I feel like just knowing that, will explain a lot about America and her way of life.

    • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      3 years ago

      they're able to identify certain words and can possibly phonetically understand unfamiliar words if you give them a minute to say it out loud. They're also often able to recognize numbers without problem.

      A lot of the folk I worked with got help from their kids or from something like a Wal-Mart tax prep service. Usually they're able to write their own name, recite the alphabet, and perhaps recognize every word in a sentence like "My dog is brown." The technique I usually saw was they'd have a repository in their heads of the first few letters of a word, usually two or three, then assume the word is one they've memorized. So I had a few students who would struggle at first to see the distinction between words like trim and train, or table and taken. In terms of social media, it was pretty common for the students to ask me how to use Facebook, so I'm going to guess the answer is they either get help from their family or they simply don't use it at all.

    • NaturalsNotInIt [any]
      ·
      3 years ago

      A lot of people who struggle with literacy simply "get by". They get relatives to help them out with tax forms or go to a tax prep service. On the job, they rely on coworkers to get them info or they do their best to try to read signs and instructions. It's rare that someone just "can't read" unless they don't speak English at all, usually it's just that they can't make out that many words and can't make sense of more complex writing. That's why pictures are so important for safety/warning signs because even someone who struggles with reading can use context clues around a big red X.