I believe that readicide is a
problem in schools. Schools are creating students who have no clue what the real
meaning of reading is. Schools are creating students who are growing up hating
and despising the thought of picking up a book and reading it. Students should want to read. They should not feel as
if reading is a tedious task. But, it has become a tedious task. Schools are
assign books that students feel are “unimportant” or “stupid” because they’re
old. Ok, I get that. But, why don’t schools take out things like Romeo and
Juliet for a book that has a similar plot line and isn’t as hard to comprehend.
Taking out Shakespeare would make English class a little more bearable.
Students don’t understand what he’s saying without having to buy a translated
version of his plays. Old English isn’t around for a reason, so why keep
teaching it?
I don’t think schools should add more genre
fiction to the curriculum. I think that schools should add more passion to
their reading assignments. Yes, most teachers love the book that they’ll be
teaching but, their students may not because of the amount of extra work that
comes with reading (Study guides, book worksheets, ect.). Extra work isn’t
helping this generation of students love reading because no matter what
teachers do to show how amazing a book is, the students will hate every moment
they have to write down what happened in every page they read. Reading should
be a fun, relaxing thing. Not this “you must read chapters 4-8 tonight and be
ready for a quiz tomorrow” type of reading. I know as a student, that if I’m being
told to do something in that sort of tone, odds are I won’t pick that book up
at all. Teachers need to adapt with their students age.
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