Reading is power @ Therefore, there's every reason to exercise our basic right
The headline of a recent news report suggests that most
14- to 18 year-olds in rural areas can read only Class 2-level textbooks. This
is deduced from the latest Annual State of Education Report (ASER) released by
the NGO Pratham, and based on a survey conducted in 26 rural districts across
24 States. It flies in the face of a constitutional right to education, and
various government and non-government interventions to improve the system and
extend its qualitative reach. The report states that about 25 per cent of those
surveyed could not read basic texts in their own language, and more than half
struggled with division.
But we know that numbers don’t reveal the whole story. We
know, for instance, that supposedly ‘good’ exam results hide the reality that
reading literacy remains largely dismal. Recognising the problem and
acknowledging the need to deal with it, there’s been a scramble by government
and non-government agencies over the last 20 years at least, to produce books
in different languages for children at the primary level.
There are economic, social, political, and health and
ability-related reasons for the lacunae. One major reason is an education
system struggling to cater for a diverse and continuously evolving population.
The deficit is evident at all academic levels and in workplaces across sectors.
A majority of those who go abroad to study have a hard
time trying to develop requisite levels of comprehension and articulation.
Indeed, it could be said that one of the direct consequences of poor reading
skills is rote learning, and, therefore, no learning.
There’s no mathematical formula to solve this problem
except reading and more reading, with or without help. Nor is it confined only
to the rural areas. While it’s true that reading levels depend upon
individuals, and all levels should be acceptable, there can be no doubt about
its capacity to empower. Indians are a naturally multilingual people; it’s a
shame not to use this magnificent tool to help ourselves.
Sandhya Rao Editorial Consultant
Source | Business Line | 19th January 2018
Regards
Prof. Pralhad Jadhav
Master of Library &
Information Science (NET Qualified)
Senior Manager @ Knowledge
Repository
Khaitan & Co
Twitter Handle | @Pralhad161978
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