黑料大事

Current Students:
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Current Students:
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Book Love

 

鈥淢iss, why you makin鈥 us read this old book? I haven鈥檛 read a book since elementary school!鈥 鈥淢iss! Why do we have to read EVERY DAY?!鈥 My inner sigh is profound. Where did we go wrong? When did reading books become a chore?

In my 26 years as an educator, I inevitably have students who share this sentiment in some form or fashion every single year. They wear it proudly as if it is a badge of honor. I often respond with, 鈥淭his is NOT something to be proud of.鈥 The respective students often shrug and then look to their peers for affirmation. I鈥檝e even had students high-five one another as if they just scored the winning touchdown.

I share a personal story of how my political science instructor my first semester in college assigned 400 pages on a Tuesday to be discussed on a Thursday. I explain that I was able to complete this task because I am a voracious reader. In my experience, I am seeing young people unable to complete 10 pages in 10-15 minutes on a non-academic book they selected to read.

There is research that shows that teens are reading less. An article from the American Psychological Association states that, 鈥溾ess than 20% of teens report reading a book, magazine, or newspaper daily for pleasure, while more than 80 percent say they use social media every day鈥︹ As an English teacher and a lover of reading everything, this is alarming. The article points out that, 鈥渙ur young people aren鈥檛 less intelligent, but they do have less experience focusing for longer periods of time and reading long-form text. Being able to read long-form text is crucial for understanding complex issues and developing critical thinking skills鈥︹

Reading is a muscle. It must be exercised daily. Growing up, my father, a migrant worker to a decorated Vietnam Vet to a retired US Army SSGT, required that my siblings and I read at least 30 minutes a day, regardless of if we had homework or not. We could read any genre, as long as there were more words than pictures. We all now have advanced degrees. I don鈥檛 have empirical evidence to prove that this practice had any effect on our academic success, but I firmly believe that it played a huge role.

Reading, even fiction, helps build vocabulary and exposes readers to correct grammar. In elementary school, I was a huge James Bond fan. Not the movies, the books. I read Ian Fleming daily. Since he was a British author, I was exposed to words not common in the American vernacular. A book report assignment put me in hot water. She was certain that I had plagiarized as I used the term, 鈥榩erambulator.鈥 She pulled me to her desk to scold me and asked me what a perambulator was. In my naivete, I thought she didn鈥檛 know. Shocked, I whispered, 鈥淢iss, it means a baby carriage,鈥 as I didn鈥檛 want to embarrass her in class. My parents had already been contacted by the school as to my impending punishment, and when she called them back to apologize my dad explained his policy. Needless to say, I didn鈥檛 get in trouble.

Help your children put the phone or tablet down. Turn the Wi-Fi off and go old school. Have everyone in the family pick up a book and read for twenty minutes. Get lost in a story. In my opinion, it will help your child鈥檚 future academic success.

Rebecca Orona

English Teacher & Book Lover

Mauler Pattern Thin
Mauler Pattern Thin