shanek said:
I posted a graph here awhile back showing illiteracy rates plummeting like a brick before there was any state or Federal taxpayer funding of schools, which didn't start up until the 1940s-'50s in the case of the states, and the '60s in the case of the Feds.
I looked up the data. It shows no such thing.
Illiteracy was plummetting, and it continues to plummet, ever since 1867, when Congress created the Department of Education, and they started to track literacy.
Now skanek, I don't know where you source your chart, but what you're really seeing in the numbers is a difference in the definition of literacy. The new standard is "functional literacy", which wasn't measured pre-1979.
That's why you see a jump on the numbers. It's a different standard of the test. Nobody tests the level of rudimentary literacy they tested in the past centuries. I'd say we have nearly 100% literacy by those standards, which were about the level of reading "The Cat in the Hat." Current tests require readers to read a dense piece of prose from a newspaper article, and be able to find facts and ascertain concepts, not just identify words.
BY NO MEANS do we have the level of illiteracy that America had in 1870, or even the 30's or 40's.
http://nces.ed.gov/naal/historicaldata/illiteracy.asp
EDIT:
Oh, now I see your graph, you're talking about a jump right around !!!! THE GREAT DEPRESSION!!!
It actually starts 14 years after the great depression, and ends 14 years after the end of the great depression. Amazing coincidence that the survey is of people over age 14? I think not.
Here's a bulletin for you: Lots of kids weren't going to school during the great depression. They were working.