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University Students Are Unable to Read a Whole Book
Breitbart ^ | 17 April 2016 | Donna Rachel Edmunds

Posted on 04/18/2016 3:18:12 PM PDT by daisy12

University students are increasingly unable to read a whole book as they simply don’t have the concentration spans required, nor are they able to understand complex, nuanced arguments, academics have said.

Lecturers at leading British universities are having to actively encourage students to read beyond the set texts, and have noticed that students are increasingly unwilling to read whole texts. They say they believe internet culture is to blame, as young people nowadays are used to receiving arguments in the form of 800-1000 word articles. Anything beyond that, they say, is now proving too challenging.

“Incoming undergraduates have had their attention habits fashioned in a totally different world than that of those who are teaching them,” Tamson Pietsch, fellow in history at the University of Sydney told Times Higher Education (THE).

“This can lead to a clash of expectations and also of abilities on both sides of the equation. In many ways, incoming students absorb information quickly, they understand the power of images, and are adept at moving between different types of sources and platforms. They are perhaps less used to concentrating for long periods of time and working through the nuances of an argument developed over the course of many pages.”

Jenny Pickerill, professor in environmental geography at the University of Sheffield, said of full length books: “students struggle with them, saying the language or concepts are too hard.

(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: bookreading; concentration; education; highereducation; literacy; literature; trends
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To: daisy12

I routinely have 3 books going simultaneously. Right now I have 4 plus 2 war games going as I prepare to teach a Leningrad class in the fall and Russian front class in 2017.


81 posted on 04/18/2016 5:45:56 PM PDT by bravo whiskey (Never bring a liberal gun law to a gun fight,)
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To: daisy12

The Internet didn’t do anything. The Internet is a network. The cause is individuals not making the effort to read.


82 posted on 04/18/2016 5:47:03 PM PDT by I want the USA back (The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those who speak it. Orwell.)
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To: luckystarmom
Lots of majors do not need calculus, and I have an engineering degree.

Agreed, but if you can't do calculus, you need to be able to read a whole book and understand it. Someone with limited reading and limited math is not going to get much out of college.

83 posted on 04/18/2016 5:51:16 PM PDT by Pollster1 (Somebody who agrees with me 80% of the time is a friend and ally, not a 20% traitor. - Ronald Reagan)
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To: daisy12

I suggest they read 1/2 of a book. Wait several hours and read 1/2 of a book. Problem solved.


84 posted on 04/18/2016 5:55:36 PM PDT by hal ogen (First Amendment or Reeducation Camp?.)
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To: dr_lew
Just now I expected to find a passage peppered with such nomenclature. Maybe it's there somewhere,...

How about the very next paragraph?

From the eighty–ninth fish genus in Lacépède's system of classification, belonging to his second subclass of bony fish (characterized by gill covers and a bronchial membrane), I noted some scorpionfish whose heads are adorned with stings and which have only one dorsal fin; these animals are covered with small scales, or have none at all, depending on the subgenus to which they belong. The second subgenus gave us some Didactylus specimens three to four decimeters long, streaked with yellow, their heads having a phantasmagoric appearance. As for the first subgenus, it furnished several specimens of that bizarre fish aptly nicknamed "toadfish," whose big head is sometimes gouged with deep cavities, sometimes swollen with protuberances; bristling with stings and strewn with nodules, it sports hideously irregular horns; its body and tail are adorned with callosities; its stings can inflict dangerous injuries; it's repulsive and horrible.

85 posted on 04/18/2016 5:59:07 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: thoughtomator

I was reading Herman Kahn and Alexander Solzhenitsyn in early high school.


86 posted on 04/18/2016 6:02:17 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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To: Fred Hayek

Well, oh yeah ?

I’ve got one question for you:

WHAT ... is the sine of forty five degrees ? Exactly. You have five seconds.


87 posted on 04/18/2016 6:06:38 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: RetiredTexasVet

Reading is hard, and hard is necessary. My middle school RLA students have no stamina when it comes to reading. We’ve basically gone to skill training...can’t expect them to read an entire book.


88 posted on 04/18/2016 6:14:53 PM PDT by chalkfarmer
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To: luckystarmom
Lots of majors do not need calculus, and I have an engineering degree.

Qui genus humanum ingenio superavit

Can you read Latin?

89 posted on 04/18/2016 6:16:40 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: daisy12

They can call this news generation the “DUMBASSES”... which would be a followup to the “millennial” generation.


90 posted on 04/18/2016 6:16:50 PM PDT by VideoDoctor
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To: dr_lew

0.707


91 posted on 04/18/2016 6:17:10 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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To: thoughtomator

I read “Gone With the Wind” when I was 12.


92 posted on 04/18/2016 6:19:46 PM PDT by CaptainK (...please make it stop. Shake a can of pennies at it.)
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To: dr_lew

Sorry about the delay, I had to reboot my internet connection. Sine of 45 degrees (or pi/8 radians if you prefer) is one of those things a person memorized, along with the sine of 30 degrees and 60 degrees.


93 posted on 04/18/2016 6:20:46 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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To: KC Burke

Has anyone here run into educrats who viewed reading several years beyond grade level to be a “behavioral” problem?


94 posted on 04/18/2016 6:22:28 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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To: bravo whiskey

I am afraid I am the greatest villain in too many books at once. Between 20 and 40 is typical for me. They generally stay in the room assigned to them until finished.

I have books at my cabin that stay there, unfinished, until I return once or twice a year. Some books have taken me over five years to finish with some requiring multiple restarts. However, most of my reading is history or political theory. Burke is still Burke even if sat down for two months. Waterloo still looms no matter where you are 200 years ago so it is easy to rejoin the narrative for me.

It is how I have read due to business travel. The books in the trunk or in the suitcase, don’t get unpacked, only the dirty clothes. The books stay there two to four days until I departed again.

My wife reads a single book, regardless of lack of appeal, from start to finish and then pencil dates the front fly page. Only when done does she start another other than cookbooks or reference works.


95 posted on 04/18/2016 6:31:16 PM PDT by KC Burke (Consider all of my posts as first drafts. (Apologies to L. Niven))
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To: Fred Hayek

Hasn’t happened yet. If my grand daughter was confronted by such a thing, my science teacher son would dismember the cretan after demolishing his arguments with hammer and tong.


96 posted on 04/18/2016 6:33:15 PM PDT by KC Burke (Consider all of my posts as first drafts. (Apologies to L. Niven))
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To: Fred Hayek

It is a behavioural problem. My oldest far frequently stay up far too late reading when they ought to be sleeping.


97 posted on 04/18/2016 6:34:39 PM PDT by Hieronymus ( (It is terrible to contemplate how few politicians are hanged. --G. K. Chesterton))
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To: MarkL

The young fellow was raised on Klingon. It is interesting to see him set aside a lot of science fandom for more mature interests. Introduced early and ready to set it aside early.


98 posted on 04/18/2016 6:39:13 PM PDT by KC Burke (Consider all of my posts as first drafts. (Apologies to L. Niven))
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To: GenXteacher
I assigned “The Oregon Trail” by Francis Parkman to some of my students. They asked me if they could just play the game and write a report about that instead.....

Hoot!

99 posted on 04/18/2016 6:45:39 PM PDT by Oatka (Beware of an old man in a profession where men usually die young.)
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To: dr_lew

Nope, but my daughter can.

She had to take foreign language for high school, and she has a brain injury that caused terrible speech problems. The counselor recommended Latin. My daughter loved it, and got awards for it. She took 3 years in high school. She’s at community college right now, and she’s hoping to transfer to a 4 year that has Latin.


100 posted on 04/18/2016 6:46:56 PM PDT by luckystarmom
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