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Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 1987
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Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED317855
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contents Myth #1: There Is an Epidemic of Illiteracy in American Society. Adult Basic Education Adult Literacy Basic Skills Definitions Functional Literacy Literacy Education Policy Formation Reading Achievement Workplace Literacy Since colonial times, definitions and estimates of illiteracy in the United States have been debated. The Census Bureau's major indicator is number of years of schooling completed. However, average grade-level attainment is high, whereas estimates of levels of reading ability remain low. In addition, these measures are inadequate for adults. A National Assessment of Educational Progress study concluded that although young adults could read and write, too many perform at low levels of proficiency. Increasingly complex definitions of literacy are accompanied by rising literacy standards, although some argue against a national standard definition, because literacy may have different connotations depending on the setting. Particularly in the workplace, the definition of literacy should be expanded beyond reading and writing to include a continuum of interrelated reasoning and communication skills. (Addresses and telephone numbers are provided for nine people who are sources for definitions of literacy. Three additional sources of information--the Division of Higher Education and Adult Learning, U.S. Department of Education; Library Programs of the U.S. Department of Education, and the Reading Reform Foundation--are listed.) (CML)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
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institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1987
record_format eric
spellingShingle Myth #1: There Is an Epidemic of Illiteracy in American Society.
Adult Basic Education
Adult Literacy
Basic Skills
Definitions
Functional Literacy
Literacy Education
Policy Formation
Reading Achievement
Workplace Literacy
Myth #1: There Is an Epidemic of Illiteracy in American Society. Adult Basic Education Adult Literacy Basic Skills Definitions Functional Literacy Literacy Education Policy Formation Reading Achievement Workplace Literacy Since colonial times, definitions and estimates of illiteracy in the United States have been debated. The Census Bureau's major indicator is number of years of schooling completed. However, average grade-level attainment is high, whereas estimates of levels of reading ability remain low. In addition, these measures are inadequate for adults. A National Assessment of Educational Progress study concluded that although young adults could read and write, too many perform at low levels of proficiency. Increasingly complex definitions of literacy are accompanied by rising literacy standards, although some argue against a national standard definition, because literacy may have different connotations depending on the setting. Particularly in the workplace, the definition of literacy should be expanded beyond reading and writing to include a continuum of interrelated reasoning and communication skills. (Addresses and telephone numbers are provided for nine people who are sources for definitions of literacy. Three additional sources of information--the Division of Higher Education and Adult Learning, U.S. Department of Education; Library Programs of the U.S. Department of Education, and the Reading Reform Foundation--are listed.) (CML)
title Myth #1: There Is an Epidemic of Illiteracy in American Society.
topic Adult Basic Education
Adult Literacy
Basic Skills
Definitions
Functional Literacy
Literacy Education
Policy Formation
Reading Achievement
Workplace Literacy
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED317855