front page report in the New York Times on September 9, 1993 and a  shorter article in the Washington Post on the same date, the day of  release of the above-mentioned study, listed some of the details of the  report, but did not mention the most serious problems found in the body  of the report. These reports were evidently based upon the short  "Executive Summary" of the report. Even though a follow-up report issued  in 2006 showed no statistically significant improvement, there have  been no other known references to this report in any known media source.  Jonathan Kozol, in Illiterate America, explained why the official U.S.  Census Bureau reports on literacy rate are inaccurate and explains that  it is in the short-term best interests of political and educational  authorities to downplay the seriousness of the English literacy problem.
It is in YOUR best interest, however, to understand the seriousness of  the problem and to take action because illiteracy has human suffering  costs for the illiterates (at least 34 types of serious physical,  mental, emotional, medical, and financial problems that we would  consider catastrophes if they happened to us) and monetary costs for  every American: (1) for the cost of government programs that illiterates  use (from our taxes) and for the cost of truancy, juvenile delinquency,  and crime directly related to illiteracy, and (2) for the increased  cost of consumer goods as a result of functional illiterates in the  workplace.
How does functional illiteracy cause serious problems for illiterates?
Here are four brief examples. Janitors have been fired because they  cannot read an after-hours note with special clean-up instructions.  Families have been evicted from their apartment -- even in the coldest  part of winter -- when the apartment owner (who wants to raise the rent,  but knows the present renters cannot afford the higher rent) falsely  claimed that the rental contract allows eviction if a crying baby  disturbs other tenants; evicted tenants who cannot read the contract  will not challenge the apartment owner fearing their illiteracy will be  exposed. The taking of medicines poses a danger to those who cannot read  the instructions on the medicine bottles. Children who have medical  emergencies, such as asthma, are in grave danger if the illiterate  parents become lost because they cannot read the street signs; even if  they have cell-phones they cannot tell the 911 operator their location  when they visit a remote place if they cannot describe their location  sufficiently to allow ambulance personnel to find them.
These and hundreds of similar "horror stories" occur all around us every  day -- most of them without our knowledge because functional  illiterates are extremely good at hiding their illiteracy. About HALF of  adult Americans are now functionally illiterate and must constantly  endure permanent SHAME, ANGER AND DESPAIR, unable to lift themselves out  of privation.
Although nearly every American can at least read a few words, if someone  can only read 1200 to 1500 simple words they learned by sight, they are  functionally illiterate. They cannot get by in our complex society as  well as they should and must constantly endure at least thirty-four  different kinds of serious physical, mental, emotional, medical, and  financial problems. Many simple tasks we take for granted are impossible  for illiterates. Most of us would consider some of the problems that  functional illiterates must constantly endure a catastrophe if they  happened to us. See Jonathan Kozol's 1985 book, Illiterate America and  Chapter 1 of Bob Cleckler's new (2009) book, Let's End Our Literacy  Crisis. The .com website in the resource box allows you to read the  first chapter titled "Illiteracy Hurts."
America's Dirty Little Secret: How many Americans are now functionally  illiterate?
The National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES) reported in 2006  that 44% of adults in the study were in the two lowest of four reading  levels (below basic and basic) and that 51% of those in the below basic  level had given up looking for a job and 5% were unemployed, looking for  work. The percentages of employed adults increased with each increase  in reading ability. The 2006 report was a follow-up to the much more  thorough 1993 NCES report, the most extensive study of illiteracy ever  commissioned by the U.S. government. Employment statistics from the 1993  report were about the same as the 2006 report.
The 1993 study used five literacy levels instead of four as in the 2006  report and revealed several devastating facts about functional  illiteracy that are not covered in the 2006 report. Most people don't  know these facts; there is no known reference to these facts in any  national media.
The shocking illiteracy statistics in the NCES 1993 report shows that  the average yearly earnings were: Level 1 (least literate), $2105; Level  2, $5225; Level 3, $9090, and Levels 4 and 5 combined, $16,311. The  threshold poverty level for an individual in 1993 was $7363 per year.  (See the U.S. Census Bureau's Threshold Poverty report for 1993)  Shockingly, 22.0 percent of U.S. adults were Level 1 and 26.7 percent  were Level 2. This means 48.7 percent of U.S. adults had average annual  earnings SIGNIFICANTLY below the poverty level largely because of their  functional illiteracy.
We do not see 48 percent or more of U.S. adults in poverty because most  households have more than one employed adult and because low-income  households receive governmental assistance (from our taxes) and from  family, friends, and charities. Even so, the 1993 NAAL report showed  that 31.2 percent of the adults in the two lowest literacy levels were  in poverty (the report only showed poverty in each literacy level, but  the combination of levels 1 and 2 can be easily calculated).
Although the 1993 NAAL report did not show the combined poverty rate for  literacy levels 3 through 5, it is easily calculated to be 10.1  percent. The 1993 NAAL report chose 26,049 interviewees for lengthy  interviews according to strict statistical balancing of age, gender,  ethnicity, and location (urban, suburban, and rural locations in a dozen  states across the U.S. and from several prisons) to accurately  represent the entire U.S. population. Since there are no provable  differences in the interviewees except their literacy rates, this is a  strong indication that about twice as many (deducting 10.1 percent which  is NOT due to illiteracy from the 31.2 percent total and comparing the  resulting 21.1 percent to the 10.1 percent) U.S. adults are in poverty  because of their literacy level as for all other reasons combined. See  the .com website in the resource box. This website allows you to read  Chapter 2, titled "How Widespread is United States Illiteracy?"
How Will YOU Benefit From Ending Illiteracy?
You will benefit emotionally if you are concerned that people you  know and love are -- or will be --functionally illiterate. The problems  and suffering of illiterates is almost certainly much worse than you  realize. Many people you know are -- unknown to you -- functionally  illiterate.
You will benefit if you object to the average personal  cost to U.S. adults of $5186 each year as a result of illiteracy for (1)  taxes for government programs that illiterates use and for the truancy,  juvenile delinquency, and crime directly related to illiteracy, and (2)  higher prices for consumer goods due to illiterates in the workplace.  See chapter 3 of Let's End Our Literacy Crisis.
You will benefit if  you are employed or if you have financial interests in a business or  organization in which you invest time or money. Illiteracy affects all  organizations to some extent, some of them seriously. Illiteracy cuts  the potential customers for written materials almost in half and hurts  businesses and organizations because of competition with more literate  workers in foreign companies. The monthly U.S. trade deficit has grown  steadily worse for many years.
You will benefit if our nation  improves the trade balance, national relationships, and our national  employment by improving communication between nations. Over 1.3 billion  people worldwide speak English -- more than the dialect of any other  language. Many of them use English to communicate with those who do not  speak their native language, but hundreds of millions of people who  speak English cannot read it very well.
What is the primary cause of English illiteracy?
Although there are many causes of illiteracy, most people are not  functional illiterates because of any failing of their own but because  of a defect in the English language. In 1755 an English dictionary was  prepared by Dr. Samuel Johnson. Linguists will tell you that Dr. Johnson  made a very serious linguistic error in his dictionary. Instead of  freezing the spelling of the sounds of the English language, as  linguistic logic demands of an alphabetic language, Dr. Johnson froze  the spelling of words. In effect, English words are now logograms --  certain letters, in a certain order, combine to represent a word, in the  same way that strokes of various kinds combine to represent a Chinese  character or word. Present day English is a conglomeration of the words  -- and their spelling -- from eight languages, the language of every  conqueror who occupied the British Isles prior to 1755. Since that time,  English has adopted words -- and usually their spelling -- from about  350 other languages. See Henry Hitching's book The Secret Life of Words.
The pronunciation of words changes with time, so what was bad in 1755 is  even worse today. Professor Julius Nyikos of Washington and Jefferson  College found that there are at least 1768 ways of spelling forty sounds  in English. See The Fourteenth LACUS Forum 1987, published by  Linguistic Association of Canada and the United States, P.O. Box 101,  Lake Bluff, Illinois in 1988. There is not even one invariable spelling  rule in English -- some of the exceptions have exceptions! The eyes of  fluent readers skip easily over a multitude of traps for the beginner.  As a result, every word in a person's vocabulary must be learned, one at  a time, either by rote memory or by repeated use.
Why didn't YOU know the seriousness of the functional illiteracy  problem?
You May Not Have Seen the Report or It Was Not Covered. The results  of even important and extensive studies of literacy do not appear in  all of the media for these reasons. (a) The literacy study may not be  covered if there are too many "more important" stories to be covered. By  the time all the more important stories have been covered, the results  of the study are no longer "news." (b) Some media executives have their  reporters cover studies showing results they disagree with. Many will  not; and (c) media executives are sometimes afraid that reporting  unfavorable results from a study will alienate them from groups from  whom they desire support. Obviously not all studies fit all three items.  As a result, literacy and learning to read may -- for example -- be  front page newspaper stories in some newspapers. It may be totally  ignored in others.
You May Have Seen a Report, But the Way It Was  Written Hid the Seriousness of the Problem.
Anne C. Lewis, a freelance writer on education concerns, says there are  "two big problems" the press makes in its coverage of illiteracy. The  first mistake is confusing adult illiteracy problems with problems in  the public schools. It is typical to blame the adult literacy problems  on the schools and then go no further -- as if fixing the blame will  somehow result in solving the problem. Blaming the schools accomplishes  nothing because, she pointed out, roughly 70 percent of the workforce in  the year 2000 was already in the workforce and therefore permanently  out of public schools. Furthermore, she says, thirty million or more  Americans read so poorly they could "bring the whole economy crashing  down. With the rapidly accelerating technology in the workplace and its  demands, for example, for reading the operating manuals and for  retraining, previous levels of illiteracy are no longer acceptable. She  says the press rarely makes this known. The second mistake in illiteracy  coverage in the press is that it is far too often only concerned with  boring stories of an occasional adult illiterate who can now read thanks  to the efforts of some selfless volunteer. This type of coverage too  often lulls the public into believing that is all there is to the  problem of adult illiteracy.
A big part of the reason people do not  realize the seriousness of the literacy problem is the way the media  handles the reporting of scientific or statistical studies. Since  reporters are journalists, not statisticians or mathematicians, and  since the reporters are almost always under time pressures to get their  report out (before someone else reports it and it is no longer "news"),  reporters often read only the Executive Summary of lengthy reports. In  any case, journalists seldom do a careful study of the entire report,  much less a serious mathematical analysis of data in a study. The 1993  study mentioned above was a 150 page report. The April 2002 version of  the report was even longer: 199 pages. In the case of this study, a  simple mathematical analysis of the data was required to understand the  true seriousness of the findings of the study.
The New York Times  article about the 1993 study gave an explanation of why increasing our  literacy rate is important: "The overall education level of Americans  has increased in terms of schooling and even in fundamental literacy.  But the demands of the workplace simultaneously have vastly increased.  We simply are not keeping pace with the kinds of skills required in  today's economy." The article also gave an explanation of why literacy  is a problem for so many people: "Insufficient education and a growing  number of adults whose first language is not English were important  reasons that the scores were so low." They failed to mention, however,  that the interviewees were carefully chosen to be an accurate  representation of the entire U.S. population at the time of the study.  The article also misquoted the study as saying it indicated that there  were 40 to 44 million adults in Level 1 literacy (the lowest literacy  level), "an 40 million" [sic] in Level 2, 61 million in Level 3, 11  million in Level 4, and "up to 40 million" in Level 5. Page 17 of the  2002 version of the study shows the true figures to be, Level 1: 42.0  million (22.0% of the 191 million U.S. adults in 1993), Level 2: 50.9  million (26.7%), Level 3: 60.5 million (31.7%), Level 4: 31.2 million  (16.3%), and Level 5: 6.4 million (3.3%). The most serious failing of  the article is that it did not quantify the seriousness of the literacy  problem. It merely began the article by stating: "Nearly half of the  nation's 191 million adult citizens are not proficient enough in English  to write a letter about a billing error or to calculate the length of a  bus trip from a published schedule."
The article by the Washington  Post writer began the article by stating: "Nearly half of all adult  Americans read and write so poorly that it is difficult for them to hold  a decent job, according to the most comprehensive literacy study ever  done by the U.S. government." This raised questions of what constitutes a  "decent job," exactly how many people are affected, how accurate was  the study, and what were the statistical procedures to ensure accuracy,  leading to the author's "engineering study" of the report. It was found  that although the Washington Post writer's statement was true, in effect  it minimized the seriousness of the problem.
Illiterates Are Exceptionally Good At Hiding. The number of U.S.  adults who cannot read at all is very small. But if they only know  1200-1600 simple words they learned by sight in the first four grades in  school, they are functionally illiterate. They can't read and write  well enough to hold an above-poverty-level-wage job. They have developed  many coping skills for their inability to read over the years. Chances  are very good that many of your acquaintances are functional  illiterates. They may be very knowledgeable. They may even be eloquent  speakers. They just didn't get their knowledge or eloquence from  reading.
Grade-Level Completion Does NOT equal Grade-Level  Competence. Many people assume that after several years of school the  students know how to read. Every teacher knows, however -- even though  they may be in denial of the fact -- that this is not necessarily true.  Having sat out several years of schooling does not guarantee an outcome.  The students may not know even a small fraction of what they have been  "taught."
Illiterates Are a Silent Minority. Out of embarrassment,  illiterates are a silent minority. Community and cultural leaders of  groups with a large number of illiterates do not want that fact  publicized. They fear it will give their "enemies" (racists and  class-conscious persons) ammunition against those who cannot read.
Self-Esteem Teaching in School Is Very Effective. Perhaps today's most  successful teaching in U.S. elementary schools is the teaching of  self-esteem. Studies have shown that U.S. students often over-estimate  their scholastic abilities. The U.S. scored worse than all but two  nations in a recent math and science competition with about twenty other  nations. Some of the U.S. students in that competition bragged that  they were "good at math." Some of them were not only not "good at math,"  they may also have difficulty reading their math books.
The U.S.  Census Reports Greatly Over-Estimate Literacy. Many believe the U.S. is a  highly literate nation because of census statistics. The last two or  three census reports claimed a U.S. is literacy rate of 99%. It is in  the short-term interest of politicians and education officials to  believe these figures. This is not to say that there was necessarily any  conscious deception. Jonathan Kozol's shocking book, Illiterate  America, pages 37-38, explained how these figures were decided upon.  Once we understand how the census bureau did the studies, we will be  likely to agree with Jonathan Kozol. He thought the accuracy of the  census reports was open to serious doubt. The Adult Literacy in America  study, in fact, proves the census bureau figures on literacy rate are  wrong.
Sensory Overload. We are constantly bombarded with  information, much of it bad news. The world seems to go on with little  effect despite the bad news about literacy. We soon learn to ignore much  of it. This is because we often do not want to believe it. Sometimes we  have seen a later report denying the validity of the bad news. After a  few years we have forgotten most of the bad news even if we initially  thought it was significant.
We Do Not See Large Portions of Our  Population in Poverty. In most cases, more than one family member is  employed. If all workers in the family are functionally illiterate, the  family may be at or below the poverty line. If one or more of the  workers in the family are literate, they bring the family above the  poverty line.
What is the obvious solution to English functional illiteracy?
The obvious solution is to return English to the principle upon which an  alphabetic language should be based -- spelling words as they sound,  the way the rest of the world does! That is the way for teaching  students reading and for teaching reading fluency. All other attempts at  improving the English literacy rate -- such as new reading books,  better teacher training, and similar changes -- are nothing more than  fighting the symptoms of the problem, similar to taking aspirin to  combat the symptoms of pneumonia rather than taking penicillin to cure  it. It is natural to resist change -- even change for the better! People  often prefer the disadvantages of the familiar to the advantages of the  unfamiliar. But when a person researches and finds that absolutely  nothing done in American public schools in the last eighty years has  made any statistically significant improvement in our true literacy rate  (as opposed to the optimistic assessments of politicians and  educational leaders who have a vested interest in reporting our literacy  level as being higher than it really is) and honestly examines the ease  of teaching reading to students possible with a spelling system that is  extremely easy to learn (as opposed to the present illogical,  inconsistent, and chaotic English spelling), common sense is certain to  cause people honestly to evaluate this spelling reform proposal.
Unlike any previous proposed spelling system, the proposed spelling  system NuEnglish is scientifically designed to use the spelling of every  sound (1) as it is most often spelled in English -- as are 82% of the  NuEnglish spellings of the sounds -- or (2) using the spelling people  expect to represent a certain sound -- as in all of the other spellings.  (For example people expect the letter F to have the sound as in the  word fan, but more often it has the sound of the letter V entirely  because of the very common word of, and people expect the letter S to  have the sound as in sat, but more often it has the sound of the letter Z  because of the very common words is and was and plurals such as bags.)  (3) NuEnglish spelling uses a perfect one-to-one ratio of the  letters-to-sounds. Students only need to learn the spelling of 38 sounds  instead of all 20,000 or more words in their reading vocabulary. Many  people have a reading vocabulary of more than 70,000 words. It is so  simple that present readers of English can learn NuEnglish spelling in  ten minutes or less. See the Wikipedia article on NuEnglish to see the  details of the spelling system.
In addition to the simplicity of NuEnglish, the change to NuEnglish  spelling will be extremely simple because of the Respeller computer  program, which is readily available to anyone on the internet, anywhere  in the world. Simply go to the nuenglish website, click on "Respeller"  at the top left, enter up to about 25 pages of English reading material,  and click the "Convert to NuEnglish" button. It will respell in  NuEnglish in only a few seconds. The use of NuEnglish spelling will  enable beginning students to learn to fluently read and write in less  than three months -- perhaps much less. Frank Laubach, founder of  Laubach Literacy International, taught thousands of adults to read in  over 300 languages around the world. Laubach found that he could teach  students to read fluently in from one to twenty days in some languages  and in less than three months in 98 percent of these languages. Laubach  stated that if English were spelled phonetically, students could learn  to read in one week! Adoption of NuEnglish will enable hundreds of  millions of people around the world who speak English but cannot read it  very well -- over 93 million in the U.S. alone -- to be able to read  English who otherwise never would.
How do we know that spelling reform can cure world illiteracy in  English?
Consider these facts about spelling reform:
Dozens of scholars for over 250 years have recommended it. For over  a hundred years their have been simplified spelling societies in the  U.K. and U.S. by various names. The present names are The Spelling  Society in the U.K. and American Literacy Council in the U.S. Both  organizations have very informative websites, spellingsociety and  americanliteracy, .org and .com, respectively.
Several nations,  smaller and larger than the U.S., both advanced and third-world, have  simplified their spelling.
A simpler spelling system has been proven  effective for making learning to read easier in more than 300  alphabetic languages but never tried in English. In 295 languages (at  least 98% of them) students became fluent readers in less than three  months. Most of the 52.2 percent of U.S. adults who presently become  functionally literate require two to four YEARS.
All reasonable  objections to spelling reform have been thoroughly debunked by  distinguished linguists and educators. To see a very scholarly debunking  of objections to spelling reform from 1909 (!) -- at a time when the  need was not nearly as great as it is today and when the changeover to a  logical spelling system would have been much more difficult, without  our present computer programs and printing capabilities -- see the last  chapter of English Spelling and Spelling Reform by Thomas Lounsbury,  LL.D, L.H.D, professor emeritus of Yale University. This is a book ready  to read or download at the Internet Archive website.
The need is  greater than ever in our increasingly complex world. Although spelling  reform is easier than ever due to computer technology, it has never been  tried in English.
Rudolph Flesch stated in Why Johnny Can't Read, pages 76-77 (this book  is available for free reading or download from the Internet Archive  wewbsite),
Generally speaking, students in our schools are about two years behind  students of the same age in other countries. This is not a wild  accusation of the American education system; it is an established,  generally known fact....
Usually the assumption seems to be that in other countries children and  adolescents are forced to study harder ... I think the explanation is  much simpler and more reasonable: Americans take two years longer to  learn how to read -- and reading, of course, is the basis for  achievement in all other subjects.
Let's End Our Literacy Crisis details a proposed method for implementing  NuEnglish into use. School curricula can then be revised to begin most  courses of study two years earlier because students learn to read two  years earlier. Our students will no longer have to enter international  competition and careers with, in effect, one hand tied behind their  backs; their education will -- at long last -- be equivalent to that of  education in other alphabetic languages.
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