illiteracy inability to meet a certain minimum criterion of reading and writing skill.
Definition of Illiteracy
The exact nature of the criterion varies, so that illiteracy must be defined in each case before the term can be used in a meaningful way. In 1930 the U.S. Bureau of the Census defined as illiterate any person over ten years of age who was unable to read and write in any language. By the next census (1940), however, the concept of "functional" illiteracy was adopted, and any person with less than five years of schooling was considered functionally illiterate, or unable to engage in social activities in which literacy is assumed.
Since that time, the concept of functional illiteracy has grown in popularity among American educators, but the standards of definition have changed with the increasing complexity of most social activities. Thus, by 1970, the U.S. Office of Education considered at least six years of schooling (and sometimes as many as eight) to be the minimum criterion for functional literacy. In 1990 over 5% of the adult population living in the United States did not meet that criterion.
World Illiteracy Rates
The United Nations, which defines illiteracy as the inability to read and write a simple message in any language, has conducted a number of surveys on world illiteracy. In the first survey (1950, pub. 1957) at least 44% of the world's population were found to be illiterate. A 1978 study showed the rate to have dropped to 32.5%, by 1990 illiteracy worldwide had dropped to about 27%, and by 1998 to 16%. However, a study by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) published in 1998 predicted that the world illiteracy rate would increase in the 21st cent. because only a quarter of the world's children were in school by the end of the 20th cent. The highest illiteracy rates were found in the less developed nations of Africa, Asia, and South America; the lowest in Australia, Japan, North Korea, and the more technologically advanced nations of Europe and North America. Using the UN definition of illiteracy, the United States and Canada have an overall illiteracy rate of about 1%. In certain disadvantaged areas, however, such as the rural South in the United States, the illiteracy rate is much higher.
Combating Illiteracy
Direct attacks on illiteracy take two main forms: adult education and the establishment of public schools with compulsory attendance for children. In the United States, several federal programs have been instituted to combat adult illiteracy; universal public education has almost eliminated illiteracy among the young. Soldiers have been used effectively in Turkey and Mexico as instructors for the general populace.
History
Throughout most of history most people have been illiterate. In feudal society, for example, the ability to read and write was of value only to the clergy and aristocracy. The first known reference to "literate laymen" did not appear until the end of the 14th cent. Illiteracy was not seen as a problem until after the invention of printing in the 15th cent. The first significant decline in illiteracy came with the Reformation, when translation of the Bible into the vernacular became widespread and Protestant converts were taught to read it. Revolutionary political movements from the 18th to the 20th cent. generally included an attack on illiteracy as one of their goals, with the former Soviet Union, China, and Cuba being among the most successful in the 20th cent.
Bibliography
See C. Jeffries, Illiteracy: A World Problem (1967); F. Laubach, Forty Years with the Silent Billion (1970); H. Graff, The Literacy Myth (1979) and The Legacies of Literacy (1987).
Author not available, ILLITERACY.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
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Illiteracy: who pays when Johnny can't read? (effect on magazine profitability) (includes related articles)
Folio: the Magazine for Magazine Management; 4/1/1989; Jaben, Jan; 2612 words;
... December/January cover story focused on illiteracy. It is a problem that will creep into ... made only cursory stabs at fighting illiteracy. About three years ago, the Magazine ... which asked for donations to fight illiteracy, ran in about 80 percent of member ... continue to write articles about the ...
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THE PRICE WE PAY FOR ILLITERACY:RICHARD C. WADE
Congressional Testimony; 12/11/1998; 3052 words;
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... 2005 despite its efforts to eradicate illiteracy, a senior official has said. Though ... million, said Gao Xuegui, director of the illiteracy eradication office of the basic education ... many people who had come out of the illiteracy trap forgot what they learnt. "The situation ...
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Illiteracy puts future of Illinois in jeopardy
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Illiteracy: hidden plague; new demands on workers bare problem.
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Publishers fighting illiteracy; Time Inc. takes lead in battling a projected $225 billion problem. (Includes related article)
Folio: the Magazine for Magazine Management; 10/1/1988; Garry, Michael; 700 words;
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A modern workplace in the face of an age-old problem: illiteracy.
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... functionally illiterate workforce. Functional illiteracy is the inability to use reading, writing and ... prison system have not completed high school. Illiteracy is a problem that affects the entire nation ... America's businesses. Why? It is estimated that illiteracy costs American businesses $20 billion ...
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The crusade against illiteracy. (Barbara Bush and the national literacy movement; includes related article on literacy in Japan)
Saturday Evening Post; 12/1/1988; Harr, John Ensor; 2825 words;
... that one pervasive problem in America-illiteracy-relates fundamentally to many other social ills. Illiteracy is not only a tragedy for those afflicted ... economic troubles in general. Fighting illiteracy would help alleviate these other problems as well. At the time, illiteracy was still hidden in ...
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