Saturday, October 26, 2019
The Definitions and Arguments of Literacy :: Technology Literary Works Essays
The word ââ¬Å"literacyâ⬠conveys different meanings to different people. Some people may accept a single definition, while others may develop complex, multi-faceted meanings of the word. This essay explores a broad range of literary definitions, arguments and statistics to convey a clearer picture of how people embrace literacy. Throughout this essay, we will focus on three sources: the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) recently published ââ¬Å"Reading at Riskâ⬠report, and two pieces by Nancy Kaplan, Professor and Director of the University of Baltimoreââ¬â¢s School of Information Arts and Technologies. The ââ¬Å"Reading at Riskâ⬠report published in June 2004, proclaims the findings of a Census Bureau survey performed in 2002. Survey participants were asked questions over the telephone about their reading habits, participation in civic activities, TV watching and the like. The NEA holds that a gradual decline in reading over the past twenty years has occurred. Even more recently, they claim that a 10% decline has occurred within the past 14 years suggesting a more rapid decline in the years to come (NEA, 2004). According to this report, literacy is defined as the ability to read high quality works, which require increased intellectual capacity, dependent upon a readerââ¬â¢s education, culture and social skills. The report doesnââ¬â¢t mention that reading online, whether news or novels, is acceptable; therefore, it would seem that they are ignoring a large percentage of where and how people are doing reading today. In fact, it appears that the NEA supports the notion t hat with the rise of the Internet, literacy declined as people began ââ¬Å"surfingâ⬠in favor of reading literary works, which supposedly require more detailed cognitive skills to absorb. One of the things ââ¬Å"Reading at Riskâ⬠does well is offer statistics: People who read are 3 times more likely to go to a performance event and 4 times more likely to visit a museum; People who watch no TV are 1.475 times more likely to read 12+ books per year; 59.4% of people who make over $75k a year are literate (NEA, 2004). Yet it discounts modern mediums, such as the internet, other hypertexts and online publications, a bone of contention for people such as Kaplan. Kaplan holds that traditional society might harbor some ill will toward these online publications and consider them threats, but she goes on to further assert that these texts are growing up with the timesââ¬âfast-paced, ubiquitous and evolving dynamically (for the better).
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