The Screen Revolution is Breaking the Thread of Literacy
If the reading revolution represented the greatest transfer of knowledge to ordinary men and women in history, the screen revolution represents the greatest theft of knowledge from ordinary people in history.
Our universities are at the front line of this crisis. They are now teaching their first truly “post-literate” cohorts of students, who have grown up almost entirely in the world of short-form video, computer games, addictive algorithms (and, increasingly, AI).
Because ubiquitous mobile internet has destroyed these students’ attention spans and restricted the growth of their vocabularies, the rich and detailed knowledge stored in books is becoming inaccessible to many of them.
[...]
The tradition of learning is like a precious golden thread of knowledge running through human history linking reader to reader through time. It last snapped during the collapse of the Western Roman Empire as the barbarian tides beat against the frontier, cities shrank and libraries burned or decayed2. As the world of Rome’s educated elite fell apart, many writers and works of literature passed out of human memory — either to be lost forever or to be rediscovered hundreds of years later in the Renaissance.
That golden thread is breaking for the second time.
Notes:
Folksonomies: literacy illiteracy populism
Taxonomies:
/art and entertainment/books and literature (0.855306)
/education/homework and study tips (0.781012)
/education/teaching and classroom resources (0.758141)
Concepts:
Literacy (0.988691): dbpedia_resource
Roman Empire (0.979204): dbpedia_resource
Western Roman Empire (0.965996): dbpedia_resource
History (0.947349): dbpedia_resource
Fall of the Western Roman Empire (0.944886): dbpedia_resource
Education (0.926374): dbpedia_resource
Rome (0.887390): dbpedia_resource
History of the world (0.786187): dbpedia_resource




