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[I wrote this piece in the late 1980's, when I was a high school English
teacher. I wish it weren't still relevant today, but I think it is.]
Last month, I assigned a Dickens novel to my eleventh-grade English class.
"Is this on Beta?" asked one. "Can I get this at Music Plus?" asked another. "I don't have time to read this!"
wailed a third.
Kids aren't the only ones who don't have time to read. I don't have time for the newspaper.
I give the car radio twenty-two minutes, it gives me the world.
I'm not alone, either. Back in the '50's
evenings were free. Now, Mom and Dad come home, microwave dinner, and still have to take care of the kids.
Sure, they can read. But do they? No -- instead, they watch TV or a videotape. I'd bet money Beaver Cleaver
programs his VCR to tape Oprah while he's stuck on the Ventura Freeway.
Recently, a mother came in for a conference.
"Go play your dinosaur book," she told her younger daughter. Obviously, she could not stop to read the book to the child.
But will the child learn to read from a book that reads to her? Will she learn how wonderful reading is?
I bet
she won't. Today's students can watch a movie in class without losing interest, but reading is boring. It requires
an attention span that they don't have. It doesn't come with visual effects, and this generation has never developed
the imagination to make it exciting.
Ironically, students can't read because they don't read. Reading is slow
because they don't know the words in the books. They get bored before they get into the story. Besides, Nintendo
is more fun and requires less effort.
What can I say, then, to parents who look at me sincerely and say "Why aren't
our kids interested in reading?" Why should they be? They do fine without reading. Mom and Dad don't read
much either, and they're doing okay.
Is it so bad that many of today's students will never read as well as their parents?
Why should my student's little sister learn to read and write?
Because we can't memorize. Could I remember fifty
things I need at the grocery store without writing them down? Are you kidding?
Because we don't communicate
complicated ideas orally -- we write them down. That's why we need technical documentation and contracts.
Because
she will be unable to express herself otherwise. My students become frustrated when they try to explain ideas to me
because they don't have the vocabulary to make me understand. Kids don't learn vocabulary from workbooks -- they
learn it from context by reading or by participating in conversation with adults.
Because America cannot compete in
the twenty-first century unless its current school children have the intellectual ability to lead the way in technology.
They cannot learn to engineer the future unless they can read.
So where are these parents who don't have time for their
kids? Out working like crazy to give their kids everything they never had.
Everything?
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