Senator LooGAR Wrote:
Yeah, I don't think on the whole it's actually worse - I think it has always sucked.
Obviously class rooms of the past didn't churn out 30 Evelyn Waugh's every year but from what I hear the best kids leaving school to go into higher education have much poorer standards of literacy than was previously the case.
My old professor blames the increase of mixed media. He says kids come to university knowing a lot but not necessarily having read a lot. They gain their knowledge from computer games, internet, movies and television and as a result don't know how to communicate via the written word. He also says undergraduates have much narrower fields of interest which further limits the type of books, if any, that they actually read.
My own opinion is that reading and writing are inexorably linked. I only really had a primary level education when I was younger, partly because I was a punk kid that didn't turn up at high school very often and partly because the school was essentially a holding pen between primary school and employment in the steel works; there wasn't much educating going on anyway. However, I do know that as I developed an interest in reading in my late teens I went from being more or less illiterate to being able to write at a reasonable standard. I didn't intentionally teach myself, my ability to write evolved as a consequence of reading novels and increased with the quality of prose that I read.
My own personal motto would be 'read what you can't write yourself' and perhaps by challenging myself in that way I'll one day be able to produce a standard of writing that I'm happy with.
I find it pretty disheartening that '50 Shades of Grey' is now the highest selling book of all time in the UK but I'm taking my mind of it by reading the letters of Mary Wollstonecraft.