OTHERS SAY: Johnny can't read | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette


OTHERS SAY: Johnny can't read | Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In a recent story for The Atlantic, Rose Horowitch addressed the decline in the ability of college students at elite institutions to handle a traditional workload. Nicholas Dames, a Columbia University literature professor, told her that many of his students find reading several books a semester to be an overwhelming challenge. It wasn't always this way, and has gotten worse over the past decade.

"Twenty years ago, Dames' classes had no problem engaging in sophisticated discussions of 'Pride and Prejudice' one week and 'Crime and Punishment' the next," Horowitch wrote. "Now his students tell him up front that the reading load feels impossible. It's not just the frenetic pace; they struggle to attend to small details while keeping track of the overall plot."

Horowitch spoke with nearly three dozen professors. The majority "relayed similar experiences," she found.

This isn't surprising, given the progressive attack on merit and academic standards in the name of "equity." Many high schools no longer require students to read books. Instead, they read articles or excerpts of books. In August, The Chronicle of Higher Education noted that students are doing less reading in high school.

This reading deficit exposes and foreshadows a number of major problems. The adults running the K-12 education system are failing to prepare students adequately. Reading comprehension is a requirement for functioning as a productive adult. It helps students process information and pay attention to details. It increases empathy. Research shows that reading can help ward off cognitive decline. Many kids may not understand these benefits, so they need adults to prod them to read, even--or especially--when they don't want to.

Then there are the universities themselves. Many have lowered standards by eliminating standardized testing requirements. Yet an exceptional test score is a strong indicator of academic readiness. In addition, grade inflation has reduced the value of grade-point averages.

Developing critical thinking skills helps students thrive in their lives and careers. Lowering standards doesn't help students struggling academically. Instead, it masks deficiencies, undermines the pursuit of excellence and discourages scholarly progress.

New students at top universities can face intimidating challenges. Reading comprehension shouldn't be one of them. That this has become a problem reveals a systemic failure in the country's education system.

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