America's Most Literate Cities

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America's Most Literate Cities

Study ranks cities' literate behavior

Most literate cities
1. Minneapolis
2. Seattle
3. Pittsburgh
4. Madison, Wis.
5. Cincinnati
6. Washington, D.C.
7. Denver
8. Boston
9. Portland, Ore.
10. San Francisco

Least literate cities
70. Garland, Texas
71. Fresno, Calif.
72. Arlington, Texas
73. Long Beach, Calif.
74. Anaheim, Calif.
75. San Antonio, Texas
76. Santa Ana, Calif.
77. Corpus Christi, Texas
78. Hialeah, Fla.
79. El Paso, Texas
Source: America's Most Literate Cities
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By Mary Beth Marklein
USA Today
August 3, 2004


The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who can't read them, Mark Twain has been credited with saying. And when you measure literacy through that kind of prism, a new study suggests, Minneapolis has the most going for it; El Paso, Texas, the least.

Minnesota's largest city and the Tex-Mex border town are at opposite ends of the spectrum in the study, which examines the extent to which residents of the nation's 79 largest cities behave in literate ways -- such as buying newspapers and books or borrowing library materials.

Indianapolis falls in the top half, ranking 27th overall; Fort Wayne placed 45th.

The country's largest cities appear well into the bottom half of the rankings: New York is 49, Chicago, 58, and Los Angeles, 68.

Like Minneapolis, many top-ranked cities also boast some of the nation's most highly educated and affluent residents. In contrast, low-ranking cities, like El Paso, tend to attract recent immigrants, many of them poor and with little schooling.

Education isn't the only factor considered in the study, which draws from U.S. Census and Education Department data, newspaper circulation rates, library resources, magazine and journal publishers, and other public documents. In all, 22 variables are measured.

This is the second year of the America's Most Literate Cities study, which this year includes 15 more cities. It ranks cities with populations of 200,000 or more.

The new version also is based on more recent federal data, and was tweaked in a few areas to provide what author Jack Miller, a longtime education researcher and chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, calls a "more thorough and . . . more accurate" indicator of literate behavior.

I'm gratified to know that we are doing OK here in flyover country.

Here's the whole list:

Most Literate Cities
 
Have you ever taken one of those surveys that matches you up with the perfect city based on your answers? I did, and I got Boston. Now I'm really curious about it. Glad to see it on your literate list!:sunny:
 
very interesting. Did you notice all the Texas states in the least literate...

Well Philadelphia was 46%. I truly wish it was higher ranked.
 
Originally posted by Cindy B
very interesting. Did you notice all the Texas states in the least literate...

Well Philadelphia was 46%. I truly wish it was higher ranked.

I think there are alot in Texas , because a lot of illiterate immigrants cross over the border there and stay in Texas cities near the border. I don't know if they are counted in the survey, but I'll bet they are.

I'm in Boston. I work for a publisher, so I'm glad we made the list!
 

i'd really like to see their methodology. i have a feeling this one might be skewed.
 
Originally posted by Cindy B
very interesting. Did you notice all the Texas states in the least literate...


How many states are in texas?:p ;) J/K



I am suprised San Fran isnt on the list. I have done those city tests minniepumpernickel. Mine came up , Boston, San Fran, Dallas, and Long Island. Boston and San Fran are always one and two for me. DC is like 8 or 9.
 
I'd also like to see the criteria on which this was based.

I do find it interesting that Minneapolis is rated #1. This city is frequently rated in the top 5 in those "best places to live" studies. I've never been, but from all that I read, aside from it being pretty cold in the winters, it does seem like a nice place to hang your hat. :)
 
Originally posted by EsmeraldaX
I think there are alot in Texas , because a lot of illiterate immigrants cross over the border there and stay in Texas cities near the border. I don't know if they are counted in the survey, but I'll bet they are.

BINGO!!! I'm in the DFW area and we have two elementary schools in our disctrict that over half of the kids don't speak english. Our district may have to cut advanced classes to support teaching kids english. It sucks for those whose kids speak english, because they won't have a way to advance in this district. Hopefully, a better plan will come about.
 
Originally posted by caitycaity
i'd really like to see their methodology. i have a feeling this one might be skewed.

Follow the second link caity. It looked at publications, newspapers, libraries, booksellers, etc. But all surveys are skewed. ;)
 
it does seem like a nice place to hang your hat.

Or toss it into the air....

Mtm_1lo.jpg

3mtm17.jpg
 
My top 10 were (starting with #1) :

Paris, TN
Morgantown, NC
Hopkinsville, KY
Atlantic Beach-Morehead City, NC
Gainseville, GA
Fountain Hills, AZ
Wimberly, TX
Fredericksburg, TX
Guntersville, AL
Alexander City, AL

There were 4 pages of cities, almost all in those states. Oh how I'd love to move...

:)
 
Well, I got Boston, Long Island and Washington DC area as my top three... so I guess I'm doing ok sitting in the number 3 spot ;)
 
Before I opened this thread, I was sure we would be number 1! Sure we are cold, Snoops, but the arts are really big here, and next to NY, it is one of the best places for live theater. It occurs to me that arts and literacy may go hand in hand!

BTW, Rochester, MN is this years "best city to live in", and also often scores high on these lists. I think Mayo clinic has something to do with that.
 
thanks.

for anyone else who is as bored as me :p here's the direct link to their methodology:
http://www.uww.edu/npa/cities/methodology.pdf

quite frankly, i was really surprised to see dc on the top 10 list. in some ways, dc is a unique city because many, many, many people work here that do not live here. some people do not even consider dc a "real" city because after 5 most sections of the city seem to take on a ghost town feel. :p

they seem to have used the population data for the district itself, rather than the metro area. however, since a large part of their data comes from newspaper circulations and bookstores (who also cater largely to people who don't live in dc), and from journals (of which an abnormally large number are published in dc, for and by people who largely don't live in dc), i have a feeling this study isn't a great measure of actual literacy rates of the cities involved.
 
Good point, Caity. D.C. is unique in that way, I guess, in that most people don't actually live right in D.C. but on its outskirts.
 
literacy rates of the cities involved

Ah. I'll bet that "literacy rates" wasn't what they were trying to study really. I think it was more pedantic than that....like the difference between people that can read and can understand what they read and the people who pursue literary things or the humanities.
 







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