The importance of learning how to read and write is called, literacy. “Oh my gosh! I want to rip my hairs out!” I told myself this as I was writing a research paper in the eighth grade. Reading and writing used to feel like a chore, until one day when my English teacher saw me struggling and was determined to help me enjoy it if not even love it. I could feel the sweat trickling down my face and I could hear the frustration inside me. I was counting down the seconds till this class was over. I was writing a research paper in Mrs. Boehm’s class, trying to finish it, as I loudly whispered to myself, “oh my gosh! I want to rip my hair out!” I didn’t realize at the time that I was sitting about four feet away from her. I could feel somebody staring at me and of course it was Mrs. Boehm, with her right eyebrow lifted. I knew she was going to give …show more content…
Public speaking came easy to me. Most people have a fear of speaking in front of big crowds, but I love it. Reading books helped me gain the confidence I now have. Without reading all those books I probably wouldn’t know a lot about speaking. I’m a senior in high school and I am still working hard every day to improve on whatever I may lack on. My elementary, middle school, and junior high school teachers gave me so much knowledge and have helped me succeed in my high school career. I remember their pep talks and their constant stress to get students to read more than one book a week. I owe it all to them for teaching me the importance of an English class. I continue to work harder and harder each and every day. Still till this day I get papers with red marks all over it. I learn new words every day and this will lead me to a successful fu-ture. I still have a lot more to learn, I am only a senior in high school. I still have a few years till I get pushed into the real world and even then I will still be learning new things. Little by little I will eventually get
Reading and writing have been in our lives and around our lives ever since the beginning of time. It is something we are naturally born into. Almost every human being has performed some type of reading or writing, whether they live in the big city, or whether they live in the woods. They have all performed some form of reading or writing in their life. It is human nature. We are born into it. I have many memories of reading and writing, though I may not be very fond of it when it concerns schoolwork, it is something I have naturally adjusted to and it somehow has made me, and probably everyone else around me as well, who we are today.
An astronomer killed my religion. More accurately, reading an astronomer’s carefully chosen and thoughtful words changed my life forever. I was raised in a strict religious home in my early childhood. Both my parents were Jehovah’s Witnesses, and being the good Witnesses that they were, they often chose to shelter their children from the worldly influences surrounding them. There were many things in life forbidden to me, many truths locked away. Unfortunately for my parents, I’ve always been curious about the world and literacy was my key. It wasn’t until I was 13 years old when I first discovered Carl Sagan’s Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space. Reading Sagan’s reflections on the world and humanity ignited something in me that had been smoldering for a long time; the idea that I did not need religion to find purpose and meaning in life, rather I must only look within myself.
John Green once said, “Great books help you understand, and they help you feel understood.” Literacy, at least to me. is the ability to understand and to be understood. Words have no limits they can travel across borders and oceans. They also hold a tremendous amount of power. Words can change the way we think, affect the way we feel, and inspire us to do more. Words can shape our entire world but more than that they can provide us a reflection of ourselves. Words bring comfort to us that there is a single person at some point in time somewhere out there in this vast world who knows what it is we go through, the struggles we face, and the things we find joy in. When you read something you can relate to it's like a hand is reaching out for
Literacy, according to Merriam Dictionary, means the ability to read and write. Everyone has the ABILITY to read and write, but that does not mean we are all good at writing. When I started elementary school in Edmond, Oklahoma, the first thing I learned was reading. My teacher would read to me and I would go to the library and pick out some books. When i got to the third grade, i was learning how to write in cursive and how to improve my pimnimship. This is also when I started to write in complete sentences and get into the “big kid” type of work. For me, I had gotten bigger and bigger assignments throughout middle school and my freshman year of highschool. My first real writing project was not until my sophomore year.
I will tell you about the importance of Literary. Literacy is important because it helps us spell words, read and do more in life. I was born in generation iGen. Generation iGen is the generation of people born with technology. With generation iGen our skills are most likely higher in technology skills then in literacy skills.
Im not good at putting whats in my head on paper because I am never sure how to word anything. I am not the best reader or English person, I am very slow reader because It takes me some time to comprehend what I am reading and what it is trying to say. But I love English I love writing I am just not the best like I get to where I don’t put in comas and periods in their spots that they need to be in. One of my favorite books is “If I stay” because as your reading it, it makes you realize that you never know when it’s your time to go and that everyday we need to live our life’s to the fullest because in a moment your whole life can change and will never be the same.I love reading stories that can make you realize how precious our life is on
Every day, literacy is used all over the world and we never even give it a second thought a majority of the time. Businessmen skim across the newspaper during their brief lunch break, students groan when given a reading assignment to do, and chatty women everywhere love meeting for their monthly book club. However, when going through all of these motions, does one ever stop to actually think about literacy and the impact it has on our lives? In the scenarios listed above, the answer is more than likely no. Literacy is taken for granted every day. Almost everyone learns how to read and write at some point in his or her lifetime, but hardly does literacy actually get recognized or receive appreciation. We never acknowledge the profound affect it can have on shaping our lives fgdfgdgfd.
“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” (Mahatma Gandhi). Learning is essential to grow as an individual and expand your knowledge. Literacy is key for broadening our mentality and a person will only benefit from it. For me, especially, literacy has been essential for my growth and the challenges I have taken on. Everything in my life has depended on my knowledge and skills that I have acquired, and I am continuously developing new techniques.
Literacy has changed the way that people live since the beginning of time. From cavemen communicating with drawings and hand signals to the earliest form of Latin. At that time reading was a skill that very few had. It was believed to be that only the wealthy and the noble class were taught this skill. Peasants did not need it in their everyday life. Reading was considered a privilege and was also used to suppress the lower class. Knowledge is power. For me, this knowledge has molded the way that I live and communicate.
Is it important to be a literate person in today’s society? The ability to function well depends on whether or not a person is literate and can comprehend what is going on around them. If a person doesn’t have the basic ability to read, they will feel the stress and dependency on others because of their illiteracy. Illiteracy is a big problem because without the knowledge of reading, illiterate people can’t perform daily tasks and responsibilities in daily life. When all it would take is a mere two minutes out of your day, don’t you think illiteracy can be helped or even extinguished?
Genesis is a ten year old African American female and is in the fifth grade. She lives in a low income neighborhood with her Grandmother whom has sole custody. While Genesis’ Grandmother would like to play a more active role in her granddaughter’s education, she works a full time job and has health problems that prevent her being able to drive. Genesis was in my fourth grade Read 180 class and is with me again as a fifth grader. I selected this student because she is strong in phonemic awareness, yet her writing scores are weak and she needs the most individualized support in writing.
I wouldn’t say that I am a good writer, and I really don’t like to read books either. Through my years in school I became literate in these two categories. I was and still am not interested in writing, or reading books in my spare time. The only writing I have ever done is for school. Writing just does not interest me, and the only reading I do out of class is reading about sports in magazines, or reading the news, or looking at web pages. I have only read a couple of books on my own, 95% of all the books I have read have been for school. The reason for not writing out of class is probably attributed to the fact that I am a very impatient person, and I have a short attention span. I have no interest in writing and reading so when
There is an old Chinese Proverb that says, “Teach me and I’ll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I’ll understand.” When it comes to literacy, we want our students to dig a little deeper; not just into written text or language but also their minds. I believe the teaching of literacy needs to be more than just reading and writing. It needs to be able to expand the minds of our students and offer a different perspective. Literacy is a variety of strategies that need to be used to capture the diversity amongst our students. When I look at literacy, I see it as an aspect of collaboration and social engagement, a form of freedom and expression, and the intensity behind questioning. Literacy allows students to become more than just a reader or a writer. It allows them to be able to interact with and interpret the world around them.
Reading and writing are both important; you can’t have one without the other. They are skills that are increased constantly due to little things that most times are not noticed. Whether it is from a book to a poem, there will always be a way that it helps out your school performance. Reading and writing in general only helps absorb information, and enhance leisure or school related writing tasks. It has also made life itself so much easier because reading and writing are so beneficial for school and for life. How much you read and write today, will somehow affect your future job, family, position, or even your salary.
Reading has at all times and in all ages been a source of knowledge, of happiness, of pleasure and even moral courage. In today's world with so much more to know and to learn and also the need for a conscious effort to conquer the divisive forces, the importance of reading has increased. In the olden days if reading was not cultivated or encouraged, there was a substitute for it in the religious sermon and in the oral tradition. The practice of telling stories at bed time compensated to some extent for the lack of reading. In the nineteenth century Victorian households used to get together for an hour or so in the evenings and listen to books being read aloud. But today we not only read, we also want to read more and more and catch up