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Start Early, Finish Strong, a Department
of Education publication, emphasizes the importance of
a child’s interaction with his/her environment
rather than intelligence as a key factor in determining
the ease at which a child will learn to read. The
publication cites a National Research Council report
which states, “Just as a child develops language
skills long before being able to speak, the child also
develops literacy skills long before being able to read.”
- In a 1988 study, Juel found “… that 88%
of children who have difficulty reading at the end of first
grade display similar difficulties at the end of fourth grade.”
- Researchers at Yale discovered a similar trend. In
their 1997 study “… 75% of students who are
poor readers in the third grade will remain poor readers
in high school.”
- Many states plan the number of jail
cells they will need in the future by the number of children
not reading on grade level by grade 3.
- The average
kindergarten student has seen more than 5,000 hours of
television, having spent more time in front of the TV than
it takes to earn a bachelor’s degree (US Department
of Education)
- 44% of all American adults do not read one book
in the course of a year (US Department of Education)
- 55%
of all children in poverty live in single-parent households
headed by women, and 40%of all single mothers have an 8th
grade education or less (Lanbach Literacy)
- Children develop
much of their capacity to learn in the first three years
of life, when their brain grows to 90% of their eventual
adult weight. (1998 Karoly study)
- The key is to start at
birth. To immerse a child
in a literacy environment can be a stronger predictor of
literacy and academic achievement than family income. The
more words a child hears, the larger the child’s vocabulary
and the larger the child’s vocabulary, the more likely
the child will be a proficient reader. However, in
order to read with a child, books must be in the home. In
a 1991 study by Needlman, parents given books by their
doctor were four times more likely to read to their children. This
rate increased to eight times more likely with lower income
parents. (1991 Needlman study)
- Disadvantaged students
in the first grade have a vocabulary that is approximately
half that of an advantaged student (2,900 and 5,800 respectively). Graves,
1986 / White, Graves & Slater, 1990
- It is estimated
that more than $2 billion is spent each year on students
who repeat a grade because they have reading problems. U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services
- Since 1983, more
than 10 million Americans reached the 12th grade without
having learned to read at a basic level. In the same period,
more than 6 million Americans dropped out of high school
altogether. A Nation Still
at Risk, U.S. Department of Education, 1999
- Over one million
children drop out of school each year, costing the nation
over $240 billion in lost earnings, forgone tax revenues,
and expenditures for social services. McQuillan,
1998
- 46% of American adults cannot understand the label on
their prescription medicine. Journal
of American Medical Association
- Forty-four percent of American
4th grade students cannot read fluently, even when they
read grade-level stories aloud under supportive testing
conditions. National Assessment
of Educational Progress (NAEP) Pinnell et al., 1995
- In 1999,
only 53 percent of children aged 3 to 5 were read to daily
by a family member. Children in families with incomes below
the poverty line are less likely to be read aloud to everyday
than are children in families with incomes at or above
the poverty line. The National Center for Education
Statistics, NCES Fast Facts, Family Reading
- 50 percent of
American adults are unable to read an eighth grade level
book. Jonathan Kozol, Illiterate America
- It is estimated
that the cost of illiteracy to business and the taxpayer
is $20 billion per year. United Way,
Illiteracy: A National Crisis"
- More than three out of
four of those on welfare, 85% of unwed mothers and 68%
of those arrested are illiterate. About three in five of
America's prison inmates are illiterate. Washington
Literacy Council
- Approximately 50 percent of the nation's
unemployed youth age 16-21 are functional illiterate, with
virtually no prospects of obtaining good jobs. U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services
- 60 percent of America's
prison inmates are illiterate and 85% of all juvenile offenders
have reading problems. U.S.
Department of Education
- The United States has the largest
per-capita prison population in the world . “One
in 100: Behind Bars in America 2008,” a study by
the PEW Center on the States
- More than 20 percent of adults
read at or below a fifth-grade level - far below the level
needed to earn a living wage. National
Institute for Literacy, Fast Facts on Literacy, 2001
- Children
who have not developed some basic literacy skills by the
time they enter school are 3 - 4 times more likely to drop
out in later years. National Adult Literacy
Survey, (1002) NCES, U.S. Department of Education
- A single
high school dropout costs the nation approximately $260,000
in lost earnings, taxes, and productivity.
- Nearly half of
America's adults are poor readers, or "functionally
illiterate." They can't carry out simply tasks like
balancing check books, reading drug labels or writing essays
for a job National Adult Literacy Survery of 1993
- 21
million Americans can't read at all, 45 million are marginally
illiterate and one-fifth of high school graduates can't
read their diplomas. Department of Justice, 1993
- According
to the 2003 National Assessment of Educational Progress
(NAEP), 37 percent of fourth graders and 26 percent of
eighth graders cannot read at the basic level; and on the
2002 NAEP 26 percent of twelfth graders cannot read at
the basic level. That is, when reading grade appropriate
text these students cannot extract the general meaning or
make obvious connections between the text and their own experiences
or make simple inferences from the text. In other words,
they cannot understand what they have read. National
Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)
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