Today during our daily rehearsal
my husband and I did “Follow
the Drinking Gourd,” a beautiful song from the era of slavery in this
country. In the lyrics were embedded instructions to escape from the South, a
way for illiterate slaves to remember the long detailed directions to find
their way to Ohio. The “drinking gourd” was the big dipper, which points to the
north.
A recent New Yorker article, “Turning
the Page: How Women Became Readers,” by Joan Acocella (10/15/12) is a
fascinating look at the history of literacy. (The article is a review of a new
book, The Woman Reader, by Belinda Jack.) Nowadays
we take it for granted that everyone should be able to read, but not long ago
the wealthy and powerful realized that literacy was a source of power and
attempted to prevent women and the poor from acquiring the skill.
Men feared that if women read
books they would begin to think independently, because, as Acocella writes,
“there would be no one there to guide their thinking” as they read.
“Accordingly, they might cease displaying the attractions—sweetness, soft
voices, compliance—that were the product of their dependence on male approval.
Indeed, they might start talking back to men.” Also, women might start
realizing there were other possibilities in life: novels portrayed romance and
excitement. Women started dreaming of having better lives for themselves.
Female literacy has been a major
contribution to both the precipitous
drop in the birthrate across the globe in the last fifty years and the
improvement in living conditions in many poor countries. The UN Economic and
Social Council reported in April 2011:
Higher levels of education, particularly among girls, had a
strong correlation to declining fertility and better development outcomes,
delegates and experts said today as the Commission on Population and
Development continued its forty-fourth session…
Another notable success story was that of Mauritius, whose
representative recalled that experts had predicted in the 1960s that the Indian
Ocean island nation would collapse under the weight of its large population and
low levels of development. Instead, Mauritius had reduced its fertility
rate by implementing strong reproductive health education programs, she said,
adding that national maternal and child mortality rates had dropped as living
conditions had improved. Mauritius now enjoyed a 95 per cent
literacy rate among people aged 15-24 years, she said.
According to Ms. Acocella, as
recently as the mid-1800s the number of people who were literate was still
shockingly low even in advanced nations —in Europe the literacy rate was about
fifty percent. But this was not shared evenly across countries; in Sweden the
rate was 90 percent, England 65-75 percent, Spain 25 percent, and Russia 5-10
percent.
Compulsory education began in
most industrialized countries in the 19th century because the
industrialists realized they needed an educated workforce. But at the same time
they realized that education was dangerous—thinking laborers would not put up
with sweatshops and unsafe working conditions.
Perhaps this explains the
conservative attack on public education that has been happening in this country
in the last few decades. By promoting vouchers, they can pull taxpayer money
away from the public system and put it into the private schools where they send
their children. Educate the poor just enough to make them employable, but not
enough so they can question anything.
Recently I saw Werner Herzog’s latest
film, Into the Abyss, which delves into the lives of people connected
with the senseless murder of three people: the two killers, their friends, and
family members of the victims. One of the killers’ acquaintances, perhaps
thirty years old, admitted that he couldn’t read until, as an adult, he went to
prison for the first time. He wasn’t happy about having been in prison, but was
very grateful for the gift of literacy. Life as an illiterate was hard, he
said.
This film was set in a small
Texas town, so I looked online for some statistics on literacy in Texas. I
found “Literacy Texas,” a group working to improve literacy in Texas, which has
this
information on their website:
Adult low literacy can be connected to almost every
socio-economic issue in the United States:
·
More than 60 percent of all state and federal
corrections inmates can barely read and write.
·
Low health literacy costs between $106 billion and
$238 billion each year in the U.S. — 7 to 17 percent of all annual personal
health care spending.
·
Low literacy’s effects cost the U.S. $225
billion or more each year in non-productivity in the workforce, crime, and loss
of tax revenue due to unemployment. (ProLiteracy)
·
85% of all juveniles who interface with the
juvenile court system are functionally illiterate. (National Assessment of
Adult Literacy, 2003)
·
Correctional populations report lower
educational attainment than do those in the general population. An
estimated 40% of State prison inmates, 27% of Federal inmates, 47% of inmates
in local jails and 31% of those serving probation sentences had not completed
high school or its equivalent while about 18% of the general population failed
to attain high school graduation. (Bureau of Justice Statistics Special
Report 4/15/03 - Education and Corrections Populations - full report attached.)
·
50% of the chronically unemployed are not
functionally literate.
(U.S. Dept. of Education, Office of Vocational and Adult
Education, Presentation: Dr. Susan Sclafani, April 2005)
The National Assessment of
Adult Literacy, a major research program completed in 2003, found that 14%
of adults in this country performed at “below basic,” which meant they had no
more than the most simple and concrete literacy skills. They found that 11
million adults were “Nonliterate in English.” These could be divided into two
groups: 7 million who could not answer simple test questions and 4 million who
could not take the test because of language barriers.
I am a great fan of public
education. I think it is a fundamental component of a democracy: there’s a
leveling effect when children are given the same basic education, and a
positive effect when children from different backgrounds are mixed in a
classroom.
Human beings are our greatest
national resource, and yet we callously throw away countless lives, condemning
those people to poverty and ignorance, unaware of the cost to our nation and
our selves.
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