Guest guest Posted July 14, 2005 Report Share Posted July 14, 2005 Hey, that's an assumption a lot of people make. Reconizing it and wanting to change the way you think for the better is a rare thing. Thanks for modelling that! There are lots of studies showing the vast differences in brain structure between aliterate (people raised in a non-reading society), illiterate (people raised in a reading society who don't learn to read) and literate people. A friend of mine teaches ESL to aliterate people, mostly immigrants from Southeast Asia. Their ability to remember things is phenomenal. My friend describes the time a student of hers realized that many Westerners use shopping lists. " You mean you can't even remember what you need from the store? " she asked, laughing. One study I read about was very interesting. Four objects were shown to subjects: an axe, a saw, a screwdriver and a log. They were asked to name the object that didn't belong. The literate people all said the log as it wasn't a tool. The aliterate people all said the screwdriver because the axe and the saw were used to work with logs, but the screwdriver was used in a different setting. So the literate people showed a more abstract reasoning, but it wouldn't surprise me if none of them even knew how to swing an axe! Then you have learning disabilties, disabilities that affect how one can receive information, but don't affect intelligence, such as dyslexia. I worked with adults with learning disabiltiies as an instructional aide. One student's disabilties were extensive enough that she could not learn to read. She got all her books on tapes, dictated her tests, and graduated valedictorian of her class. So yes, literate and aliterate use very different ways of thinking, but it's not a matter of intelligence. RE: Re: PETA recommendations This was what I was trying to get at, but now I wonder what's going on inside my head because I put the two together. On some level I think that illiterate people aren't as smart as me. How embarrassed am I now? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.