exploded. Today about a 100,000 books are published each year. If you read a book a week, you’d be reading .005% of the new books. Hard to keep up on your reading that way. Think about all the people who used to own a really good set of encyclopedias. Their basically worthless today because if you want the knowledge of the world a quick Google search will work and you can get everything in multi-media.
So here’s a good question, have we change the way we teach reading and writing to fit a new world or are we still in line with the 1950s?
a very good post and critical point of views..
Thanks for the nice comment.
I definitely think you are on the right track here. Consumption of information has changed and just because it is being consumed differently doesn’t mean we are consuming less of it.
The question you pose at the end is an important one that schools need to start thinking about more seriously.