• sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    I am so glad I got two college degrees simultaneously and was then overworked by the private sector so badly I had a mental breakdown and was then misdiagnosed for years and can now never enter the workforce in my given field due to missing half a decade of work.

    Now I get to be told by literal, actually illiterate morons to focus on my grindset and have a positive outlook, whilst browsing through ghost (fake) job applications that all have 200 applicants and a 4 month interview process.

    … I’d been saying the average American has a 6th or 7th grade reading level.

    Now it looks like I gotta knock that down to 5th or 6th grade reading level.

    EDIT: Somehow this does not exist in this thread yet:

    • SteevyT@beehaw.org
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      1 day ago

      When I designed store fixtures, the assembly instructions had to be written at a 3rd grade reading level, and even then were barely followed.

  • skyler@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    To determine how many prison beds will be needed in future years, some states actually base part of their projection on how well current elementary students are performing on reading tests

    Wow. That’s depressing.

  • d-RLY?@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Literacy has played a large factor in advancements in societies and more important liberation of oppressed peoples. The fascists and greedy rich people have been doing everything to fuck with education for decades. And US citizens have been more or less taking pride in being stupid. The working and poor need to be doing everything possible to take pride in learning to combat this degeneration for our survival.

  • Adkml [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    Makes sense anecdotally.

    Lines up with the big groundswell of opposition I’ve seen from parents about their kids getting homework because “this homework is ridiculous I can’t even answer the questions on my kids third grade homework. Who the hell cares what an adjective is.”

    Also lines up with the rights understanding of what a pronoun is.

    • _pi@lemmy.mlOP
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      2 days ago

      The parentposting is the worst with math.

      My favorite flavor is the “THIS 5th GRADE HOMEWORK IS TOO HARD” when the adult clearly has never learned basic concepts like order of operations (PEMDAS) and cardinality of logic (e.g. how you solve sudoku where you order working through the solution always taking the smallest number of unknowns, first solve places where only one numbers missing until there are no first rank order problems, then move on to second rank order problems where two numbers are missing).

      But there are definitely parents answering ‘she was looking for Romeo when she said “wherefore art thou Romeo?”’.

      You can 100% see this degradation with adults in real time if you look at popular reality TV shows that have puzzle/knowledge/trivia components like Survivor and The Challenge and just binge watch the whole back catalog. You’ll see things getting harder until the game hits its stride and identity but then at one point just simpler and simpler and simpler.

      Survivor is actually pretty bad now because the entire show started cheaping out and reusing things over and over again. So people just started 3d printing the puzzles and memorizing them. Literally No Reality TV Contestant Left Behind style pipeline. The other thing is that they completely devalued the actual survival aspects of the show, and it’s a game of attrition where it’s who can think straight on the lowest amount of calories. The only reason to know any actual survival skills on that show anymore is just in case of tie breakers where they have to make fire from flint.

      • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        Another way that you can watch the degredation of the American brain over time is by looking at the Flesch-Kincaid reading levels of major Presidential speeches over time.

  • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Audiobooks are becoming huge for accessibility purposes because of this phenomenon. People have already expressed appreciation for their inclusion in my Intro to Marxism reading list.

    • _pi@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 day ago

      Audiobooks aren’t really a good solution to be honest. Reading / writing literacy are the basis of scholarship. We have centuries of research and examples that we’ve turned our back on that efficient learning happens only when you can unlock good literacy skills. Specifically the aspect of reading/physical writing/sublingualization is a cornerstone of comprehension of complex ideas. With something like Marxism that’s based on understanding both technical and archaic language and social constructs it becomes really hard. There are tons of self professed Marxists that couldn’t tell you what commodity fetishism actually means in simple terms.

      Great example is the Communist Manifesto itself, meant to be a pamphlet for factory workers in the 19th century, but is typically a mildly difficult text to approach for the average person today.

      Audiobooks can replace something like pleasure reading where you’re just reading pulp garbage, but they’re not really a good replacement for learning.

      • comfy@lemmy.ml
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        24 hours ago

        I don’t disagree that reading and writing are the basis of scholarship (as we know it), but I reject any suggestion that comprehending critical Marxist concepts should require a scholarly barrier of entry. If someone wants to become a theoretician then sure, it makes sense to analyse Marxist theory from primary sources with all its historical overhead, but if our goal is to promote efficient learning, then we shouldn’t be recommending archaic texts written for a whole different target audience. People don’t really need to learn French or German words to understand what the worker class and owner class are and their resulting material interests, or what alienation is. How many people need to know who exactly Kautsky was anymore? Can’t commodity fetishism be defined in simple terms? Archaic works absolutely still have value and relevance, but the Marxist ideas relevant to most workers can absolutely be made more accessible to your local audience while retaining its analytical value.

        • _pi@lemmy.mlOP
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          21 hours ago

          You’re talking from a relative position of understanding of these concepts. You’re not talking from a blank slate. Even in professional environments that I’ve been in where everyone went to college and theoretically is fully literate, you would have trouble getting people to retain these concepts even if you used friendlier technical language. You’re overestimating the amount of time it takes to actually achieve understanding, there are people on this site that constantly mix up these words and concepts, have a hard time applying them to the real world and misapply them regularly and are self professed Marxists. You’re also mistaking cultural policing of agreeing/using these concepts for understanding of them. Just think about how many people in America agree with capitalism but can’t adequately explain what capitalism is. They agree with freedom but don’t have a working definition or framework of what freedom means. On a societal level this often becomes bromides. My parents and grandparents read Marx in school but couldn’t give you an accurate basic run down of Marxist concepts.

          Marxism isn’t some magical thing. There were plenty of people in the USSR that also didn’t understand the system they existed under and it’s concepts but reflexively or sheepishly agreed with it.

  • Commiunism@beehaw.org
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    23 hours ago

    The source seems extremely dubious with seemingly no way to see how they conducted the study and where they pulled the numbers from , and some of the points are not very well worded especially in their 2024 study, there the first 2 lines are:

    “On average, 79% of U.S. adults nationwide are literate in 2024. 21% of adults in the US are illiterate in 2024.”

    Granted, English isn’t my first language but those statements just seem contradictory. “U.S. adults nationwide” and “adults in the US” seems like the exact same thing, unless someone can correct me. Turns out I’m the one who can’t read, thought both examples used “illiterate” rather than “literate and illiterate”

    Comment sections are also filled by bots so that doesn’t give that much confidence either.

    • Gloomy@mander.xyz
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      1 day ago

      If 21 % can’t read (are Illiterate) then it makes sense that 79 % can read (are literate). So yes, nationwide and in the US are the same thing.

      Besides that, I agree. No sources is a no go and no moderated comments is a fucking biohazard.

      • Commiunism@beehaw.org
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        23 hours ago

        If 21 % can’t read (are Illiterate) then it makes sense that 79 % can read (are literate). So yes, nationwide and in the US are the same thing.

        Seems like I can’t read myself, I thought both said illiterate. My mistake.

  • RustyEarthfire@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    50% of Americans read so poorly that they are unable to perform simple tasks such as reading prescription drug labels

    Maybe they could start them off with something easier, like Finnegans Wake

  • rekabis@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    The so explains the conservative ascendancy. More morons for their electorate who uncritically swallow everything spoon-fed to them, less for the progressives on the left.

    • _pi@lemmy.mlOP
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      2 days ago

      Yeah because it’s primary research and this is a huge unaddressed and uncared about problem that’s only growing. The last National Assessment for Adult Literacy took place in 2003.

      PIAAC (PROGRAM FOR THE INTERNATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF ADULT COMPETENCIES) which this is likely partially based on is typically who provides the survey data to these institutions.

      Barbara Bush Foundation is another source that deals specifically with this.

      A lot of this data is cobbled together because the government has practically defunded any studies of this issue. Literacy has effectively been taken for granted and hasn’t actually been upheld. Everyone in this space says more data is needed but isn’t optimistic that more data is going to paint a better picture of literacy (both in children and adults) in the US.

      • The Cuuuuube@beehaw.org
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        1 day ago

        the new, potentially illiterate, president is on the record saying his approach to dealing with numbers that seem bad is to stop gathering or reporting the numbers. his plan for getting the trains to run on time is to simply say that they are, whether or not that’s true

      • RustyEarthfire@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        If it was primary research then it should have methodology.

        But since the data is “cobbled together” from other sources, then it’s by definition secondary research (and should list those sources).