Summary

A new survey by the National Center for Education Statistics reveals that 28% of U.S. adults perform at the lowest levels of literacy, up from 19% in 2017, with a growing gap between top-skilled and lowest-skilled individuals.

The Survey of Adult Skills, which compares literacy, numeracy, and problem-solving abilities across over two dozen countries, found the U.S. remained average as many nations experienced similar declines.

NCES Commissioner Peggy Carr noted these low scores indicate functional illiteracy, affecting basic life and work tasks, though the exact causes of the decline remain unclear.

  • @reddig33
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    11 day ago

    I wonder how many of these people went to public school in the US? How many are native English speakers?

      • @reddig33
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        71 day ago

        Or homeschooled? It would be interesting to see where the illiterate people are coming from. Id like to know where the failure points are.

        • Drusas
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          fedilink
          31 day ago

          I used to work in a school at a correctional facility for incarcerated teenagers and almost all of them were homeschooled. Many of them could barely read, fewer than 10% could write a coherent statement, and almost none of them had even basic math skills.