• @TheMightyCanuck
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    568 months ago

    Holy shit the literacy rate is kinda shocking…

    Do people not like to read? A quarter of the population is fucking NUTS

    • @[email protected]
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      168 months ago

      Some people didn’t have an opportunity to learn in the first place. Lack of education doesn’t make someone “fucking NUTS”.

      • @[email protected]
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        678 months ago

        I think they meant a quarter of the population being illiterate, that is, that fact that such a statistic exists, is “fucking nuts,” not the illiterate population themselves.

        • @[email protected]
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          38 months ago

          Well he proceeded it by saying that they don’t “like” to read, implying that this is a choice on their part.

          • @TheMightyCanuck
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            58 months ago

            Hence it being a question. I wasn’t aware that access to learning to read wasn’t easily available.

            Stats on illiterate by choice vs socioeconomic standing would be very interesting

      • @[email protected]
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        158 months ago

        This basically comes down to how you define literacy.

        Nationally, 21% of Americans have level 1 or below literacy on the PIAAC literacy scale. That’s probably where the 85 people came from.

        12% are at level 1, meaning they can only read at a basic level. 4% are functionally illiterate, and 4% had some kind of cognitive or physical handicap or language barrier that kept them from being surveyed.

        About 34% of illiterate Americans were born outside the US, so they’re possibly literature in another language.

    • @[email protected]
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      98 months ago

      One thing I haven’t noticed anyone else mention is that the literacy data being referenced here seems to originate from the PIAAC, an organisation that I wasn’t previously familiar with. I was curious about their methodology, since I also thought the quoted rate was shocking. The thing is, according to this FAQ, they only assess in English. So the number of people who are actually illiterate is inextricable from the number of people who are literate in another language, but haven’t learned English yet.

    • @[email protected]
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      88 months ago

      This video is a great discussion of literacy. To put that rate into context, ‘illiterate’ often includes people that can read and write a little bit, but still struggle with some vital or everyday tasks. According to Wikipedia, 20% of US adults have a literacy level at or below level 1 which would be 80 people in this example. This report has a ton of stats and also defines each level of literacy.

    • @[email protected]
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      58 months ago

      I have no idea how no one has picked up on this and have all decided “Americans are dumb”.

      What everyone has missed is the literacy statistic is for ENGLISH literacy. The other 20% or so are pretty much all immigrants that cannot speak English and there aren’t tens of millions of adults with the mental capacity of a rock.

      • @[email protected]
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        68 months ago

        I’m from Connecticut. Willimantic area, not Greenwich area, but we were still less damaged by Jim Crow and similar policies (except for redlining, that fucked everyone). I spoke to a man in 2017, who had been born in the US, seemed aware and thoughtful, and had to get his granddaughter to write down the claim number I wanted to give him, because he didn’t know his numbers or letters.

        I didn’t ask, even though it was killing me with curiosity. His granddaughter probably heard the curiosity in my voice, and explained that in 1967, when he was able to leave school, the teachers didn’t care whether a black kid learned to read. They let him leave school at twelve, even though it was well after brown v the board of education. By the time he wanted to learn to read, he was older, had full time work, and it just didn’t click.

        That man was underserved by his government well past the point of mistreatment, not stupid. He’s obviously only one data point, but he’s not the only black man who was treated differently in schools

      • @[email protected]
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        58 months ago

        Not entirely.

        Only about a quarter of them were born in another country. Then you’ve got e.g. people with severe cognitive delays or some kind of physical impairment such as blindness. And there’s also people whose education system failed them.

        It’s honestly a mix of things.