Posted on 04/18/2016 3:18:12 PM PDT by daisy12
University students are increasingly unable to read a whole book as they simply dont have the concentration spans required, nor are they able to understand complex, nuanced arguments, academics have said.
Lecturers at leading British universities are having to actively encourage students to read beyond the set texts, and have noticed that students are increasingly unwilling to read whole texts. They say they believe internet culture is to blame, as young people nowadays are used to receiving arguments in the form of 800-1000 word articles. Anything beyond that, they say, is now proving too challenging.
Incoming undergraduates have had their attention habits fashioned in a totally different world than that of those who are teaching them, Tamson Pietsch, fellow in history at the University of Sydney told Times Higher Education (THE).
This can lead to a clash of expectations and also of abilities on both sides of the equation. In many ways, incoming students absorb information quickly, they understand the power of images, and are adept at moving between different types of sources and platforms. They are perhaps less used to concentrating for long periods of time and working through the nuances of an argument developed over the course of many pages.
Jenny Pickerill, professor in environmental geography at the University of Sheffield, said of full length books: students struggle with them, saying the language or concepts are too hard.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
I think I first played it on an Apple II with a green monochrome screen.....sometime in the early 80s.
I recall reading them, but it’s been so long there’s no way I can even begin to recall the stories or even if I enjoyed them.
By any chance did you get a chance to see any of the TV series that was done by MTV, “The Elfstones of Shanara?” It was actually pretty good, once you got past the “teen angst” that they added to attract their demographic viewers. But the story was pretty good, and some of the characters, in particular Alanon the Druid, were performed quite well.
Mark
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