Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I think about what makes a successful person, almost everyone is a voracious reader of news as well as books for pleasure. I wish there was a way to reward this behavior in the college process. (I feel like kids can just lie if asked how many books they have read this year or what they have read lately). But my hunch is that kids who read a lot do better in college and in life.
Amy I wrong in thinking this important habit doesn’t seem to matter these days?
It makes a difference in how they perform in school and on standardized tests.
Anonymous wrote:When I think about what makes a successful person, almost everyone is a voracious reader of news as well as books for pleasure. I wish there was a way to reward this behavior in the college process. (I feel like kids can just lie if asked how many books they have read this year or what they have read lately). But my hunch is that kids who read a lot do better in college and in life.
Amy I wrong in thinking this important habit doesn’t seem to matter these days?
Anonymous wrote:My college sophomore always was and still is a huge reader. He reads a ton of history books. He has a book with him when waiting for appointments, etc. He is a deep thinker, always praised by teachers/profs, etc. He had perfect scores in reading and English first try, no prep on ACT. He is very strong in stem too- but the reading helps in all areas.
My college senior reads a ton for school, but much less outside of school assignments. I do think iPhone/social media plays into this and we have always had limits- so it’s not as bad as most of his friends.
Reading does make smarter people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are deeper thinkers, and write better essays.
That's how they are rewarded.
I wish that were the case but most of the essays are so short that a non-reader could probably write a great essay (not to mention AI the thing).
Anonymous wrote:They are deeper thinkers, and write better essays.
That's how they are rewarded.