Pew
Research: 3.23.2018
by Andrew Perrin
About
a quarter of American adults (24%) say they haven’t read a book in whole or in
part in the past year, whether in print, electronic or audio form. Who are
these non-book readers? Several demographic traits correlate with non-book
reading, Pew Research Center surveys have found. For instance, adults with a
high school degree or less are about five times as likely as college graduates
(37% vs. 7%) to report not reading books in any format in the past year. Adults
with lower levels of educational attainment are also among the least likely to own
smartphones, even as e-book reading on these devices has increased
substantially since 2011. (College-educated adults are more likely
to own these devices and use them to read e-books.)
Adults
with annual household incomes of $30,000 or less are about three times as
likely as the most affluent adults to be non-book readers (36% vs. 13%).
Hispanic adults are about twice as likely as whites (38% vs. 20%) to report not
having read a book in the past 12 months.
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MORE >>
General
America’s
Most Literate Cities, CCSU
2016: Book
Reading 2016, Pew
2013: Remodeling
Literacy Learning, Natl Center for
Literacy Education (NCLE)
2012:
Improving Adult Literacy Instruction: Options Practice Research, NAS
2007:
To Read Not To Read, NEA
2004:
Reading At Risk, NEA
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