Literacy weaves itself into our lives

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Last week I encouraged you to thank a teacher. Hopefully, there was a teacher or other person in your life who taught you to love reading and/or writing.

You may remember a class that taught you things like: recognizing an author’s purpose; using context clues; seeing relationships/analogies; predicting outcomes, and more. You most likely did not appreciate learning them, but what you may or may not know is that you use those skills every day without the labels.

Think about times you have needed to evaluate a project in your home or work life. Our success often comes from learning to analyze well. Literacy weaves itself into our lives.

You may or may not remember learning about what is referred to as inferential comprehension which means understanding the author’s purpose, drawing conclusions, catching character formation, and anticipating outcome. It would be a funny world if you took everything literally and it could have some serious consequences.

Have you ever been given directions as you drive? They said, “Turn left.” To be sure you understood, you said, “Turn left?” to which they answered, “Right.” I long ago learned to say “correct” so the message didn’t get confusing and perhaps dangerous.

So you know you need more than literal interpretation to understand and you know you need more than interpreting through words, body language, etc. to see underlying meaning. The more challenging aspect of literacy is called critical evaluation, which doesn’t mean you criticize. It means as a reader you analyze ideas and information in the story or material and compare and contrast it to what you already know, and then you reason with it.

This skill can be lost if you don’t continue to work on it. It means you have to interact with the material and try to discover hidden meaning. You connect A with B and then to C, etc. Any symbol or logo needs this type of evaluation. Being literate also means choosing to make stereotypes diminish and vanish.

November is “Native American Month,” and since I belong to the Potawatomie nation, I am interested in learning about other Native American nations.  American Indians are actually part of nations, though people often think of them as tribes or they lump all Native Americans together. 

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