Masters of Disguise
Seeds of Literacy: 2.29.2016 by Alexandria Marshall
Have you ever met someone and knew they were
struggling in life with low literacy skills?
You probably don’t think that you have. Yet 36 million adults are estimated to have
less-than-basic literacy skills, while almost 30% of adults have numeracy
skills that max out at counting and basic arithmetic.
So how is it possible that so many millions of
Americans have such low literacy and yet no one sees it?
The answer is that you likely have looked
into the face of low literacy and just didn’t know it.
“Low literacy adults are masters of disguise,”
wrote ProLiteracy President and CEO Kevin Morgan during a recent Reddit Ask-Me-Anything session on adult
literacy. “You can work with someone, know a family member or friend and never
suspect they have low literacy skills.”
He’s absolutely right. Perhaps the reason people
often have a hard time realizing the extent of the adult literacy problem in
America is that we don’t see it — or, at least, we don’t think we see
it.
Low literacy isn’t physically obvious, and from a
lifetime of dealing with it, adults adapt to hide it. They develop tactics to
divert attention away from their struggle and to cover up their inability to
read well, or read at all. They may enlist the help of a trusted friend or
family member to read and fill out forms for them, or they may recognize things
by sight and iconography instead of by word. Having low literacy doesn’t mean a
person isn’t smart, and their ability to employ such tactics speaks to how
resourceful they are.
Low adult literacy is also not a problem we, as a
society, really look for. How often do you meet an adult and ask yourself if
they know how to write a sentence or multiply numbers? We make assumptions that
adults already know how to read and write proficiently, and easily accept the disguise
put on by low-literate adults.
But to the tens of millions of low-literate
adults, their struggle is anything but invisible.
We’ve probably all met a low-literate adult. They
are our family members, our coworkers, even our teachers. When they reach out for help —
because it’s truly never too late to gain vital literacy skills — we need to be
there to reach back.
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