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Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Bill Murchison :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Power of Print
by Bill Murchison
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I know, I know, "reading" is a righteousness issue: the kind that brings the well-meaning and high-minded to the table, causes them to pull off their spectacles and pass their palms across their foreheads at the imputation modern kids don't want to do it. I mean, don't want to read because of all the competing temptations out there -- weak schooling, video games, the Internet, TV -- as identified by commentators on a new study.

The study, issued by the National Endowment for the Arts, says daily pleasure reading among kids is on the decline. But -- aha! -- so also among adults. Indeed, the study correlates the drop in reading to declines in performance on math and science.

Among other findings: When you have books at home, you read more; when you don't, you don't. And another: Low reading skill correlates to low pay.

I have to acknowledge this isn't the first time we have heard such stuff. I couldn't say exactly when I first read about, perhaps commented on, pronounced declines in the intellectual drive of American students. Elvis might still have been alive then (if he isn't now).

What's easier to know, though not to understand, is the intractability of the desire not to learn. That's right -- not to. Americans spend enormous amount of money each year on trying to persuade students they should care whether "cat" has two t's or just one and whether Robert E. Lee played the bull fiddle with Bob Wills or built the Brooklyn Bridge -- whatever the Brooklyn Bridge may be, and wherever Brooklyn is. Whoever Bob Wills was.

A half decade in higher education convinces me that hard as the grown-ups try these days -- and that isn't monumentally hard -- the kids end up with pretty much what they want in the way of knowledge. A lot or a little. Curiosity seems to drive it: the thirst to know, or not know. I had college journalism students for whom, curiously enough, curiosity was a lost art. There wasn't anything they particularly wanted to find out about. They just wanted their degrees so they could do something or other.

Reading, we're all taught to understand, is the passport to wisdom. Except I gather that's not what everyone wants -- wisdom. There's a lot of just-get-by-ness out there in the world, and not just among students but also among those ex-students who propagated them originally. I don't mean this to sound snobbish. I don't care whether a good plumber can quote "Purgatorio" (actually, I can't either), but I care very much how he works with a pipe wrench. We do as we do because we do: I can't put it any other way. Continued...

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About The Author
Bill Murchison is a senior columns writer for The Dallas Morning News and author of There's More to Life Than Politics.
 
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Subject: Give them something to read
One of the major reasons, in my opinion, that some people don't like to read is the simple fact that they have never read a good book. If you think that I am kidding, look at the pap that is taught in public schools today. You'll be surprised to see the politically correct stuff in grade school. You will be flabbergasted to see the reading list in high school. You will be absolutely astonished at the literature survey reading lists in college. I know because I recentlly did exactly that.

If you want kids to read and to carry this habit over into adult life, give them books that are well written, have vivid characters and a strong message. As an earlier writer suggested, "Where the Red Fern Grows" is one such book. In more recent times, look at the success of the Harry Potter series. I have seen 4th and 5th graders that coulddn't be bothered to read in school sit down and devour 5 and 600 page books, often breaking rules about reading in bed or at the table just to finish a chapter. As a kid I loved Edgar Rice Burroughs, especially the Mars series, Joseph Altshelter's American history stores and adored Random House's Landmark Book series in both American and world history (If you want a great example of how far our standards have slipped, get ahold of an old Landmark book and admire the quality of the writing and the accuracy of the research and remember that these were kiddie best sellers, read for fun!) And that doesn't even mention the Bobsey Twins, the Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew.
If society really wishes to instill a love of life long learning and reading, it must provide quality material for young readers to sink their teeth into. "Heather Has Two Mommies" just doesn't quite make it, does it.

Required reading
well most of the books i had on my summer reading list one year pretty much sucked. not only that, the required reading for some schools also is not very good. Try getting someone not interested in reading to read Shakespeare or something like that. I read and still don't like it very much. I'm not sure of any other ways to get them to read, except what you just said earlier. People who have higher reading levels get paid more.
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