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2006/04/06

Media, Education, and Voting

Update-apparently there some problems with the links. I've psated the articles below.

Please respond to the following articles:

Here's the first.

Meghan Daum:
Hedgehog nation
April 1, 2006


I AM HEREBY declaring the Information Age a complete bust. We may tell ourselves that, thanks to the Internet, cellphones, the 24-hour news cycle and e-mail updates from MoveOn.org, there's no piece of information that escapes our notice. But I am living proof that this isn't true. Take last weekend's immigration rally in downtown L.A., which, as we all know by now, drew crowds of more than half a million. I can't believe I'm admitting this in print, but as of Saturday morning, I didn't know about it. I found out when I stepped outside to get the newspaper and ran into my neighbor, who was wearing a white "Unite Now" T-shirt.

"Going to the march?" he asked me.

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"What march?" I asked.

He looked at me as if I'd just returned from Paris and mentioned that I didn't notice the Eiffel Tower.

As ashamed as I was, it turned out that plenty of other people hadn't gotten the memo either. My sample of the clueless included a lawyer-turned-history professor, an Ivy League-educated writer and, ahem, a news producer. Another friend said she'd heard about the rally but only in the context of warnings about traffic snarls. These are all people who spend much of the day on the Internet, often while listening to news programs on public radio and talking on the phone with friends and associates who don't exactly live in caves.

Somehow I, like so many others, managed to miss the coverage preceding the event. Was this because I was too busy reading Yahoo news items about Jessica Simpson and obscure Australian journal articles about "Darwinian aesthetics"? Well, actually, yes.

Not to throw around 10-cent aphorisms like "the more you learn, the less you know," but I daresay the reason some of us miss major news is because there's just too much news out there. The more information that becomes available, the less informed we are.

I blame this phenomenon on many things — Wikipedia, Anderson Cooper, holiday newsletters from relatives who share the details of their diverticulitis — but whatever the source, I suspect the root cause is the over-customization of information. We may pat ourselves on the backs for being discerning consumers of news, but that very discernment can make us kind of stupid. Think of it as intellectual provincialism. Now that we can tailor our information streams by programming our TiVos, signing up for newsgroups and clicking past boring front-page stories in favor of juicier dispatches about real estate, we can top off our data reserves without the bother of actually learning anything new.

If the old-fashioned way of getting news — three networks, the morning newspaper and (for that rarified but very vocal minority) a daily dose of "All Things Considered" — was an inch deep and a mile wide, today's acquisition process is like researching a dissertation. Instead of branching out, we burrow deep. It's like a peculiar twist on the dichotomy between Isaiah Berlin's famous concept of the fox, "who knows many things," and the hedgehog, "who knows one big thing." Even though we have ample opportunity to know a little (even a lot) about everything a search engine turns up, we tend to sift through all that information to learn more about the stuff we're already interested in. The result is that we've become a nation of hedgehogs.

This isn't the usual take on modern life. If there's any notion that culture critics hold dear, it's the idea that headlines have taken the place of stories and "analysis" is another word for pundits who walk off Sunday morning news shows in a huff. There's some truth to that, but isn't it also possible that the overload of information is gradually reprogramming our minds so that we're actually thinking deeper about a narrower range of topics?

That might explain the look of horror on my neighbor's face. As it happens, he and his wife are professional labor organizers — in other words, dedicated hedgehogs when it comes to immigration issues. And even though I've often thought of myself as a fox (good dinner party conversationalist, miserable academic), it was only then, standing in my yard in my bathrobe and feeling like the neighborhood numskull, that I realized I'm a hedgehog too.

If he'd asked me about German cinema, I would have knocked his socks off (of course, 500,000 people don't show up at German film festivals). As it is, I'm still trying to get over my embarrassment. I never thought I'd say this, but maybe it's time we all got in touch with our inner fox — at least a little. Hedgehogs may be brainier in the strict sense, but it's hard to squeeze those prickly spines into a "Unite Now" T-shirt.


Here's the second.

Why Johnny can't be bothered

By Thomas Geoghegan, a Chicago attorney and author, and James Warren, a Tribune deputy managing editor

April 4, 2006

This story contains corrected material, published April 5, 2006. The story as published misquoted Thomas Jefferson.

Also, a photograph that accompanied the article was incorrectly displayed; the visual image was flopped, or reversed. The picture showed a boy reading a newspaper, circa 1940s.

In Chicago for their annual gathering, the nation's newspaper publishers should sit down with some politicians and school principals. All three parties are impacted by the real Culture War. Not the one between left and right over gays, guns and abortion, but the one between the "we" who still read a daily paper and those who don't.

"My wife and I read three papers a day," says a law professor friend. "But my daughter who's in graduate school, not a one. And my son, 19, doesn't read a paper at all either."

Yes, newspaper reading has dropped around the world. But that's a half-truth at best. The share of Germans over the age of 14 who scan a daily paper is nearly 80 percent. The French and Scandinavians, among others, read much more than we do too.

So don't be so quick to blame the Internet, TV news, iPods, IMing or even unrelenting attacks on the evil "mainstream media." It's too facile. Other countries have most of that, as well as Britney Spears, nincompoop shock jocks and pro wrestling. But newspaper reading in those countries hasn't collapsed as far as it has here.

The crisis in America, where ironically we have the world's highest rate of bachelor's degrees, is that if people don't read papers, they generally won't vote. The crisis of the press here is a crisis of democracy too. The single best indicator of whether someone votes is whether he reads a paper, according to political scientist Martin P. Wattenberg in his book, "Where Have All the Voters Gone?" But the converse is also true. Whether one votes is a much better indicator than a college degree as to whether one is reading a daily paper.

The reaction between these two trends, a decline in voting and the decline in the reading of dailies, is what scientists call autocatalytic. One drives the other in a downward spiral. The under-30 young read far less, and vote far less--and according to their teachers, have fewer opinions. Not reading, not having political sentiments, they aren't especially capable of voting intelligently anyway.

What can we do now?

Let's start with public education. In the Northwest Ordnance of 1787, Thomas Jefferson slipped in a famous mandate of public schools for basically one reason: to turn kids into citizens able to govern themselves. But we take democracy for granted. The founders could not. No one had ever attempted such a huge experiment: to test whether the common people could manage the public business.

Critical to public education was telling children not that they merely could but that they had to vote: It was a moral obligation. And to exercise that obligation, they had to be literate enough to read a paper. If they didn't read a paper, they couldn't follow a legal argument and sit on a jury. Unless they read a paper, they couldn't cast a vote; it would be too dangerous to the country. Jefferson opined, "... and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them." The quotation is attributed to a letter by Jefferson found in "The Papers of Thomas Jefferson," according to A Dictionary of Quotations, Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress. (This paragraph as published has been corrected in this text.)

But teaching students to read a paper is virtually the last thing anyone in America expects from a school, especially in this test-driven era of No Child Left Behind. The purpose of education is now largely vocational or economic, preparing students for job and career, while filling a dizzying array of state and local mandates, including AIDS awareness, obesity prevention, anti-bullying and fire-safety programs. The civics element is gone. And the industry's traditional link to schools, its Newspaper in Education program, evolved into more of a gambit to boost circulation than a means of thoughtful civics instruction.

History, civics and other "political" subjects need to play a big role not just for the college-bound but also the armies who will at most have high school diplomas. A year ago the Chicago Tribune ran an estimate that only 47 percent of high school graduates from public schools in Chicago went on to any college work at all, and most of those soon dropped out. They depart having been cheated out of the civic skills they need to vote and take part in the great policy debates over allocation of the country's income (Social Security, welfare reform, Medicare, etc.).

There are many ways to recast public education to save the press and the democracy. One approach is four years of civics and four years of American history. "Four years of civics" might include one old-fashioned civics course, a current-events course, a course on problems of American democracy, and a final course that involves in-service learning and volunteer work.

Another approach would be for the state school system to publish a "student paper" that is given every day to students. The paper would consist of articles taken from newspapers around the state. The plan here is to turn the reading of the paper into a daily habit.

If publishers want to save themselves from long-term demise, they must consider reinvention of their papers' content and dramatic hikes in traditionally anemic marketing and promotion efforts. But they should also push for a new public education quite different from that envisioned by No Child Left Behind.

Worry a bit less about the Wall Street analysts and a bit more about the principals and the taxpayers on the local school boards. Sit down with them, but with a bit of care since school leaders rightfully feel put upon by too many mandates. And think about paying something for civics courses, which may turn out your future readers. It's the democratic thing to do--and maybe the industry's best hope to stay alive, even flourish.


Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune

12 Comments:

At 9:35 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The decision of which one is better depends on what one’s importance to his or her life is. If one’s life is depended on entertainment, then the first article is right for him or her. If one’s life is depended on news, then the second article is suits for him or her. In my opinion, I agree in both articles because both articles elaborate well with ideas. Since technology is growing and improving every year, people should start using computer, television, and other technology to learn from it. Television had more advantage than newspaper because it is easier and faster to broadcast events on television than wait for the next day’s newspaper to be sent to each house. At the same time, I agree that people should read newspaper to be updated about the current events. It may not be as current as the ones on the television, but people do get more educated by reading than watching and listening to the television. Students who read more do better in school, when they read the newspaper; they improve the writing and reading skills in school. It depends on one’s circumstance, but this my opinion about the media and the newspapers.

 
At 10:00 PM, Blogger enriqueapblog said...

Response to Articles

1) First of all, I found this article quite interesting. I really liked the way he began his story by going straight to his message in the first paragraph. He mentioned that with all the new ways of informing ourselves with news, such as the internet etc., that one could not possibly miss out on something as big as the immigration rally in L.A., which he embarrassingly confessed he did. He blames all the distractions around us, such as “the Yahoo news items about Jessica Simpson,” for him not knowing about it. I fully agree with his statement. It is true that in today’s society we care more about celebrities than politics or other important incidents. I believe that we have to blame the media for that problem, mainly because they throw at us only the things they know will grab our attention. Also, I fully agree with his statement about the “overload of information that is gradually reprogramming our minds so that we’re actually thinking deeper about a narrower range of topics.” Overall, I believe our society has changed, in terms of the unnecessary news the T.V. or radio throws at us.

2) One thing that I enjoyed about this article was the use of statistics. With the usage of numbers and facts, his message came across more effective. I fully agree with his argument about the people in today’s society not reading the daily newspaper which according to Martin P. Wattenberg, “it is the best indicator of whether someone votes or not.” With this though, you have to consider all the distractions that we have. The second form of recasting public education to save the press he mentioned, I believe won’t work. By having a “student paper” at our school, it would be too much of a hassle. I personally would enjoy it because the paper contains valuable information about incidents occurring in our nation. Also, if we begin that process now, we won’t break into the habit, mainly because we aren’t used to it, and I believe it would take a long time to do so. Overall, I fully agree with this well written article about our nations decline in voting and reading the daily newspaper.

 
At 11:36 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

First Article

I completely agree with Meghan’s point. Today, we have discovered many ways of shortening the information that we discover in order to reach a specific area of information. For example, people want to research a specific topic on football. Instead of finding a book, which covers a general perspective of football and contains that specific topic, they go onto the Internet to find that topic. The good side about the Internet is the fact that it makes it easier to find the information specifically focused on that topic. The bad side about this is that we do not get the chance to analyze other sides of football since the Internet only finds the information that we need. We are no longer forced to read about other information in order to reach a specific set of information. Our knowledge becomes limited to what we only want to know. Therefore, we should strive to learn more than we should to break those limits.

Second Article

I agree with this article. Reading the paper is a very important daily task that our younger society should get familiar with. In fact, it is what gives life to our democracy. People need to know current events in order to establish strong opinions, which could create a better country. If our people did not have a single care for our country’s events and preferred to live ignorantly within our nation, they would no longer vote to control the direction the country will go in. By voting for a particular president, we are setting a course for our country to travel in. The course will determine how our national and international problems will be resolved. If our people are not educated enough to create good choices, we could shift our country into a terrible pathway, and our democracy could go to ruins.

 
At 10:15 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

The first article brought up many good points that I hadn't really thought about before reading it. New technology, including the internet makes so much information available to the public, that you can find just about any piece of information or new, no matter how obscure it may be. The main point that the author of the article tries to prove is that this ability to find all of this information clouds the public's minds and distracts them from the news and information that is truly important. If everyone is too busy reading articles about celebrities or becomes an expert on some small hobby that a select few people participate in, then they all miss the bigger picture. I think that it is important for people to be able to search for that information that isn't all that well-known, but at the same time I think people may be informed of the more important ongoing events if they are forced to see the bigger picture when they read their news. It all really comes down to whether or not you believe as an individual whether people are smart enough to have control over which news they receive. Can people resist just reading the gossip and their own personal interests long enough to make sure that they are informed about what is going on in the world? Or do people have to find out by seeing it with no choice, such as on the front page of a newspaper where you can't avoid seeing it?


I found the second article very interesting. The author related the importance of reading a newspaper daily with democracy in the United States. From the information he found, more and more young people under the age of 30 are not reading as many newspapers. This same age group has also become the group of Americans with the least amount of voting participation. The author of the article seemed to think that if an individual doesn’t read newspapers that can show you different opinions about politics and ongoing events in the world, then those individuals will not be able to form their own opinions. This makes more and more Americans indifferent to voting and what will become of their country. I think that this is a very scary thought. The kind of e\democracy that we have in the United States of America is irreplaceable and while many countries have tried to imitate our government, none have become as functional and powerful as our own. If the future generations of America begin to take this fact for granted and stop taking care of democracy, then it will eventually fall apart and everything that our forefathers worked for will be gone just like that. However, I also believe that it is not too late. It is obvious, just by the publication of this article, that Americans are realizing that something is wrong in our society, and if we can fix the problems, and make the youth of America care again, then we will be able to keep the democracy that we all hold so dearly alive and well.

 
At 10:26 AM, Blogger Ryan Maxwell said...

The two articles both examine the effect of media on education and everyday life. The first is mainly focused on the sheer amount of information while the second focuses on the type of media being absorbed by the public. The author of the first article is mainly concerned with haveing a wide range of news. The way the news is now organized, you can exclusively zoom in on one branch of it to the exclusion of others. When you do this you miss vital information concerning current events. The author is probably also living under a rock in order to have not heard about the immigration riots. The problem she is describing does not exist in society as a whole, but in herself. It is her problem that she is not accessing the news and her issue is not worthy of a news story. The second article is much more worthy. The author's main concern is the type of media being looked at. He notices the trend between the increasing digitalazation of the media and the apparent lack of knowledge of current events. With a paper you have an in depth analysis of a variety of topics. Often with television news you really get very little news. The information given for each story is very brief and a lot of the television news concerns the newscaster joking around with eachother and too much time discussing the whether. The author also notices a correlation between whether one reads the newspaper and whether he votes. Unless pressured to vote by for a democratic canditate by Jesse Jackson or the NAACP, most voters tend to to have at least a remedial understanding of what their voting on. In order to acquire this they must remain informed on current issues that would impact their choice. Themost through way to be informed would be the newspaper. His analysis of this event is thorough and thought provoking.

 
At 12:47 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Kyle Jones

Its true, the whole lot of it, article one shows how really selective we are as a people. We become focused solely on one thing and it becomes hard for us to pry us away. Like the hedgehog we have become specialized, knowing all about only one thing, like for me, you ask me about World of Warcraft and I could give you and almost encyclopedic knowledge of the entire game. But if you asked me about the Barbie in fairytopia game I could tell you absolutely nothing. So I think it’s safe to come to the conclusion that as hedgehogs we’re becoming a quite arrogant populace, and we fit in where our area of expertise falls. We need to be more like foxes, cause all to often in this day and age you get a bum dinner party dominated by one topic of discussion!

The second article addresses the fact that less and less people are reading the daily news paper. The idea is that it is the duty of the schools to teach the masses how to read a news paper, in that it would be more beneficial in the long run. Once again I have to wholeheartedly agree. The programs in school today are there just to fill state standards and to make sure we make it to college so that then just another institute can deal with the youth. Instead of worrying about the people who cannot read to begin with we need to focus on keeping a more open gateway into the future, instead of this pen and pencil approach to school. Other countries read their daily news papers quite a bit more than we do, and its safe to assume that if we do not begin to educate ourselves further by reading the news paper we will see a dramatic decline in the intelligence of our country.

 
At 12:50 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree with both of these articles. Sometimes it seems that technoglogy leads everybody in the right direction and is the most useful tools to inform people, but really it might even deprive people of certain knowledge. Mainly because what is played up is celebrity business and what goes on in Iraq, not the small town Orange County events, which might explain why the man from the first article didnt hear of the march. Also the second article is very correct. Many kids,teens, and even some adults do not read the newspapers. This I believe is because they rely heavily on reading updates through emails, websites, or text messages on cell phones. SO that relates back to the first article. The new technology leads to peoples uninterest towards newspapers.

 
At 12:55 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1. In my opinion, this article states the truth in that the great bulk of US citizens do take many of the essentials for granted. The ignorance of hedgehogs is comparable to the ignorance of many in the US; a clear contrast would be the fox, who uses and appreciates all information. The United States' overwhelming culture, spurred by the diversity, causes many to glance over that which sustains them.

2. The entire issue of whether students should read newspapers in school seems ridiculous. Newspapers contain valuable information regarding world and local events that definitely should not just be ignored. However, technology will eventually overshadow the classic reading of newspapers, and in this case there is no point in forcing one to resort to old ways.

 
At 7:06 PM, Blogger enriqueapblog said...

1) First of all, I found this article quite interesting. I really liked the way he began his story by going straight to his message in the first paragraph. He mentioned that with all the new ways of informing ourselves with news, such as the internet etc., that one could not possibly miss out on something as big as the immigration rally in L.A., which he embarrassingly confessed he did. He blames all the distractions around us, such as “the Yahoo news items about Jessica Simpson,” for him not knowing about it. I fully agree with his statement. It is true that in today’s society we care more about celebrities than politics or other important incidents. I believe that we have to blame the media for that problem, mainly because they throw at us only the things they know will grab our attention. Also, I fully agree with his statement about the “overload of information that is gradually reprogramming our minds so that we’re actually thinking deeper about a narrower range of topics.” Overall, I believe our society has changed, in terms of the unnecessary news the T.V. or radio throws at us.

2) One thing that I enjoyed about this article was the use of statistics. With the usage of numbers and facts, his message came across more effective. I fully agree with his argument about the people in today’s society not reading the daily newspaper which according to Martin P. Wattenberg, “it is the best indicator of whether someone votes or not.” With this though, you have to consider all the distractions that we have. The second form of recasting public education to save the press he mentioned, I believe won’t work. By having a “student paper” at our school, it would be too much of a hassle. I personally would enjoy it because the paper contains valuable information about incidents occurring in our nation. Also, if we begin that process now, we won’t break into the habit, mainly because we aren’t used to it, and I believe it would take a long time to do so. Overall, I fully agree with this well written article about our nations decline in voting and reading the daily newspaper.

 
At 8:33 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I for one agree with the Hedgehog Nation article. Thanks to the media and cell phones people do not take the time off their daily schedules to read the newspaper. People just get their information from websites that focus mainly on one subject. We have gotten into the habit of only looking for news that interest us. “Was this because I was too busy reading Yahoo news items about Jessica Simpson”. People are more interested in useless information like, what celebrity is marring who this week. People have a tunnel vision going, like hedgehogs. They look for one particle type of news and hone in on it and block all else.

I agree with “Why Johnny Can’t Be Bothered” on a few points. The reason a lot of people do not vote is because they do not read the newspaper. They are not well informed on the problems and bills being passed. If they read a newspaper most often they would be better informed and more people would vote.

 
At 10:25 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

In the first article the author talks about not knowing about a recent political event. He complains about the facts that people looking on the internet look past important events and rather look at the information on say, pop culture. I absolutely agree with him that our nation is full of the hedgehog types. Too many people today only learn more about certain topics they already know about/the ones they are most interested in. While I don’t see the problem with that I think that you should become well informed about an array of subjects. I disagree that newspapers would help this. From my personal findings, newspapers only report on devastations, and all the bad things happening around the country and world. In the second article the author complains that too many of today’s youths don’t read the newspaper. Ill admit that I also don’t read the newspaper, except for glancing at it on the weekends, but any other time I could never find the time to sit down and read it. He suggests that perhaps the schools could publish a newspaper with clippings from newspapers around the country. I disagree that this would help. Going back to the fact that we have a nation of hedgehogs, I don’t think that kids today would bother to read this type of newspaper unless it had something that interested them in it. This however would prevent people from becoming foxes, knowledgeable in many different areas.

 
At 6:04 PM, Blogger Flushing Jie Jie said...

I keep my radio on wbai 99.5, new york's Pacifica radio station. You can hear it on the net at http://www.wbai.org

Their morning news is the best, its not the usual murmurs of the "silence of the lambs" press and media. They told us there were no weapons of mass destruction before the first marine landed.

Many people don't read their "Daily Noose" because they realized they are being lied to. They don't watch their TV news programs because they couldn't care less about Brittney's baby or the other sensationalism that we are bombarded with instead of real news. Many people in the USA don't vote for the same reason. Theres no real choice. And the media keeps pretending there is.

 

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