Quantcast The Torch Online
College Media Network

Torch

The Award-Winning Student Newspaper of St. John's University

When aliteracy strikes students

More students are choosing not to read books in their free time

Lori Filicanevo, Staff Writer

Issue date: 4/25/07Section: Editorials and Opinion
  • Print
  • Email
According to a March 14, 2001 Washington Post article, "a 1999 Gallup Poll found that only 7 percent of Americans were voracious readers, reading more than a book a week, while some 59 percent said they had read fewer than 10 books in the previous year. Though book clubs seem popular now, only 6 percent of those who read belong to
one. The number of people who don't read at all, the poll concluded, has been rising for the past 20 years."

This phenomenon is known as aliteracy - that is, having the ability to read but
choosing not to do so. It is a trend that, if it continues to grow, will become an even bigger problem than it is today.

It seems obvious that this aversion to reading begins at an early age when kids get easily
frustrated at an activity they cannot excel at. But even for the avid middle-school reader, an aversion can develop in high school or even in college. In college, so much emphasis
is placed on that it is simply a necessary skill. If a person does not keep up in the textbook, he or she will most likely fall behind in class. In a given semester, a student may face hundreds of pages of reading alone, more likely than not in a subject that
they are not interested in. Even worse is when a person has a bad English professor who assigns a ton of reading but does not teach the material. That will really make the person dread picking up a book. By the time a break comes along, the phrase "reading for pleasure" is completely foreign. Nowadays, people want to unwind with their iPods or spend hours in front of the television. At St. John's, few students seem to be spending their common hour buried in a book that was not being used to help write a paper.

Aliteracy is not something that should be taken lightly. Mark Twain said it best, when he
noted, "The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them."

Reading not just literature, but good literature, should be encouraged at a young age. Parents should read their children E.B. White's classic, "Charlotte's Web," instead of
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

Do you use Ratemyprofessor.com?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement