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Ultimate form of rebellion - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Debbie Jacob

SOMETIMES my thinking on a subject makes seismic shifts. For years I have lamented the Government’s lack of support for reading. I complain about taxes on books and not enough emphasis on reading in schools, and criticise the Government for not realising the importance of reading.

I try to convince the reading public of how reading builds academic, personal and social skills we all need to become happy and productive citizens. But now I realise I might have it all wrong.

Maybe the Government realises the value of reading. It knows if you build critical reading skills, you will become better informed voters and more critical citizens. You will better understand the cultural, ethnic and racial differences in this country and become more empathetic and tolerant.

Perhaps the Government doesn’t encourage reading because it doesn’t want you to be wiser and more outspoken. It doesn’t want you to weaponise reading. The Government is afraid of readers.

As for you, dear citizens of Trinidad and Tobago, I no longer feel you should be reading just to develop comprehension and critical thinking skills, empathy, personal and social development. You should be reading because it is a civic act of rebellion.

You need to show the Government that you are smarter than it thinks. You need to read to understand how to hold everyone around you, from your boss to your political leaders, accountable for their actions. You should read because you have the right to be happy.

Whenever polls about the happiest countries in the world pop up on the internet, Scandinavian or Nordic countries – Norway, Iceland, Sweden, Finland and Denmark – rank high on the list and one country often ranks first. These are cold places known for their love of reading. People in Iceland give books to each other on Christmas Eve.

Iceland has one of the highest rates of books per capita (3.5 books for every 1,000 inhabitants). A university study in 2013 showed 50 per cent of the country’s residents read at least eight books per year and 93 per cent of its people read at least one book a year.

The Pew Research Centre says the average number of books read by adults in the US is 12 per year, but 50 per cent of US adults can’t read a book written at an eighth-grade (Form 2) level. About 30 million adults in the US cannot read above a third-grade (Standard 3) level. What do you think that says about their comprehension and analytical skills?

An internet article called Above and Beyond Therapy says that in the UK the average number of books read per year is ten. On average, women tend to read more books than men.

An article by Ralph Moller published on the internet on February 21 says about 42 per cent of US college graduates never read another book after college. So much for life-long learning.

Studies on reading consistently show that adults over the age of 65 tend to read more books than any other age group. They would have grown up in a time when schools stressed reading.

And how many books make someone an avid reader? Reports s

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