Archives For reading

The timing on this Chronicle of Higher Education post by Naomi S. Baron professor of linguistics and executive director of the Center for Teaching, Research & Learning at American University, could not have been more fortuitous. It is fortuitous in two ways. First, I have been reflecting on the importance of creating learning environments that help foster intrinsic motivation and provide the necessary context and significance for learning. And second, I have been lamenting receiving an exceptional book as a gift in print format because I am not able to add virtual highlights and notes which I use extensively in all the books that I read using an e-reader.

I will deal with the second point first. In the past I had extensively used adhesive book tabs, notes in the margins and highlights to mark and identify important passages and as result some of my most heavily used books are messy and cluttered.
Books & Adhesive Tabs
While the tabs were intended to help me find the important thoughts and ideas in the books they really didn’t help because the more tabs you add the more difficult it becomes to find what you are looking for. In addition, as you can see from the picture above, the tabs get curled and mangled the more you use the book. Virtual highlighting and note placement not only eliminates this problem you can also search the entire book, notes or your highlights looking for the that key term or passage. In addition, many e-readers enable you to export all your highlights and notes to a text file which allow you to work directly with the most important sections of the text.

The final frustration with receiving a print based book is that I no longer carry any of these adhesive tabs in my briefcase or have any on hand in my office so I am not able to mark the important sections of the book. I will just have to purchase an electronic copy of this book I received as as gift.

While this convenience aspect of using an e-reader is important it may not be as important as my first point–reflecting on the importance of creating learning environments that help foster intrinsic motivation and provide the necessary context and significance for learning. Professor Baron argues that “deep reading” is not possible on an a digital screen because digital reading encourages distraction because most people have the tendency to engage in some form of multitasking. She also points to survey results that reveal that some students still view reading in print as “real reading” and that reading in print forces a student to read more slowly and carefully. Baron also points to anecdotal evidence of students asking for shorter version of the text, article or other form of summary like SparkNotes because they can’t be bothered to read the full text.

In the prelude to the actual statement of her argument, Baron also laments that students just don’t have the motivation to read deeply. I would argue that this is the actual problem and digital text made available on an phone, tablet, or other digital devices simply escalate the tendency to look to something more interesting or meaningful. I recall having to slog through too many devastatingly dry, boring and irrelevant books in my many years as student and even though I didn’t have access to the books in a digital form I still found many ways to distract myself from the mind-numbing reading of material that was given to me without any context or obvious purpose. OK, the purpose was to know the material for the test–unfortunately that was and is still not enough for most students.

The challenge that we have as educators is to create a learning environment where students understand and appreciate that they can learn so much from the work of others. The “deep reading” that Professor Baron argues is so important to the humanities only happens with the right motivation. The format of the material is really irrelevant. If learner understands why the material is important, where it fits in their life’s journey and how it will help them to become who they wish to become the deep reading, and I would argue deep learner, will happen using text or other materials in any format.

For the past couple of weeks the post by Allison M. Vaillancourt, the vice president for institutional effectiveness and human resources at the University of Arizona, regarding academic disdain for the popular press or books that are on best sellers lists has been on my mind. Vaillancourt makes the argument that we (academics) should “lighten up” and accept the fact that

the ability to make connections using elements of popular culture can help us be more relevant to those who don’t live in our world.

While I appreciated Vailliancourt’s admonishment to the academy to accept non traditional academic writing as a source of useful information, the post also stirred up a long lasting frustration I have with the academy regarding what is deemed to be worth-while reading. The response of “my grade 7 math textbook” to a radio talk show text in survey asking what is the last book you have read was the final push I needed to finally vent my angst. Too many people do not read. Academic scorn toward popular press or best sellers contributes to this problem.

I was first exposed to the scorn that so many academics have toward popular books when I was a undergraduate student. I have always been a voracious reader and heading back to school in my 30’s was a wonderful opportunity to immerse myself in an environment where reading and writing and the discussion of what one was reading would be the central focus–or so I thought. I quickly found that reading and discussion were not the primary focus… it was taking notes and regurgitating empty information on exams. To be fair to a some of my English, Religion and Philosophy professors there were a few classes where reading was intriguing and the discussions were genuine but for the most part my undergraduate studies were simply a process of what I refer to as recipe and regurgitation. I also quickly learned that most of my student peers did not do the required readings but relied on lecture notes to get by, so the lively discussion that I sought didn’t happen in the classrooms or in the hallways. I also quickly learned that professors were not very comfortable being challenged with students who not only read all the required and supporting material but who could approach the material from a different perspective or who pulled in references from alternative sources. Too many professors just wanted to lecture, test and be left alone.

Fortunately, there were are few who were willing to enter into challenging and interesting debates but even a few of these academics were not willing to, or were hesitant to engage in, discussions on popular books that were on New York Times best seller lists. I am still bothered that I was not able to find any professors who were willing to enter into a debate or discussion on Allan Bloom’s book, The Closing of the American Mind. Bloom’s main argument was that the “great books” of Western thought have been devalued as a source of wisdom and students were no longer being exposed to this level of thinking. Back then I found the paradox of these professors scorning a best selling book that itself scorned popular pop culture and stressed a return to the Great Books frustrating, but today I realize just how harmful this scorn can be.

This was my first experience with academic scorn or arrogance toward popular books and, unfortunately, it would not be my last. I found that many of my student peers were put off by this elitist attitude. Too much of this attitude also finds its way into Schools of Education and ultimately the K-12 system. Anything that discourages reading is harmful not just to individuals but to society as a whole. The Pulitzer prize winning author Ray Bradbury argued:

“You don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.”

Granted, Bradbury was not an academic and was only a fantasy, science fiction, horror and mystery fiction writer and since so many of his works were adapted into comic books, television shows and films perhaps my academic peers can ignore his argument. However, they will have to acknowledge an academic among academics. Robertson Davies the Canadian novelist, playwright, critic, journalist, professor and the founding Master of Massey College at the University of Toronto stated:

The great book for you is the book that has the most to say to you at the moment when you are reading. I do not mean the book that is most instructive, but the book that feeds your spirit. And that depends on your age, your experience, your psychological and spiritual need.

The notion of a book feeding one’s spirit is not only refreshing it is good. Similarly the notion that any book that can do this a great book is not only refreshing it is should be instructive. Books should not be scorned because they do not fit into the required academic model.

To be fair to my peers in the Academy most professors are well intentioned. Many see the consumption of pop culture through popular press, books, television and now through youtube and other media as the primary contributor to the decline in reading. Dr. Mark Bauerlein, English professor at Emory University and the author of the book, The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don’t Trust Anyone Under 30), is a prime example of a well meaning academic who misses the point when it comes to accounting for the decline in reading. Bauerlein’s central argument is that our culture’s dependence on the screen, first the TV and now media through the internet, has not only contributed to a decline in reading but also a decline in reading ability because screen media:

minimizes verbal intelligence, providing too little stimulation for it and intense long term immersion in it stultifies the verbal skills of viewers and disqualifies them from most every academic and professional labor.

While Bauerlein’s point that a diet of only screen consumption will reduce or limit a person’s vocabulary is valid it is only an issue if the screen is the only source of information for an individual. Rather than blame media altogether, I would suggest that we also look at the accessibility of print in which Mr. Bauerlein refers. What I mean by accessibility is how engaging is the print or more specifically how easy is the print to read and understand. Bauerlein’s book is also a very good example of high brow academic writing that is inaccessible to most people. I have read thousands of books, and usually read one to more books a week as well as hundreds of blog posts and articles, I have a Ph.D. and a healthy vocabulary but I still found Bauerlein’s book very difficult to read — by far one of the most difficult books I have read in the past few years. Why? I spent so much time looking up words in dictionary.com and re-reading sections of text to fully understand the content that I could never develop any flow in my reading. In addition, I couldn’t get a clear understanding of his main point until 130 pages into the book when he finally stated why this generation is the dumbest generation (lower exposure to rare vocabulary on screens than in print). I struggled through the remaining hundred or more pages simply to see if he hand another point. Dr. Bauerlein truly has an amazing vocabulary which is much higher than mine and most other people I know and is no doubt a brilliant man, but his writing and vocabulary are not very accessible. I took the time to review some of the articles that he published and confirmed that he is very consistent in his writing and equally inaccessible. His book didn’t say very much to me and it didn’t feed my spirit because it was so difficult to read. I wanted to stop reading it after just a few paragraphs.

I understand why many people do not like reading especially if they have had to curl up with a good dictionary when trying to struggle through a highly acclaimed academic text. I also understand why people are discouraged to read when some academics are so quick to roll their eyes and dismiss anything popular as“psychobabble” and “common sense”. Like Vailliancourt, I appreciate familiarity with contemporary thinking and want to be in the know when someone refers to:

super connectors” (Malcolm Gladwell’s The Tipping Point), “flying too low” (Seth Godin’s The Icarus Deception), “right people on the bus, wrong people off the bus” (Jim Collins’s Good to Great), or the importance of “purpose, mastery, and autonomy” (Daniel Pink’s Drive).

I have read (or in the process of reading) all these contemporary best sellers and have to acknowledge that I learned more about psychology and motivation from Daniel Pink’s book, Drive, than I did in all my psychology classes (my Ph.D. is in Educational Psychology). Similarly, I gleaned more from Collin’s book, Good to Great, then I have more traditional academic business texts.

To dismiss these types of books because they are popular and accessible is not only arrogant, it is ignorant and I am embarrassed for my academic peers who hold this lofty attitude. Furthermore, it is our responsibility as highly educated members of society to promote reading of all sorts of diverse material. A high brow attitude and scorn for certain types of books or material doesn’t help. And as we all know…If you are not part of the solution you are part of the problem.

R. David Lankes, director of the Information Institute of Syracuse, NY, laments over the fact that today’s batch of ereaders are limited gadgets that do very little to enhance the reading experience. He does acknowledge that he enjoys and readily uses ereaders of various sorts but is hopping for much more. He also points to the fact that collobration with the author other readers and other information is really where the future of ereaders should be.

We are on the cusp of something significant and perhaps with the release of the iPad we will start to scratch the potential of the future of reading and perhaps learning. We do have a long way to go but you have to start somewhere…

Read the full article…