seayakin
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2003
- Messages
- 1,437
I was at a conference recently where the speaker talked about the wretched literacy rates in the United States. He cited the study (National Assessment of Adult Literacy NAAL – A First Look at the Literacy of American Adults in the 21st Century - http://nces.ed.gov/NAAL/PDF/2006470_1.PDF) One of the things that shocked the crowd of university librarians was that only 53% of college graduates were proficient and reading prose, 62% were proficient at reading a document, and 43% were proficient at reading and understanding quantitative information.
Proficient is defined as indicating the “skills necessary to perform more complex and challenging literacy activities." And includes more specifically, the following:
■ reading lengthy, complex, abstract prose texts as well as
■ synthesizing information and making complex inferences
■ integrating, synthesizing, and analyzing multiple pieces of
information located in complex documents
■ locating more abstract quantitative information and using it
to solve multistep problems when the arithmetic operations
are not easily inferred and the problems are more complex
comparing viewpoints in two editorials
■ interpreting a table about blood pressure, age,
and physical activity
■ computing and comparing the cost per ounce
of food items
Many of my colleagues would have defined these as basic reading skills not proficient.
What do the critical thinkers on this forum think and what does it say of critical thinking in higher education?
Proficient is defined as indicating the “skills necessary to perform more complex and challenging literacy activities." And includes more specifically, the following:
■ reading lengthy, complex, abstract prose texts as well as
■ synthesizing information and making complex inferences
■ integrating, synthesizing, and analyzing multiple pieces of
information located in complex documents
■ locating more abstract quantitative information and using it
to solve multistep problems when the arithmetic operations
are not easily inferred and the problems are more complex
comparing viewpoints in two editorials
■ interpreting a table about blood pressure, age,
and physical activity
■ computing and comparing the cost per ounce
of food items
Many of my colleagues would have defined these as basic reading skills not proficient.
What do the critical thinkers on this forum think and what does it say of critical thinking in higher education?
Oslo, here I come.