Saturday, September 8, 2012

Further Evidence We Inhabit "Universe B."

Children 'too embarrassed' to pick up books, study says.  Wow.  This sucks.  This situation MUST be reversed.  The Daily Mail.  Excerpts:

According to the latest study, one-in-six children admitted they were too embarrassed to read in front of their friends for fear of being labelled a geek.


Researchers said it was "essential" for children to make time to read as there was a clear link between reading outside lessons and academic achievement.

Young people who read at home on a daily basis are 13 times more likely to perform above the level expected for their age in literacy, it was claimed.

Jonathan Douglas, trust director, called on the Government to back a national campaign to halt the reading decline and “give children time to read in their daily lives”.

"The fact that children are reading less than in 2005 signals a worrying shift in young people's literacy habits,” he said.

"We believe we need to inspire a new generation to read in the same way that the Olympics is inspiring a new generation to take part in sport.

"We need to make reading irresistible. We want to call on families and professionals working with children and young people to make 10 minutes in their day for reading."

The research was based on a long-running survey of 21,000 children in primary and secondary education.

It emerged that 38.1 per cent of pupils read in their spare time when the study was first carried out in 2005. This dropped to 37.7 per cent in 2007, 32.2 per cent in 2009 and 30.8 per cent in the latest poll was completed in 2011.

The research found that 54 per cent of those questioned preferred watching TV to reading.

"These findings together suggest a clear issue with children's leisure time with many children enjoying reading but pushing it out in favour of other activities," said the study.

Of those who did read outside class, 47.8 per cent said they read fiction, down from 51.5 per cent in 2005.

Other forms of reading were also in decline, it was revealed. The study also showed that 57 per cent of children read magazines, compared with 77.5 per cent in 2005; 50.4 per cent read websites compared with 63.8 per cent seven years ago; and 27.9 per cent read comics, down from 50.6 per cent in 2005.

A Department for Education spokesman said: “The findings of this survey come as no surprise and shows that we need to continue our drive to encourage young people to develop a love of reading.

“In a world of so many distractions for young minds, the place of literature is more important than ever.

This societal trend threatens to destroy civilization from the inside out.  We cannot devolve into illiteracy and a mob-mentality chaos.  "Idiocracy" looks less like just a comedy and more like dystopian prophecy:  The logical end result stemming from several generations of BAD Educational Policy and socially-encouraged ignorance.  It's not so far off, really.  We owe future generations better than we're treating them by allowing this intellectual abomination to occur.  We must address this crisis head on.  Yesterday.

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