"Interesting that both the writers in question attended and apparently received good enough educations at public schools to write books condemning public education."
Flesch was educated in Europe... no comparison. By the time a French or German kid is six years old, you can hand him/her a book of any kind and they can read it. They won't know what all the words mean, but they CAN read it. Not so here.
Some parents actually think a poor school is doing a good job, when it was really the
parents who did the basic work without even thinking about it. My mother taught me how to read and my numbers up to 20 or so before I started school.
Ask some American kids how to spell these similar-looking words: recipe, receipt, receive, receptive, recipient. The longtime current method of teaching reading is one word at a time. Most of the time, when kids see a word like one in the list above, they're really just guessing.
Literacy in America at the time of the American Revolution was estimated to be about 90%. I believe Gatto gave an approximation of literacy in the 1880s as in the 93-97% range (when the public school system idea was put into operation). Some studies done in 1997 indicated that 21-23% of Americans were functionally illiterate.
One time I googled 'illiteracy and crime' and found that I wasn't alone in my suspicions that the two are closely related.
'Illiteracy and crime are closely related. The Department of Justice states, "The link between academic failure and delinquency, violence, and crime is
welded to reading failure." Over 70% of inmates in America's prisons cannot read above a fourth grade level.' [italics are
not mine]
http://www.begintoread.com/research/literacystatistics.htmlI also read somewhere that kids who haven't gotten a handle on reading by the time they are 13 will probably
never be functionally literate, even with special tutoring. There are parents who are so busy with their own lives, they never notice that what their kid is 'reading' has really been memorized by hearing the other kids in school read the same things over and over. Illiterate people often have very good memories, adapting what they
can do to partially make up for what they can't do.
It's past sad, it's past pathetic, it's CRIMINAL. But they've been getting away with it for about 120 years.
Most illiterate cities in America (over 50,000 pop.):
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=105x7291294Sue, Public School Enemy #1