{"id":4111,"date":"1990-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1990-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-71-no-5-september-october-1990-life-without-literacy\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:27:22","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:27:22","slug":"vol-71-no-5-september-october-1990-life-without-literacy","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-71-no-5-september-october-1990-life-without-literacy\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 71 No. 5 &#8211; September\/October 1990 &#8211; Life Without Literacy"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Illiteracy is a scourge of humankind, breeding                     misery and detracting from justice and democracy. Can we continue                     to underestimate it and not do all we can about it, in Canada                     or wherever it blights peoples&#8221; minds?<\/p>\n<p> Imagine what it would be like if every fifth person on earth                     were afflicted with a disease that left him or her permanently                     disabled. Obviously the media would be full of news and comment                     about it, researchers would be working tirelessly to find                     a cure for it, funds would be pouring forth to aid victims                     of it, and mammoth international information campaigns would                     be launched to check its spread.<\/p>\n<p>Well, according to Federico Mayor, director-general of the                     United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization                     (UNESCO), upwards of 1 billion adults are unable to read or                     write, which handicaps them just as surely as if they had                     a physical impairment. The reason this scourge does not provoke                     more action is that it is not readily visible. Instead of                     restricting the use of peoples&#8217; eyes , ears or limbs, illiteracy                     restricts the use of their minds.<\/p>\n<p>A billion is a difficult number to digest. It represents                     40 times Canada&#8217;s present population. The immensity of such                     a figure robs it of its meaning in basic human terms.<\/p>\n<p>No long row of zeros can convey the hopelessness of an intelligent                     young man in a Third World country who pushes a hand cart                     in a bazaar, and knows that he will continue to push a hand                     cart until he is immobilized by age or illness. His inability                     to read disqualifies him for anything but the most punishing                     kind of physical labour. He has no time to learn to read because,                     merely to subsist, he must work 14 hours a day.<\/p>\n<p>The UN&#8217;s estimate that more than 100 million children are                     without access to schools is another figure too enormous to                     contemplate unless it is reduced to the personal level. It                     is natural for parents anywhere to want the best for their                     children: think of never being able to give a child an education                     because no school is available, and not being able to teach                     that child at home because you cannot read yourself.<\/p>\n<p>Of course illiteracy is considered normal in many parts                     of the world , but that does nothing to relieve the desolation                     of talented and spirited individuals who are intellectually                     imprisoned by their surroundings. Boys and girls growing up                     in Third World villages have their dreams like their counterparts                     in more affluent environments, but without the essential tools                     of education and communication, there is little chance that                     they can ever come close to making those dreams come true.<\/p>\n<p>Millions upon millions of people are caught up in class                     and caste restrictions which make reading and writing seem                     irrelevant. It is taken for granted that people are born to                     follow their parents&#8217; and ancestors&#8217; occupations. They usually                     start to work at an early age without ever entering school.<\/p>\n<p>In economies where the bulk of the work is done by hand                     and trade is spread over a multitude of small scale artisans                     and merchants, it is possible to at least survive without                     reading or writing. To an outsider, the unlettered classes                     in underdeveloped lands may appear to be quite contented.                     Why then attempt to promote literacy in places where it is                     not among the highest priorities?<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps the simplest and yet strongest reason was expressed                     by the 19th century British writer and statesman Thomas Carlyle:                     &#8220;That there should be one man die ignorant when he had the                     capacity for knowledge, this I call a tragedy.&#8221; People are                     bound to remain ignorant if they cannot read and write, because                     literacy is the key to learning almost any subject beyond                     a rudimentary stage.<\/p>\n<p>This means that illiterates are prevented from making the                     most of life, since education sets a person free to seek self-fulfillment.                     More important, it means that they are blocked off from contributing                     a full measure of their intelligence and talent to the general                     good of their communities. In cultures which discourage education                     among females, half or more of the people are disallowed from                     doing all they can to benefit their fellow human beings.<\/p>\n<h3><span class=\"quote\">The shame is compounded by the fact that illiteracy is a preventable state<\/span><\/h3>\n<p>When one considers how many advances in civilization have                     been made over the centuries by the tiny minority that traditionally                     could read and write, one wonders just how far the human race                     might have progressed by now if most of the earth&#8217;s inhabitants                     had possessed the faculty to cultivate ideas through reading                     and express them in the portable and lasting form of writing.                     How many potential Platos or Shakespeares or Einsteins might                     be living at this very moment amongst what the pioneer literacy                     advocate Frank Laubach called &#8221; The Silent Billion?&#8221; Is there                     a boy or girl somewhere out there where there are no schools                     who might have the ability to find a cure for cancer &#8211; or                     for hate?<\/p>\n<p>We shall never know what might have been accomplished if                     the great bulk of the human race had not been shackled by                     an inability to absorb knowledge and communicate ideas. What                     we <em> do <\/em> know is that this mass intellectual handicap                     exacts a terrible price.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Illiteracy kills,&#8221; as the head of the Organization for                     World Literacy, Carlos Murtore, recently said. The transmission                     of AIDS and other contagious diseases, disease-breeding insanitation,                     unproductive or destructive agricultural practices, overpopulation                     &#8211; all these blights on the underdeveloped world are perpetuated                     by the inability to communicate effectively with people who                     cannot be reached by written words.<\/p>\n<p>The havoc wrought by illiteracy normally comes in a round-about                     way , but it can sometimes be grimly straightforward. For                     instance, India&#8217;s Central Road Research Institute has traced                     a high proportion of the 40,000-plus fatal traffic accidents                     in that country every year to the fact that approximately                     99 per cent of Indian truck drivers cannot read traffic signs.<\/p>\n<p>In declaring 1990 International Literacy Year, UNESCO&#8217;s                     Mr. Mayor called it a &#8220;collective shame&#8221; that so many people                     should be consigned to the darkness of ignorance in the closing                     decade of a century which was supposed to have been enlightened.                     The shame is compounded by the fact that illiteracy is not                     inevitable: it is a preventable and correctable state.<\/p>\n<p>Given the opportunity and motivation, the vast majority                     of the world&#8217;s illiterate people could be taught to read,                     write, and do arithmetic. Thanks to modern teaching techniques,                     even those with learning disabilities can become fully literate                     and &#8220;numerate,&#8221; meaning being able to count and calculate.<\/p>\n<p>Why aren&#8217;t they, then? The excuse most often offered is                     that resources are scarce: there are not enough teachers,                     not enough classrooms, there is not enough money. The horrifying                     thing is that , while there is never enough money to educate                     people, there always seems to be plenty of money around the                     world for arms to kill and maim them. In some places, youngsters                     are likely to pick up a gun or a fire bomb before they ever                     pick up a book.<\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, Third World nations do face barriers to general                     literacy which are embedded in economics and political and                     cultural tradition. In a relatively rich and advanced country                     such as Canada , there is no excuse at all for widespread                     illiteracy.<\/p>\n<p>Yet shockingly enough, well-grounded research has shown                     that the incidence of illiteracy in this country is approximately                     the same as the estimated world average &#8211; at least one in                     every five adults. An extensive study by the Southam News                     group in 1987 revealed that a minimum of 24 per cent of Canadians                     aged 18 or over were functionally illiterate in English or                     French, and\/or unable to do simple arithmetic.<\/p>\n<p>This was more than double previous estimates by the federal                     government, which assumed for official purposes that anyone                     with nine years&#8217; schooling or more could read, write, and                     count adequately. If that assumption was ever correct, it                     certainly is no longer: more than one-third of the illiterates                     turned up by the Southam survey were high school graduates.<\/p>\n<p>The survey recognized that literacy is a relative state:                     greater knowledge is required to get along in the sophisticated                     milieu of Canada than in places where there is less call for                     reading. It concentrated on the ability to use written material                   effectively enough to function in Canadian society today.<\/p>\n<h3><span class=\"quote\">A nightmare of being laughed at while we grope in the dark and run into walls<\/span><\/h3>\n<p>Researchers interviewed a cross-section of some 3,000 Canadian                     residents in their homes and gave them a test which included                     such seemingly easy acts as finding the correct dosage on                     a cough syrup bottle, circling the expiry date on a driver&#8217;s                     licence, picking out the long distance charges on a telephone                     bill, and calculating the change on a restaurant bill. When                     the results were projected into the total population, they                     indicated that at least 4.5 million Canadians, and possibly                     as many as 5 million, lacked the language and numeracy skills                     necessary to keep up fully with the demands of everyday life.<\/p>\n<p>The Canadian statistics, like those of the world as a whole,                     blanket a great deal of individual misery. Again and again,                     the people interviewed said that no fully literate person                     could imagine the frustration and humiliation that goes with                     not being able to read, write or count. It often results in                     abject heartbreak. One woman blamed her divorce on the gap                     in understanding between a husband who could read and a wife                     who could not.<\/p>\n<p>For most of us, living as an illiterate person in a developed                     country today would be like having a nightmare, groping in                     the dark , running smack into walls, being convinced that                     everyone around us is sneering at our clumsiness and confusion.                     Illiterate men and women have trouble doing things which most                     of never give a second thought: finding addresses, looking                     up telephone numbers, paying bills, taking buses, shopping.                     Asked why he didn&#8217;t get a job, one man explained that he couldn&#8217;t                     read the help-wanted ads in a newspaper. If he did find an                     opening, he said, he couldn&#8217;t fill out the application form.<\/p>\n<p>Illiteracy in Canada is a more painful condition than in                     less- developed societies because here, it carries a social                     stigma. It is commonly seen as a mark of laziness or stupidity                     in a country where , theoretically at least, everybody has                     a chance to attend and stay for a reasonable length of time                     in school.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, the disgraceful illiteracy rate in Canada owes                     much to a significantly higher drop-out rate than in comparable                     countries like West Germany, Sweden and the United States.                     Almost 30 per cent of present-day Canadian youths never finish                     high school, roughly twice the percentage in the U.S.<\/p>\n<p>More than half of a representative group of Canadian drop-outs                     aged 18 to 24 said in recent interviews that they had quit                     school out of lack of interest in education, a desire to take                     a job, or boredom. Apparently it never occurred to those who                     left without adequate reading skills how boring it would be                     never to read an entertaining book.<\/p>\n<p>Those who do drop out before they learn to read soon find                     that the society treats them at best as clowns and at worst                     as pariahs. To Canadians in general, being illiterate is something                     to be embarrassed about, like having been in jail.<\/p>\n<p>Illiterate people therefore go to strenuous lengths to hide                     their disability. They get friends and family members to look                     up information, fill out forms and so forth. They resort to                     subterfuges like pretending they forgot their glasses at home                     when faced with having to read something, and always ordering                     &#8220;the special&#8221; in restaurants without knowing what it is.<\/p>\n<p>A fair percentage of Canadian illiterates have learned to                     cope so well with these stratagems that they see no need for                     remedial training. But the time when an illiterate person                     could expect to lead a fairly untroubled life is fading fast.<\/p>\n<p>Reading is becoming &#8220;a must&#8221; in more and more occupations,                     from farming to working in a laundry with computerized washing                     machines. Industry has become the domain of the written word,                     whether on computer screens or paper. Every time a modern                     industrial worker turns around, it seems, there are more manuals                     to scan, more electronic &#8220;prompts&#8221; to respond to, more notes                     to write, more forms to fill out.<\/p>\n<p>Along with outright illiteracy, semi-literacy has become                     a matter of growing concern among Canadian employers. They                     find that high school and university graduates cannot write                     simple memos or work with alphabetical files. This is happening                     at a time when Canada has never had more need of an alert,                     adaptable, and thoroughly competent work force to hold its                     own in the free-for-all of international trade in the age                     of high technology.<\/p>\n<p>Functional illiteracy is estimated to cost Canadian business                     $4 billion a year in errors, retraining, work-related accidents,                     and foregone productivity. Every time someone mistakes the                     meaning of an instruction or botches a shipping order, our                     international competitiveness suffers just that infinitesimal                     little bit more.<\/p>\n<p>In the interests of competitiveness, Canadian industry has                     been re- equipping with ever more advanced technology. As                     a result, the number of jobs for skilled and educated workers                     is rising, while the number of jobs in which workers are not                     expected to read is shrinking drastically.<\/p>\n<h3><span class=\"quote\">The only permanent defence is to create                   a &#8220;literate environment&#8221;<\/span><\/h3>\n<p>The instinctive reaction to Canada&#8217;s poor performance in                     the international literacy stakes is to blame the educational                     system. But it must be remembered that schools today play                     a non-educational role imposed on them by society. Youngsters                     who years ago would have been held back a grade because of                     language deficiencies now qualify for &#8220;social promotion&#8221; so                     that they can keep up with their age group. Schools are expected                     to deal with motivational and behavioural problems which were                     formerly addressed in students&#8217; homes.<\/p>\n<p>The problem is not so much one of education as of attitudes,                     habits and values. &#8220;Literacy is something that begins at home,&#8221;                     Lynn McAlpine, program director of adult education at McGill                     University, said in a recent interview with the Montreal <em>                     Gazette<\/em> . &#8220;If children don&#8217;t see reading at home it becomes                     part of the school culture, not the home culture. It isn&#8217;t                     a natural part of living.&#8221; The best advice the experts can                     give to parents who worry that their children might grow up                     with inadequate language skills is to read to them and read                     along with them. That way, they are introduced early to the                     delights of reading. They see it as a pleasure, not a chore.<\/p>\n<p>If Canada is to face up to the stern demands of the competitive                     age , the cultivation of literacy must spread through the                     culture in general. The only permanent defence against illiteracy                     is to create what one expert calls &#8220;a literate environment,&#8221;                     in which reading and writing are prized not for economic reasons,                     but for their own sake. Just as we aim for a high standard                     of living, so we should aim for a high standard of literacy.                     The two, after all, are connected to a large degree.<\/p>\n<p>The low value hitherto placed on literacy in this country                     has serious implications politically and socially. In effect,                     the illiterate portion of our citizenry is deprived of an                     effective voice in the democratic process, simply because                     people who cannot communicate on paper are unable to promote                     their own best interests politically. Illiteracy also breeds                     grievous social problems. Those knocked out of the mainstream                     by their disability are more likely than most to turn to drug                     and alcohol abuse and crime.<\/p>\n<p>The public perception of illiteracy is crucial to efforts                     to grapple with it. It is not true that illiterate people                     are necessarily lacking in intelligence or industriousness,                     meaning that they are unwilling to take remedial training.<\/p>\n<p>We are all too quick to say, &#8220;it&#8217;s their own fault&#8221; when                     people cannot read and write, whereas they may be victims                     of circumstances . Dozens of factors can contribute to illiteracy.                     One woman told a magazine interviewer that nobody ever read                     in her childhood home because her mother was very neat, and                     didn&#8217;t want a lot of paper cluttering up the place.<\/p>\n<p>By saying &#8220;it&#8217;s their own fault,&#8221; what we are really saying                     is: &#8221; It&#8217;s their own problem.&#8221; When its economic, political                     and social depredations are taken into account, illiteracy                     clearly becomes a everybody&#8217;s problem, because the whole country&#8217;s                     social progress and prosperity is at stake. Illiteracy represents                     a serious drain on our national pool of brain power. In the                     sophisticated global economy that is growing up around us,                     brain power is fast becoming the main commodity a developed                     nation has to sell.<\/p>\n<p>Fortunately, illiteracy is not one of those things the average                     citizen can do nothing about. On the contrary, anyone with                     a good grasp of language and numbers may volunteer as a tutor                     with community literacy groups (to find your local group,                     check with the United Way or other central volunteer agencies                     in your area). Anyone who is personally acquainted with an                     illiterate person can gently urge him or her to take part                     in remedial training.<\/p>\n<p>Half the battle against illiteracy is against the stigma                     it carries . Men and women who are reluctant to come out of                     the illiteracy closet must be persuaded that they are capable                     of learning to read, write and count; that, whatever age they                     are, there is always another chance.<\/p>\n<p>As for the governments from which so much of the funding                     for literacy training comes, they must be convinced that illiteracy                     is a national issue which citizens are seriously concerned                     about, and wish to be placed high on the list of policy priorities.                     The same applies to the scourge of illiteracy worldwide. We                     must demonstrate to our leaders that we consider illiteracy                     a leading global problem , and that we want Canada to join                     wholeheartedly in the fight against it in cooperation with                     other nations.<\/p>\n<p>We must make it clear that we do not want those who represent                     us to stand by while illiteracy continues to work its insidious                     evil on mankind&#8217;s capacity to live in health, safety and justice.                     Much more should be done about it, and much more <em> can                     <\/em> be done.<\/p>\n<h3>New Look, New Paper<\/h3>\n<p>This edition of the Royal Bank Letter introduces a new graphic                     design intended to make it visually easier to read and give                     it a more contemporary appearance. Also in line with contemporary                     trends , the Letter will henceforth be printed on recycled                     paper as part of the Royal Bank&#8217;s commitment to environmental                     conservation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[77],"class_list":["post-4111","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-77"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 71 No. 5 - September\/October 1990 - Life Without Literacy - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-71-no-5-september-october-1990-life-without-literacy\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 71 No. 5 - September\/October 1990 - Life Without Literacy - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Illiteracy is a scourge of humankind, breeding misery and detracting from justice and democracy. Can we continue to underestimate it and not do all we can about it, in Canada or wherever it blights peoples&#8221; minds? 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Can we continue to underestimate it and not do all we can about it, in Canada or wherever it blights peoples&#8221; minds? 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