Monday, January 12, 2026

An illiterate generation?

Two related news stories caught my attention this week. One was entitled "They Can't Read: [Hoover Institution Senior Fellow} Victor Davis Hanson Shares Horror Stories That Drove Him Out Of University." The other piece is called "Gen Z are arriving to college unable to even read a sentence – professors warn it could lead to a generation of anxious and lonely graduates."

As the titles imply, there are entire cohorts of young people emerging from public education functionally illiterate. The latter article begins: "As Gen Z ditch books at record levels, students are arriving to classrooms unable to complete assigned reading on par with previous expectations. It's leaving colleges no choice but to lower their expectations. One shocked professor has described young adults showing up to class, unable to read a single sentence."

The crisis of literacy goes back decades, arguably generations. "Why Johnny Can't Read" was first published in 1955 and drew national attention to the failures of the "look-say" method of teaching (as opposed to phonics) that signaled the beginning of the end for literacy.

We are so obsessed with books in our family that this hits home ... hard.

We've also had lively discussions in our household about the issue. Is reading even "necessary" in our modern society? Clearly illiteracy isn't an insuperable handicap for everyone. History is rife with brilliant people who succeeded despite their inability to read. Today's younger generations are clearly succeeding even though reading is no longer a priority.

I guess what I find distressing is our modern culture seems to actively cultivate functional illiteracy. Children are surrounded by screens instead of books. They're encouraged to watch videos about something rather than reading about it. Parents don't model reading; they model viewing. Artificial intelligence is poised to take the need to read away from us. Children no longer grow up with the expectation that reading is not only educational, but fun. University professors are reaping the rewards of this change in attitude and ability.

Recently a reader related a frustrating experience with an AI bot and asked rhetorically, "You'll do better finding your answers in a book somewhere. What will we do when books are gone?"

An excellent question. We're on a personal mission in our family not to let that happen. Let's hope future generations are able to overcome their illiteracy.

4 comments:

  1. This country is on a totally doomed track as you know, and it has come from withing by infiltrators. I fisrt noticed the decline in youth morality when years ago I had to go to my kids high school to pick one of them up for a dentist appointment and I was in complete SHOCK when i was caught in a hallway with the kids changing classrooms, they were all using horrid foul language, that was not allowed when I was in school and I even heard a couple of teachers using it as well. I deemed that the beginning of the end for our kids. It has done nothing gotten worse as you know.

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  2. This is all in keeping with the "Keep them stoned, stupid, and entertained" mechanism being employed by "The Powers That Be" in our society now; a modern take on "Bread and Circuses," and with the same goal in mind! Indeed, many kids can't even tell time on an "analog" clock! Ignorant and uneducated people are easy to steer. God, help us all... Please...

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  3. When I was in high school I started to read the whole library. I never completed the task but got about 50% done before I graduated. Reading is such fun!

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  4. I love to read! I can't imagine how awful life would be if I couldn't read. In our society there is no excuse for illteracy.

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