Christine
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 31, 1999
- Messages
- 32,571
This may be a little off topic, but a conversation with my daughter last night got me thinking about this thread and how lucky I am.
Her English/History teacher has been listening to students whine about having to read "The Great Gatsby" and "Farenheit 451", and yesterday kind of got fed up. She asked the class to raise their hands if they've read a book (cover to cover) in the last year. Most of the class raised their hands, but the majority confessed that they were only reading the books because they were assigned for class. The next question was, how many had read a book in the last year for fun. Half the hands went down. How many had read a book in the last month for fun. Half of the remaining hands went down. How many had read a book in the last week for fun. By this point, only a couple of hands were up; my daughter's and maybe 2 other. Last question, how many are reading a book today, for fun. My daughter was the only one with her hand up.
As she lowered her hand, she heard one of the kids in the class whisper under his breath, "Nerd." She turned to him and said, "Yup. And proud of it!"
While I'm proud that my daughter enjoys reading, and stands up for herself, I'm saddened that so many kids aren't reading anymore. We live in a well to do area, where there are many libraries and book stores, so it's not like there aren't books available. I just don't understand it!
I'm so thankful for this thread, because it gives me hope to see so many people reading, and sharing what they've read!
I don't know what the cause of this is, but I have my suspicions. I am an avid reader. Neither one of my kids (ages 21 and 18) are. It saddens me. Both read well. I always thought their dislike of pleasure reading started in elementary school when the schools started in with all that "Advanced Reader" AR system where they had to rack up points and read at certain levels on their own time. They were still forced. My kids hated it. Prior that, we always read together and they always enjoyed going to library and getting books for themselves. Then AR kicked in (probably around 3rd grade) and the drudgery started. Now they associated reading with "school work" or a task rather than the pleasure it should be.