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Archives for November 2007

Seriously, Read! Now!

November 27, 2007 by Jon Frater Leave a Comment

Remember a few months ago when I suggested that reading was still a worthwhile activity for the American public? Well, this report seems to support that idea (as if we needed the extra confirmation, right?)

To wit:

Harry Potter, James Patterson and Oprah Winfrey’s
book club aside, Americans — particularly young Americans — appear to
be reading less for fun, and as that happens, their reading test scores
are declining. At the same time, performance in other academic
disciplines like math and science is dipping for students whose access
to books is limited, and employers are rating workers deficient in
basic writing skills.

Harry Potter, James Patterson and Oprah Winfrey’s
book club aside, Americans — particularly young Americans — appear to
be reading less for fun, and as that happens, their reading test scores
are declining. At the same time, performance in other academic
disciplines like math and science is dipping for students whose access
to books is limited, and employers are rating workers deficient in
basic writing skills.

It gets worse:

Among the findings is that although reading scores among elementary
school students have been improving, scores are flat among middle
school students and slightly declining among high school seniors. These
trends are concurrent with a falloff in daily pleasure reading among
young people as they progress from elementary to high school, a drop
that appears to continue once they enter college. The data also showed
that students who read for fun nearly every day performed better on
reading tests than those who reported reading never or hardly at all.

The study also examined results from reading tests administered to
adults and found a similar trend: The percentage of adults who are
proficient in reading prose has fallen at the same time that the
proportion of people who read regularly for pleasure has declined.

And the punchline:

In an interview Mr. Gioia said that the statistics could not explain
why reading had declined, but he pointed to several commonly accepted
culprits, including the proliferation of digital diversions on the
Internet and other gadgets, and the failure of schools and colleges to
develop a culture of daily reading habits. In addition, Mr. Gioia said,
“we live in a society where the media does not recognize, celebrate or
discuss reading, literature and authors.”

Nah, that would be too . . . French.

I’m the first to admit that reading is indeed a cultural activity. In the house where I grew up, books were things to be treasured, horded, read aloud when one was young and read silently when one grew older.  My brother and I were reading The New York Times by the time we were three years old (so  my mother says) and, unlike my math scores which teetered on grade level throughout elementary and junior high school, my reading scores in the NYC citywide tests were 12.9 by third grade and pretty much stayed there. The reason for this is mostly because my mother was raised in exactly that kind of environment–books were A Big Deal, plain and simple. It wasn’t until I was well into college that I began to realize that not every household was like that.  I suspect the situation is worse now.

So seriously! Read! Now!

Filed Under: Surveys & Data Collection

Reagan Library Can’t Find Items, Says Report

November 8, 2007 by Jon Frater 1 Comment

I read something like this and I honestly don’t know whether to laugh or cry:

LOS ANGELES – The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum
can’t locate or account for tens of thousands of valuable mementos of
Reagan’s White House years, according to a published report.

An audit by the National Archives inspector general concluded that the library in Simi Valley
was unable to properly account for more than 80,000 objects out of its
collection of some 100,000 artifacts, the Los Angeles Times reported on
its Web site Wednesday night.

The audit was connected to an investigation into allegations that a
former employee stole from the Reagans’ collection of gifts from
foreign leaders and other dignitaries, but sloppy record-keeping has
hindered the probe, Inspector General Paul Brachfeld said

"We have been told by sources that a person who had access capability
removed holdings," Brachfeld told the Times. "But we can’t lock in as
to what those may be."

Part of the problem has to do with a lack of supervision and a "near
universal" security breakdown that may have left the mementos
vulnerable to pilfering, "the scope of which will likely never be
known," the audit found.

Considering that The Great Communicator was something of a prototype of the Dear Leader status the current government has been giving our presidents of late, you would think that they’d keep better watch over his stuff.  You know that when George W. Bush’s library is finally built, it’ll probably have watch towarers, land mines, electric fences and a platoon or two of Blackwater security goons watching the joint from a solar dome on a platform in space.  I’m not suggesting that we  necessarily need to turn  libraries into Fort Knox but would having consistent, measurable, and proven security systems for them hurt?

Filed Under: Articles & Nifty Links

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