There is a cultural narrative about how electronic
devices are pulling children away from books. When I meet with other university
professors they often tell me that the students don’t read anymore because their
eyeballs are glued to their phones. Technophobes think we are raising a
generation that doesn’t understand the value of literature.
The polarization of old and new continues. Maybe it is
leftover sediment from an anti-screen mindset that was always on the fringes of
the golden age of television. It is a trite myth-like story that attempts to
cast books as the underdog in battle against thechno-imperialism. Paper is the
good guy and Gorilla Glass is the villain.
Common Sense Media’s new report, entitled “Children,
Teens, And Reading,” attempts to offer a “big-picture perspective on children’s
reading habits in the United States and how they may have changed during the
technological revolution of recent decades.” The big scary takeaway:
According to government studies, since 1984, the percent of 13-year-olds who are weekly readers went down from 70% to 53%, and the percent of 17-year-olds who are weekly readers went from 64% to 40%. The percent of 17-year-olds who never or hardly ever read tripled during this period, from 9% to 27%.
These statistics are startling. But I’m not sure what
this has to do with technology. The framing doesn’t make much sense to me.
It seems to me that we currently live in a culture that
is more heavily text based than any other time in history. People read all day
long. Google, Twitter, and Facebook deliver words. People can’t peel their eyes
from the smartphone–essentially a text and information distribution mechanism.
We actually have trouble NOT reading. Folks are always checking their email and
their text messages. Sometimes it is hard to pull away from this matrix of
letters.
Still, what are people reading? It seems like they
don’t read many books. I’m not talking about kids, but rather adults. Even the
technophobes don’t read books.
I’ve met highly educated elite individuals who have
told me they just don’t have time to read books. They skim the NY Times book
review so they can participate in cocktail party conversations. They buy
executive summaries from the back of in-flight magazines. I’m shocked by the
number of people who ask me if there are audio versions of my books
available.
Is the problem that kids don’t read books, or is the
problem that nobody reads books because our culture has become anti-academic and
anti-intellectual? We’d prefer to read magazines and blogs that are subtly
self-promotional in their incessant questioning the value of the humanities,
liberal arts education, and those university degrees that are more dependent on
books than algorithms and databases. The popular rhetoric tells us we need more
STEM education, more engineers, more entrepreneurs. We’re surrounded by an
implicit anti-book agenda, and still we wonder why kids don’t read books.
I’ll admit that I’m biased. I’m an academic. I get
paid to read. But my kids (6 and 8) also read a lot on their own. Not only
because I require it–30 minutes of reading is a prerequisite to video game
time–but also because their dad models good reading behaviors. Dad is always
ordering new books; dad is always reading them. In my household, being an adult
means feeling comfortable with books. Maturity means having excessive
familiarity with long-form written word.
The Common Sense Media report agrees. “Parents can
encourage reading,” they explain, “by keeping print books in the home, reading
themselves, and setting aside time daily for their children to read.”
Strong correlations exist between these parental actions and the frequency with which children read (scholastic, 2013). For example, among children who are frequent readers, 57% of parents set aside time each day for their child to read, compared to 16% of parents of children who are infrequent readers.
When it comes to books, however, most studies show
that the text delivery method is irrelevant. Good reading behavior has nothing
to do with technology. E-readers, tablets, laptop screens are all capable of
delivering long-form text. Books have nothing to do with paper. In fact,
electronic devices only increase access to books. A report from the Joan Ganz
Cooney Center released earlier this year explains that “a majority of children
ages 2 to 10 have access to a device for electronic reading: 55% have a
multipurpose tablet in the home, and 29% have a dedicated e-reader (62% have
access to at least one of these devices). Among children with one of these
devices in the home, half (49%) engage in electronic reading, either on their
own or with their parent (30% of all children).” Books matter; how kids read
them doesn’t.
My kids read on the iPad, the e-reader, and paper. I
make sure of it. I read to my kids every night. I read with my kids during the
day. I do it because I see it as a crucial piece of their education. I can’t
just outsource the raising of my children to specialists–and then complain that
those teachers are failing. It is obvious to me that parents also need to be
involved. They need to make sure their children read books.
Of course, it is easier to frame the story as paper
vs. digital. It gives us permission not to engage with our kids. We can blame
the video games and apps rather than blaming ourselves. Parents need to take
responsibility for raising thoughtful, empathic, open-minded adults. Books are a
crucial part of the equation. But even if we eliminated every digital technology
from our lives, our kids still won’t read books unless we tell them in no
uncertain terms that books are an important part of being an adult.
Teach your kids to
read. And teach your kids that it matters what they read. Renaissance Learning’s
annual “What Kids Are Reading Report” tells us a lot about what kids
are currently reading and it is not all pretty. Their huge study “does not
summarize sales or library data. It uses data from 318 million books read by 9.8
million students in the U.S. to determine what the most popular books are in a
given year. It is the most extensive report in the U.S. that reflects K12
reading trends.”
Three interesting findings:
1. Gendered reading starts as early as first grade.
Elementary-school boys read tons of “Captain Underpants,” but it doesn’t even
make it to the girls’ top 20 list. We’re conditioned to read statistics like
this as proof that girls and boys have different preferences, tastes, and
attitudes. I don’t believe it. Alternatively, we might read this as evidence
that we are creating an increasingly gendered world where roles and intellectual
expectations are divided according to biological reproductive organs. If this is
really what you want, by all means, keep at it. If not, there are plenty of
books that are non-gendered; let your kids know that you think more highly of
these.
2. Middle schoolers (in particular 6th graders) are reading the
most words per student. The average words per student increases through
middle school and then starts decreasing again in high school. I see this as
evidence that parents are sending the wrong message about books to their
children. We value literacy, cheering on small kids to learn to read as quickly
as possible. But when these kids become adolescents they attempt to directly
emulate their adult role models. If adults don’t read books then trying to act
like an adult means not reading books.
3. Books like Twilight and Hunger Games are
more popular than literary classics. These days, teachers assign these more
often than Shakespeare or Don Quixote. Most of them will
tell you that it is because they figure any reading is good reading and books
like these increase student engagement. On the one hand, this makes sense. On
the other hand, we should remember that popular fiction prioritizes sales over
content. They are revenue generators first and literary explorations of the
human condition only afterward. This doesn’t necessarily mean popular fiction is
bad, but there’s also a reason that certain books have transcended the economic,
political, and epistemological trends of particular centuries.
At the end of the day, how our children read and what our
children read says a lot more about adult attitudes about books than it does
about the kids’. Model the behaviors and attitudes you want your children to
emulate.
Jordan Shapiro is author of FREEPLAY: A Video Game Guide to Maximum Euphoric
Bliss, and MindShift’s Guide To Games And Learning For information on
Jordan’s upcoming books and events click here.
from: Forbes
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