Maggie’s Credentialed but Illiterate

lash

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Sep 28, 2012
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I’ll just say that this article highlights the very thing we see here on the forum.

And yes, I’m posting the full text of the essay even though I realize many will ignore it or skim and post anyway, because that is exactly what this essay is about.
—————-
Credentialled But Illiterate: The Reading Crisis at the Heart of Education

By Patrick Keeney

In his trenchant essay, “The Average College Student Is Illiterate,” Hilarius Bookbinder sounds the alarm over the precipitous decline in student literacy.

It is a sobering account. Bookbinder (a pseudonym) teaches in the humanities and draws upon years of classroom experience. He observes that many of his students are functionally illiterate. They are unable to engage with serious adult literature and often find the very act of reading tedious. As a result, they avoid it whenever possible. This aversion manifests in predictable ways: skimming texts without comprehension, failing to identify key arguments, and struggling with exam questions simply because they haven’t read them carefully.

His reflections reveal the troubling reality of liberal learning today and the formidable challenge educators face in fostering genuine intellectual engagement. Bookbinder places the blame squarely on society. “I don’t blame K–12 teachers,” he writes. “This is not an educational system problem. This is a societal problem.”

Of course, he has a point, but this is too lenient. It overlooks the significant structural failures within the K–12 system itself—failures that have deprioritized foundational literacy, neglected intellectual rigor, and left students unprepared for the demands of higher education.

Over the past several decades, elementary and secondary schools have increasingly adopted a pedagogical model prioritizing technological fluency and emotional well-being over developing serious intellectual habits. As one parent noted in response to Bookbinder’s piece, children are now “pushed into technology (computers, iPads) as early as kindergarten” and “are not required to read entire books, let alone write about them.”

This new orthodoxy exalts engagement over comprehension, screen fluency over print literacy, and the consequence is a generation of students ill-equipped for the demands of higher education.

More troubling still is the retreat from rigor. In the name of preserving students’ self-esteem, schools are often reluctant to challenge students, hold them accountable, or insist upon high standards of excellence. The result is a dangerous turn to what has been called the therapeutic approach to education. Students are flattered rather than instructed, and their self-esteem is affirmed regardless of whether they have done anything estimable. The essential work of education—discerning truth from error, cultivating judgment, introducing the young to the intellectual heritage of their civilization—is displaced by therapeutic aims.

And so, when these students arrive at university, their failure becomes apparent. Every professor has stories—students who cannot follow a basic line of reasoning, who confuse anecdote with argument, or who, without the slightest embarrassment, announce that they are “not readers,” as though this were a harmless personal quirk rather than a disqualification fromserious intellectual life. Once isolated anecdotes, such stories are now commonplace, as Bookbinder documents.

The university effectively becomes a triage center for the wounded products of a broken educational pipeline. Professors are increasingly urged to accommodate: to simplify readings, moderate expectations, and reward effort rather than genuine achievement. The result has been a steady erosion of standards and academic benchmarks.

But this is not merely an educational failure. It is a moral one. Literacy is not simply a technical skill—it is a form of ethical and intellectual development. It requires cultivating patience, empathy, and sound judgment. It demands that we sit still and listen attentively to the minds and voices of others. If students cannot do this, then we are not educating them. At best, we are merely credentialing them.

To be literate, in the fullest sense, is to participate in the great conversation of civilization. It is to gain access to and be initiated into the shared understandings of a community. A liberal education, properly understood, is neither vocational training nor a self-esteem project. It is a moral and intellectual discipline that presupposes a conception of the good and an account of the human person as more than a bundle of appetites or a mere consumer. It sees the human being as a moral agent, capable of self-transcendence and shaping a life toward truth, beauty, and meaning.

We deceive ourselves if we believe the decline in student literacy is a neutral development. We must resist the fashionable cynicism that shrugs and says this is simply the way of the world. We are told that deep reading is obsolete in the internet age, with its endless screens and omnipresent mobile phones. Our society increasingly treats the reading of serious texts not as an essential ability at the core of educational engagement, but as a quaint indulgence from abygone era.

Such resignation is not only intellectually lazy but morally perilous. The capacity to read deeply, write clearly, follow and test a line of reasoning—these are habits of mind without which neither democracy nor the life of the mind can flourish.

Education has always been about elevation. Liberal learning, as the name implies, is about liberating the individual from the contingencies and limitations of his or her birth. It is the deliberate act of lifting students’ minds above distraction, above appetite, above the noise of the present moment. To “meet students where they are” may be a necessary pedagogical starting point, but it must never be mistaken for the destination. The true aim of education is not to affirm students as they are, but to form them into what they might become. It is to awaken their capacities for reason, imagination, and judgment—and to summon them toward the best versions of themselves.

An earlier version of this essay was previously published in The Epoch Times
 
Thing is, we see this here on this very forum. People arguing about/for/against something without having actually read or comprehending what they did read. Then they argue based upon anecdotal logic instead of supporting their argument with anything factual.

How many times have we seen this meme when more than two sentences are used at a time?

1759955011341.gif
 
Literacy is not simply a technical skill—it is a form of ethical and intellectual development. It requires cultivating patience, empathy, and sound judgment. It demands that we sit still and listen attentively to the minds and voices of others. If students cannot do this, then we are not educating them. At best, we are merely credentialing them.

To be literate, in the fullest sense, is to participate in the great conversation of civilization. It is to gain access to and be initiated into the shared understandings of a community. A liberal education, properly understood, is neither vocational training nor a self-esteem project. It is a moral and intellectual discipline that presupposes a conception of the good and an account of the human person as more than a bundle of appetites or a mere consumer. It sees the human being as a moral agent, capable of self-transcendence and shaping a life toward truth, beauty, and meaning.

We deceive ourselves if we believe the decline in student literacy is a neutral development. We must resist the fashionable cynicism that shrugs and says this is simply the way of the world. We are told that deep reading is obsolete in the internet age, with its endless screens and omnipresent mobile phones. Our society increasingly treats the reading of serious texts not as an essential ability at the core of educational engagement, but as a quaint indulgence from abygone era.

Such resignation is not only intellectually lazy but morally perilous. The capacity to read deeply, write clearly, follow and test a line of reasoning—these are habits of mind without which neither democracy nor the life of the mind can flourish.

Education has always been about elevation. Liberal learning, as the name implies, is about liberating the individual from the contingencies and limitations of his or her birth. It is the deliberate act of lifting students’ minds above distraction, above appetite, above the noise of the present moment. To “meet students where they are” may be a necessary pedagogical starting point, but it must never be mistaken for the destination. The true aim of education is not to affirm students as they are, but to form them into what they might become. It is to awaken their capacities for reason, imagination, and judgment—and to summon them toward the best versions of themselves.

I'm sorry but all this sounds like a load of B.S. written by some over educated, totally out of touch with reality liberal arts professor in a University that never had to work a real competitive job.

It's the same old garbage the "overly educated and useless" class have spat out for centuries to explain why their pasty faces are so superior to the "regular folks"

This time they are just couching it in nice catch phrases designed to try to interest "conservatives" who actually care about children being actually functionally literate so they can work and have a good life.

That whole "feels" and "emphasizes" is a bunch of froth that totally takes away from an actual problem of children needing to know how to functionally write/read/count and do basic math (advanced math is NOT needed for most people as long as they know the basics).
 
One has to wonder are those pushing these services doing it to"help" the unfortunate, to make a buck, or to sabotage the poors and ensure future serfdom?
That’s a fair question. One that bears consideration beyond the obvious “make a buck” answer. Why not make a buck while creating a dumber and more easily swayed sheep class?
 
I'm sorry but all this sounds like a load of B.S. written by some over educated, totally out of touch with reality liberal arts professor in a University that never had to work a real competitive job.

It's the same old garbage the "overly educated and useless" class have spat out for centuries to explain why their pasty faces are so superior to the "regular folks"

This time they are just couching it in nice catch phrases designed to try to interest "conservatives" who actually care about children being actually functionally literate so they can work and have a good life.

That whole "feels" and "emphasizes" is a bunch of froth that totally takes away from an actual problem of children needing to know how to functionally write/read/count and do basic math (advanced math is NOT needed for most people as long as they know the basics).
And yet you seem pretty well educated and seem to be able to read and comprehend things. Do you read? Or do you actually think that it’s not necessary?

There should be zero question that reading and reading comprehension has taken a serious nosedive in public education. Any parent with half a brain can see that today.
 
That whole "feels" and "emphasizes" is a bunch of froth that totally takes away from an actual problem of children needing to know how to functionally write/read/count and do basic math (advanced math is NOT needed for most people as long as they know the basics).
The problem is schools are more interested in pushing social programs and not bothering to teach even the basics. Here in Komifornia they eliminated testing .

 
We must outlaw teachers unions and all other public sector unions.

Purge dems from all government jobs.

At a minimum, deport all Leftists to China or NK to be with their own kind.

Have major ad campaigns to state the facts about Trans being a mental illness, and the facts of American Exceptionalism, while warning against liberalism, fascism, marxism, maoism, socialism, communism, progressivism, authoritarianism, globalism.

In K-12 education, outlaw any mention or body language in favor of any form of the above political schemes, DEI, CRT, ESG, etc. Same for any school or gov't employees when it comes to giving any hint of their sexual orientation, sex/gender, relationship status, or political views.

In other words, make our Constitutional Republic Great Again!
 
Been going on for a while. I hired a lot of students from top universities around the country - undergrads and grads. "Best and Brightest" was our recruiting mantra. Some of these hand picked, top of class, "A" students struggled to write clearly and get to the point succinctly. That was 20+ years ago and I'm sure it has not improved.

Kids school assignment reading is viewed mostly to answer questions - just finish the assignment. Reading should be a path, not to answering questions, but making the right questions inescapable. I see this in otherwise capable adults who are of the opinion that data and information is to answer questions rather that to ask the right questions. This, along with other educational trends is why the US is trailing much of the world in knowledge, intelligence and education - among other things.

I'm of the view that good writing comes, at least in part, from a lot of reading. There are alternatives to the traditional ink on paper media and, while there is nothing wrong with that on the surface, it leaves "readers" with limited experience in reading as electronic media is mostly short pieces and summaries. From about the 2nd or 3rd grade through high school I read a few books a month outside of assignments and still read at least a few books a year. I attribute my ability to learn and problem solve is an extension of that.

Yes, the schools have too many problems dumped on their plate so time and focus has been taken away from the basics. Its tough to push scholastic progress while dealing with all the other requirement places on schools and teachers. I've run a NFP that works with kids education and we see it everyday. The other big piece that we miss is the fact that education should take place primarily in the home. I don't mean homeschooling but parents and families engaged with the kids in learning - taking what they glean in the classroom and running with it. The prevailing view today is that the schools are, or should be, the primary source of leaning - a misguided view.
 
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That whole "feels" and "emphasizes" is a bunch of froth that totally takes away from an actual problem of children needing to know how to functionally write/read/count and do basic math (advanced math is NOT needed for most people as long as they know the basics).
I’ll respond to this again since I feel I glossed over some of what you said. I agree with this statement with perhaps the exception of the part in parentheses.

The whole point of the article and my post is that they are currently Not able to functionally write and read. Unless one considers the most basic See Jane Run as functional reading and being able to txt 14 incomplete words with two thumbs as functional writing.

I would also ask what you consider basic math, but that’s a completely different subject.
 
Been going on for a while. I hired a lot of students from top universities around the country - undergrad and grads. "Best and Brightest" was our recruiting mantra. Some of these hand picked, top of class, "A" students struggled to write clearly and get to the point succinctly. That was 20+ years ago and I'm sure it has not improved.

Kids school assignment reading is viewed mostly to answer questions - just finish the assignment. Reading should be a path, not to answering questions, but making the right questions inescapable. I see this in otherwise capable adults who are of the opinion that data and information is to answer questions rather that to ask the right questions. This, along with other educational trends is why the US is trailing much of the world in knowledge, intelligence and education - among other things.

I'm of the view that good writing comes, at least in part, from a lot of reading. There are alternative to the traditional ink on paper media and, while there is nothing wrong with that on the surface, it leaves "readers" with limited experience in reading as electronic media is mostly short pieces and summaries. From about the 2nd or 3rd grade through high school I read a few books a month outside of assignments and still read at least a few books a year. I attribute my ability to learn and problem solve is an extension of that.

Yes, the schools have too many problems dumped on their plate to time and focus has been taken away from the basics. Its tough to push scholastic progress while dealing with all the other requirement places on schools and teachers. I've run a NFP that works with kids education and we see it everyday. The other big piece that we miss is the fact that education should take place primarily in the home. I dont mean homeschooling but parents and families engaged with the kids in learning - taking what they glean in the classroom and running with it. The prevailing view today is that the schools are, or should be, the primary source of leaning - a misguided view.

One of the reasons why I truly appreciate the education I got at my private HS. Their mantra was "teach the student to 'think...' not just recite facts. So, the questions we would get on our tests (say US History for example), would never ask, "In what year did this happen...." you were expected to know that. They would give you a quotation from a prominent Historical figure. The test question would then be, "Assess the validity of that quotation." We got a lot of those as that was a favorite question on the History AP exam. Likewise, in Biology AP, they'd ask a lot of "Structure related to function" questions (i.e. "How is the structure of the small intestine related to its function?"). In one case in Biology AP, the test was going to be on the Nervous system. The teacher (also the track coach) came in. went to great pains to confirm that all were present or accounted for (i.e. called in sick, etc.). He then grabbed the test papers from his desk, but it was clear that he was holding something underneath them. He stated, "We'll get started with the test in a moment, but first......."

BLAM! BLAM! BLAM!

Out from under the test papers he produced his track starter revolver and fired it 3 times (fused solid barrel, no projectiles). The exam then consisted of only one question: "Describe in detail, all of the physiological/neurological responses your body just encountered based on the stimulus that just occurred." And there would be like 10 points he wanted to hear about (usually there would be 10 questions on the Biology tests and 1hr/41 min. to take it). He was lucky not to get fired over that, frankly. He would have been in today's times. Or, another of my favorite Biology test questions would be, "It has been said that man is as far from the sea, as the length of the cell that separates him from his blood. Explain." These questions made you think and synthesize... not just spew facts back.
 
I’ll just say that this article highlights the very thing we see here on the forum.

And yes, I’m posting the full text of the essay even though I realize many will ignore it or skim and post anyway, because that is exactly what this essay is about.
—————-
Credentialled But Illiterate: The Reading Crisis at the Heart of Education

By Patrick Keeney
TLDR.

ChatGPT says this is all bullshit anyway.
 
Thing is, we see this here on this very forum. People arguing about/for/against something without having actually read or comprehending what they did read. Then they argue based upon anecdotal logic instead of supporting their argument with anything factual.

How many times have we seen this meme when more than two sentences are used at a time?

View attachment 8783595
So I asked ChatGPT to give me the synopsis of that.

Synopsis of “Credentialled But Illiterate: The Reading Crisis at the Heart of Education” by Patrick Keeney


Patrick Keeney’s essay critiques the severe decline in literacy among today’s college students, drawing on a piece by the pseudonymous Hilarius Bookbinder titled “The Average College Student Is Illiterate.” Bookbinder, a humanities professor, laments that many of his students are functionally illiterate—unable to comprehend complex texts, identify arguments, or engage deeply with written material. He attributes this decline not to individual educators, but to broader societal changes.


Keeney, while acknowledging Bookbinder’s perspective, argues that the crisis is also rooted in systemic failures within the K–12 education system. He criticizes modern pedagogical trends that prioritize technology use and emotional well-being over intellectual rigor and foundational literacy. Children are increasingly exposed to screens instead of books and are rarely challenged with demanding reading or writing tasks.


This shift has fostered a therapeutic educational model that flatters rather than challenges students, replacing critical thought and intellectual engagement with efforts to boost self-esteem. By the time students reach university, the consequences are clear: many cannot follow arguments, distinguish between anecdote and evidence, or even admit to reading as a necessary intellectual activity.


Universities, in turn, have lowered academic standards, rewarding effort over achievement to accommodate underprepared students. Keeney warns that this erosion of literacy is not just educationally damaging but morally troubling. True literacy cultivates empathy, judgment, and engagement with civilization’s great intellectual traditions. Its decline threatens not only education but the foundations of democracy and human development.


Ultimately, Keeney calls for a return to the true purpose of liberal education: the intellectual and moral formation of students, challenging them to rise above distraction and become thoughtful, reasoning individuals. Simply awarding credentials without fostering literacy, he argues, is both a disservice and a deception.
 
So I asked ChatGPT to give me the synopsis of that.

Synopsis of “Credentialled But Illiterate: The Reading Crisis at the Heart of Education” by Patrick Keeney


Patrick Keeney’s essay critiques the severe decline in literacy among today’s college students, drawing on a piece by the pseudonymous Hilarius Bookbinder titled “The Average College Student Is Illiterate.” Bookbinder, a humanities professor, laments that many of his students are functionally illiterate—unable to comprehend complex texts, identify arguments, or engage deeply with written material. He attributes this decline not to individual educators, but to broader societal changes.


Keeney, while acknowledging Bookbinder’s perspective, argues that the crisis is also rooted in systemic failures within the K–12 education system. He criticizes modern pedagogical trends that prioritize technology use and emotional well-being over intellectual rigor and foundational literacy. Children are increasingly exposed to screens instead of books and are rarely challenged with demanding reading or writing tasks.


This shift has fostered a therapeutic educational model that flatters rather than challenges students, replacing critical thought and intellectual engagement with efforts to boost self-esteem. By the time students reach university, the consequences are clear: many cannot follow arguments, distinguish between anecdote and evidence, or even admit to reading as a necessary intellectual activity.


Universities, in turn, have lowered academic standards, rewarding effort over achievement to accommodate underprepared students. Keeney warns that this erosion of literacy is not just educationally damaging but morally troubling. True literacy cultivates empathy, judgment, and engagement with civilization’s great intellectual traditions. Its decline threatens not only education but the foundations of democracy and human development.


Ultimately, Keeney calls for a return to the true purpose of liberal education: the intellectual and moral formation of students, challenging them to rise above distraction and become thoughtful, reasoning individuals. Simply awarding credentials without fostering literacy, he argues, is both a disservice and a deception.
😂😂😂

That is great! 🤣🤣🤣

Were I an English teacher, I would fail that AI for blatant plagiarism. Take the introduction, summarized argument and closing statements and juice them up just a tiny bit to make it sound intelligent.

It was merely a regurgitation.

Let me hear some original thought.
 
My favorite author, Heinlein, had a series of essays and public speeches collected into a book called "Expanded Universe." He pointed out that in the early 80's, this was a problem. Cal Tech, one of the most prestigious schools on the west coast and in the nation, would only take the top 15 percent of graduating high school students. By the time of the essay, at least half of the incoming freshmen needed to take remedial English, AKA, "Bonehead" English.

As opposed to a farmer I once saw on the Phil Donahue Show. He saw the crappy curriculum at his local high school and decided to school his children at home. His youngest son, at the age of 17, was already earning his GED and was accepted to Princeton based on test scores and how well he wrote in his letters to gain acceptance.

None of the students at his local high school were getting into any top tier or ivy league school.

And this traces back to the lowering of expectations. The school system is designed to graduate the idiots.
 
Been going on for a while. I hired a lot of students from top universities around the country - undergrads and grads. "Best and Brightest" was our recruiting mantra. Some of these hand picked, top of class, "A" students struggled to write clearly and get to the point succinctly. That was 20+ years ago and I'm sure it has not improved.

Kids school assignment reading is viewed mostly to answer questions - just finish the assignment. Reading should be a path, not to answering questions, but making the right questions inescapable. I see this in otherwise capable adults who are of the opinion that data and information is to answer questions rather that to ask the right questions. This, along with other educational trends is why the US is trailing much of the world in knowledge, intelligence and education - among other things.

I'm of the view that good writing comes, at least in part, from a lot of reading. There are alternatives to the traditional ink on paper media and, while there is nothing wrong with that on the surface, it leaves "readers" with limited experience in reading as electronic media is mostly short pieces and summaries. From about the 2nd or 3rd grade through high school I read a few books a month outside of assignments and still read at least a few books a year. I attribute my ability to learn and problem solve is an extension of that.

Yes, the schools have too many problems dumped on their plate so time and focus has been taken away from the basics. Its tough to push scholastic progress while dealing with all the other requirement places on schools and teachers. I've run a NFP that works with kids education and we see it everyday. The other big piece that we miss is the fact that education should take place primarily in the home. I don't mean homeschooling but parents and families engaged with the kids in learning - taking what they glean in the classroom and running with it. The prevailing view today is that the schools are, or should be, the primary source of leaning - a misguided view.
Throw a couple of pages of cursive writing in front of them, and get back to me......
 
The prevailing view today is that the schools are, or should be, the primary source of leaning - a misguided view.
Back in my greenie days, early 90s, I tutored basic math and reading to an elementary school near my employer. The employer had a program with this school. School was in a relatively poor part of DC, not far from Union Station.

The kids who were in the tutoring program didn't get much, if any, support at home for school or homework. The teacher at the school, who supervised the tutoring program, told us this as a sad fact of the general student population.
One kid I worked with on basic math, simple adding and subtracting, would return each session having grasped nothing new. We more or less did the same problems for several weeks -- a thing which in my k-6 days, was expected to be learned that day/overnight.

In the 90s I suspect most folks would say, "that's inner city education for you". Thirty years later, it seems this isn't affecting the poorest kids and neighborhoods, but it goes right up to the fancier public schools and even colleges and universities.

Two years ago I visited my small college in West Virginia where I got my ugrad in Biology. It was July when I visited, students not in session, but faculty were there. I talked to 3 of the Bio faculty. They asked when I graduated, I told them who was chair of Bio Dept then. Talked about our 4 year curriculum, how hard it was. All 3 current profs said, "we could not expect that kind of work out of students today." The 3 had different levels of cynicism about teaching college classes in this era, with students arriving at sub-HS-diploma levels of reading / maths / science foundation.

One of the profs joked that in a few years, the school would likely become a car dealership.
 
I’ll just say that this article highlights the very thing we see here on the forum.

And yes, I’m posting the full text of the essay even though I realize many will ignore it or skim and post anyway, because that is exactly what this essay is about.
—————-
Credentialled But Illiterate: The Reading Crisis at the Heart of Education

By Patrick Keeney

In his trenchant essay, “The Average College Student Is Illiterate,” Hilarius Bookbinder sounds the alarm over the precipitous decline in student literacy.

It is a sobering account. Bookbinder (a pseudonym) teaches in the humanities and draws upon years of classroom experience. He observes that many of his students are functionally illiterate. They are unable to engage with serious adult literature and often find the very act of reading tedious. As a result, they avoid it whenever possible. This aversion manifests in predictable ways: skimming texts without comprehension, failing to identify key arguments, and struggling with exam questions simply because they haven’t read them carefully.

His reflections reveal the troubling reality of liberal learning today and the formidable challenge educators face in fostering genuine intellectual engagement. Bookbinder places the blame squarely on society. “I don’t blame K–12 teachers,” he writes. “This is not an educational system problem. This is a societal problem.”

Of course, he has a point, but this is too lenient. It overlooks the significant structural failures within the K–12 system itself—failures that have deprioritized foundational literacy, neglected intellectual rigor, and left students unprepared for the demands of higher education.

Over the past several decades, elementary and secondary schools have increasingly adopted a pedagogical model prioritizing technological fluency and emotional well-being over developing serious intellectual habits. As one parent noted in response to Bookbinder’s piece, children are now “pushed into technology (computers, iPads) as early as kindergarten” and “are not required to read entire books, let alone write about them.”

This new orthodoxy exalts engagement over comprehension, screen fluency over print literacy, and the consequence is a generation of students ill-equipped for the demands of higher education.

More troubling still is the retreat from rigor. In the name of preserving students’ self-esteem, schools are often reluctant to challenge students, hold them accountable, or insist upon high standards of excellence. The result is a dangerous turn to what has been called the therapeutic approach to education. Students are flattered rather than instructed, and their self-esteem is affirmed regardless of whether they have done anything estimable. The essential work of education—discerning truth from error, cultivating judgment, introducing the young to the intellectual heritage of their civilization—is displaced by therapeutic aims.

And so, when these students arrive at university, their failure becomes apparent. Every professor has stories—students who cannot follow a basic line of reasoning, who confuse anecdote with argument, or who, without the slightest embarrassment, announce that they are “not readers,” as though this were a harmless personal quirk rather than a disqualification fromserious intellectual life. Once isolated anecdotes, such stories are now commonplace, as Bookbinder documents.

The university effectively becomes a triage center for the wounded products of a broken educational pipeline. Professors are increasingly urged to accommodate: to simplify readings, moderate expectations, and reward effort rather than genuine achievement. The result has been a steady erosion of standards and academic benchmarks.

But this is not merely an educational failure. It is a moral one. Literacy is not simply a technical skill—it is a form of ethical and intellectual development. It requires cultivating patience, empathy, and sound judgment. It demands that we sit still and listen attentively to the minds and voices of others. If students cannot do this, then we are not educating them. At best, we are merely credentialing them.

To be literate, in the fullest sense, is to participate in the great conversation of civilization. It is to gain access to and be initiated into the shared understandings of a community. A liberal education, properly understood, is neither vocational training nor a self-esteem project. It is a moral and intellectual discipline that presupposes a conception of the good and an account of the human person as more than a bundle of appetites or a mere consumer. It sees the human being as a moral agent, capable of self-transcendence and shaping a life toward truth, beauty, and meaning.

We deceive ourselves if we believe the decline in student literacy is a neutral development. We must resist the fashionable cynicism that shrugs and says this is simply the way of the world. We are told that deep reading is obsolete in the internet age, with its endless screens and omnipresent mobile phones. Our society increasingly treats the reading of serious texts not as an essential ability at the core of educational engagement, but as a quaint indulgence from abygone era.

Such resignation is not only intellectually lazy but morally perilous. The capacity to read deeply, write clearly, follow and test a line of reasoning—these are habits of mind without which neither democracy nor the life of the mind can flourish.

Education has always been about elevation. Liberal learning, as the name implies, is about liberating the individual from the contingencies and limitations of his or her birth. It is the deliberate act of lifting students’ minds above distraction, above appetite, above the noise of the present moment. To “meet students where they are” may be a necessary pedagogical starting point, but it must never be mistaken for the destination. The true aim of education is not to affirm students as they are, but to form them into what they might become. It is to awaken their capacities for reason, imagination, and judgment—and to summon them toward the best versions of themselves.

An earlier version of this essay was previously published in The Epoch Times
The issue is much, much older and has roots in the "progressive" movement of the late 1800's. There is even a shooting related tangent to it.


If you didn't pick up on the tangent, Horace Mann was F.W. Mann's father; author of "The Bullet's Flight"

ETA:
Apologies he was an Uncle.
 
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I spend pretty much my entire day, every day, trying to figure out what college students have written and what they actually mean by the gibberish they typed. I can excuse the non native English speakers, but the majority of the problems don't come from them.
 
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😂😂😂

That is great! 🤣🤣🤣

Were I an English teacher, I would fail that AI for blatant plagiarism. Take the introduction, summarized argument and closing statements and juice them up just a tiny bit to make it sound intelligent.

It was merely a regurgitation.

Let me hear some original thought.
When chatgpt is finally perfected, it will reply too everything with.....tldr.
 
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I believe a huge part of the problem is cultural. How many times a day does an average American, regardless of anything, read a headline and maybe 2-3 sentences following on and moves on to the next thing? Smart phones, tablets, and how we get information, process info… We’re all guilty of it.
 
Far from being just a fluff piece to stroke the authors’ egos, this/these essays try to identify a root problem that needs to be addressed. Will it, I’m doubtful, but getting the public to recognize the root cause is a start.
Ya, they will "address it." Just like the reading first program. That was sceince and evidence based. 😉😉I will tell you how it worked here anyway. A Superintendent's wife got the contract at each school district. It paid about 2.5x a teacher's salary. They worked about half the days of a teacher, and district wide reading scores dropped during the course of the program. That was in the 1990s.

Fast forward to a couple years ago. People were given contracts as reading coaches for schools. I think it was used to fluff the executive directors salary mostly. That way they could virtue signal about taking a smaller contract than the last person but actually get paid more. I informed that person of two kids that needed a reading coach, but not a single kid was ever seen for coaching.

This executive director never completed a single budget in 3 years. Then left for a promotion to the state's department of education. 😳

Speaking of credentialed. We hired a licensed SLP a few years ago, we had to let go because with out a handler, she woukd get lost and need help finding her way in or out of buildings. I think I was about 5 when I learned to follow the exit signs to get out, and 2 when I figured out you go in through the door. 🤣🤣🤣

That person literally did 4 years of college to ger a BA. Then another 2 years to do an SLP program.
 
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The thing is that kids are learning to read way younger today. Kids are considered to be behind if they aren't reading at 5 when they transition from preschool to kindergarden. There has been a huge push to teach kids to read younger. And it does not appear equating to more educated or well adapted kids.

To me it's not surprising. I don't think reading is nearly as important for young children as everything they learn through play. I think we might be displacing other learning for most of the group, by forcing the majority of children, who aren't ready to memorize all those characters and rules, to learn to read.
 
The issue is much, much older and has roots in the "progressive" movement of the late 1800's. There is even a shooting related tangent to it.


If you didn't pick up on the tangent, Horace Mann was F.W. Mann's father; author of "The Bullet's Flight"

ETA:
Apologies he was an Uncle.
Quote from the article:

“The National Adult Literacy Survey (NALS), released in 1993, revealed that between 40 million and 44 million Americans are unable to read phone books, ballots, car manuals, nursery rhymes, the Declaration of Independence, the Bible, the Constitution, or the directions on a medicine bottle. Another 50 million Americans recognize so few printed words that they are limited to a fourth- or fifth-grade level of reading. Illiterates account for 75 percent of unemployed adults, 33 percent of mothers receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Children, 85 percent of juveniles who appear in court, and 60 percent of prison inmates.”

This was the early ‘90s.
 
Google search; "how to lead a literate populace"

Google AI response; "
Did you mean: how to lead a literate population

AI Overview


Leading a literate and critically-thinking populace requires a transparent, collaborative, and evidence-based approach to governance and communication. Unlike a population that can be managed through simple, top-down directives, a literate citizenry demands reasoned arguments, is skeptical of easy answers, and expects to be an active participant in decision-making.

... "

Funny, the AI gets it.
 
I believe a huge part of the problem is cultural. How many times a day does an average American, regardless of anything, read a headline and maybe 2-3 sentences following on and moves on to the next thing? Smart phones, tablets, and how we get information, process info… We’re all guilty of it.

We've been getting "reprogrammed" for a while now, with TV and phone apps designed to hijack our dopamine receptors to give us quick hits, to compete for our screen time.

I was thinking about this not too long ago, how it's changed all of us, myself included - and I hate it.