| Carnegie Corporation of New York | Print page | Mail page| High-bandwidth page |
| Core Adolescent Reading Next:
Writing Next: Effective Strategies to Improve Writing of Adolescents in Middle and High Schools A
Meta-Analysis of Writing Instruction for Adolescent Students Double the Work: Challenges and Solutions to Acquiring Language and Academic Literacy for Adolescent English Language Learners Achieving
State and National Literacy Goals, A Long Uphill Road Reading
to Achieve: A Governors Guide to Adolescent Literacy.
National Governors Association Center for Best Practices Adolescent Literacy and the Achievement Gap: What Do We Know and Where Do We Go From Here? Carnegie Corporation of New York Adolescent Literacy Funders Meeting Report |
The State of Adolescent
Literacy Today Why Adolescent Literacy Matters
Thirty five years later, alarmed that the answer to Pifers questions was still a resounding not yet, Carnegie Corporation President Vartan Gregorian promised that Carnegie Corporation will do what it takes to ensure that the appalling [dropout] rate of 3,000 a day quickly becomes one of those shameful memories in American history that we are all eager to forget. What does Americas magnificent legacy of free, universal public elementary and secondary education mean if we fail to provide every American child with the reading and writing skills they need to succeed in higher education, to become productive citizens in the workplace and, dare I say it to fulfill their own happiness?3 In the past decades, significant progress has been made in literacy education for students in kindergarten through third grade, but there has been notably less importance placed on, and consequently less progress and investment made in, literacy education for older students. In their 2004 report to the Carnegie Corporation of New York, Reading Next: A Vision for Action and Research in Middle and High School Literacy, Harvard Graduate School of Education professors Gina Biancarosa and Dr. Catherine Snow write that a focus on early literacy training alone cannot prepare students for the demands of higher education: It is clear that getting third graders to read at grade level is an important and challenging task, and one that needs ongoing attention from researchers, teacher educators, teachers, and parents. But many excellent third-grade readers will falter or fail in later-grade academic tasks if the teaching of reading is neglected in the middle and secondary grades.4In Standards for Middle and High School Literacy Coaches, a 2006 report funded by Carnegie Corporations Advancing Literacy program, researchers explain why elementary literacy is not sufficient preparation for todays job market: In past years, literacy was limited to the ability to read and understand a simple document and write ones name on a contract. Literacy demands in todays workplace have accelerated. High school graduates are required to interpret a wide range of reference materials: journal articles, memoranda, and other documents that may contain technical information, including intricate charts and graphs. Increasingly, they are expected to judge the credibility of sources, evaluate arguments, develop and defend their own conclusions, and convey complex information in ways that will either advance scholarship in a discipline or contribute to workplace productivity- skills well beyond the reach of poor readers.5In other words, poor literacy among adolescents is in no way an isolated, academic problem, but rather one that will affects young people and society as a whole for years to come. Small wonder then that the National Governors Association has made this a priority issue; its Center for Best Practices published Reading to Achieve: A Governors Guide to Literacy, which explores the effects of widespread adolescent illiteracy on the national economy: Neglecting students literacy has serious economic consequences for individuals and states. Today, almost 40 percent of high school graduates lack the reading and writing skills that employers seek, and almost a third of high school graduates who enroll in college require remediation. Deficits in basic skills cost the nations businesses, universities, and under-prepared high school graduates as much as $16 billion annually in lost productivity and remedial costs.6The Alliance for Excellent Education, a key partner in the Corporations efforts, lists the following statistics on adolescent literacy, all of which illustrate the severity and danger of the current crisis:
Next: Which Adolescents Are Most At Risk? |
|||||||||
| |
||||||||||