As technology grow and increasingly gets bigger and and better people are finding new ways to harness that information and use it to their advantage and learn from it. Clive Thompson suggests that technology is even helping literacy and this young generation. He states that “Young people write far more than any generation before them”(Source 7). You can thank Twitter and Facebook for the mass amount of posts and writing from teens. Thompson followingly says that “students were remarkably adept at what rhetoricians call kairos - addressing their audience and adapting their tone and technique to best get their point across.(Source 7)
“Twilight of the Books” By Caleb Crain & “Reading for Pleasure is in Painful Decline” By Stephen L. Carter. In this essay, I will be Supporting my Claim on the best and the more intelligently Written Passage on Readers of America. Both Texts support the claim of the decrease in readers in America along with Reasoning’s as to why this may be the start to something hazardous to our society.
Moreover, the study proved that the amount of people reading has declined in our world today. It also proved what age the majority of people not reading are.
Dana Gioia talks about the decline of reading in America in her passage. She argues that it is having many negative effects on young Americans. The author uses many different tools to persuade the reader and make an argument. One of the tools she uses the most is facts. Dana uses facts to help strengthen her point.
The proposal that adolescents’ interest in literature has diminish in America is clearly voiced by Dana Gioia, in the article, “Why Literature Matters”. Although, Gioia used different methods to persuade his readers, one way he tried to persuade is by indicating the disadvantages of not reading in society today. One of the many disadvantages Gioia told to persuade his readers was through the effects it had on a child’s development, with its mind. A quote from the article, stated, “... A time of crucial intellectual and emotional development bypass the joys and challenges of literature is a troubling trend”.
Amy Goldwasser claims reading and writing online to be aesthetically and intellectually equivalent to the more traditional methods, in her persuasive essay, “What’s the matter with kids today?”. She is absolutely correct. Reading and writing online volutarily shows the same quantity as previous nonelectronic modes, uses the same thought process and problem solving, and reveals a less of importance for knowledge of fun facts in order to concentrate on analyzation. When compared to generations prior, this next generation is more inclined to write about themselves without pressure from others. They share key moments of their lives and display them over social media.
People are getting used to reading online and now expect to have everything introduced as a short analysis. In the excerpt essay, according to Nicholas Carr, using the internet for reading and researching may affect
(Rich, Literacy Debate, The New York Times). Reading books seems to be a thing of the past, thus thrusting online reading into the future and that is not necessarily a bad thing. I do research every day and, quite frankly, about ninety percent (90%) of the things
The internet has been very beneficial but has taken some incredibly crucial skills. For instance a friend of Carr’s was a lit major and he inctilby found himself in the same problems as Carr the friend saw that “the more they used the web, the more they fight to stay focused on a piece of text”(5). A person who used to be a “Various Reader” lost the ability to read, it's just crazy to see how much the internet can affect you. I mean for god sakes if person who dedicated his life to literature lost the ability to read something then you can truly see how the internet has affected us. Sadly I must admit i have the same problems as Carr's friend and Carr i too have the lost the ability to read and even though i am no lit major i spent years learning not only to read but to read at a high level and now i have lost that.
The one issue that I see with the Federalist Papers that are affecting the United States today are the Checks and Balances. James Madison explains and defends the system. The delegates tried to make sure that they could limit the power of the three branch of government. To make sure that no branch became to powerful than the other.
Being a reader, I value the benefits of both print and electronic texts. The physical experience of holding a print book provides a level of comfort and focus that is hard to beat, but electronic texts offer convenience, accessibility, and portability. Furthermore, electronic texts allow for text-to-audio conversion, which enables me to keep up with my reading while on the go. My preference for either type of text does not disadvantage my ability to engage critically with academic texts. Rather, it is my reading practices and approach to the material that determines the amount of my engagement in a text.
One of the topics Nicholas Carr brings up is the downfall of books. Back then, when there wasn't internet and all the technology we have today, people were able to focus and read a book cover to cover. Now that there’s internet in our lives it is harder for people to stay focused and have the patience to read the book cover to cover when they know that they have the internet to their disposal. I disagree with Nicholas Carr and think that internet is good because it is very helpful in our everyday lives.
According to this statement the readers can conclude that the main reason for reading concentration disturbance is the internet. In terms of the scientific research, the article provides the research by the British Library and U.K educational consortium which states “They found that people using the sites exhibited ‘a form of skimming activity,’ hopping from one source to another rarely returning to any source they’d already visitied” (Carr, 2008). From this statement we can understand that there are numbers of attractive information piled on one page, people have a hard time choosing which one to read, resulting them to skim and jump to one another. From these couple examples, it can be concluded that the author of this essay is strongly attempting to convince the readers in his idea of internet disturbing people’s concentration. However, the essay itself is extremely biased, because of the fact that there is no information about benefits of using the internet and reading online.
In “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Readers” by Kavitha Rao, she express her opinion on the topic that the current generation is not reading for fun. She mentions several experience she had with other people, that don 't see the benefit in reading for fun. She says that since people aren 't reading more leisure anymore they 're becoming less creative, inarticulate, have poor communication skills and low confidence, which is caused by parents forcing their kids to read, and the education system need to have students memorize textbooks and nothing else. After reading this article I find myself disagreeing with Rao on several points she made, I don’t believe the modern attitude towards reading is causing people to be self absorbed and unimaginative, she also claims that book clubs don 't encourage reading for fun, parents are forcing their children to read boring books which turned them away from reading and that the educational system is to blame for college students for being inarticulate.
Everyone knows that reading is important, but have you ever asked yourself why is that so? Reading is one of the most beneficial and practical activities that a human being can do. Unfortunately it is a disappointment that people these days read less. As we know, books were the main source of entertainment centuries ago, but with the widespread of technological advances such as the cinema, television, internet, among others, many people left their books on the bookshelf. The purpose of this speech is to present the benefits and the importance of reading.