Did you know ...
17.5% of Chatham County adults didn’t graduate from high school; 7% didn’t make it to ninth grade; In some townships, the number of residents without a high school diploma is even higher: Matthews Township (Siler City at 39.9% and Cape Fear Township (Moncure) with 23.9%. – American Community Survey
Nearly one-fourth of Chatham County adults who didn’t graduate from high school live in poverty. – Census Bureau’s American Community Survey
50% of adults in North Carolina are unable to obtain a high school
diploma, struggle to secure a livable wage for themselves and their
families, and do not have access to adequate health care because they
lack necessary reading and life skills. – Gov. Beverly Perdue, 2009 proclamation for Literacy Awareness Month
View this ABC News report on Illiteracy in America (ABCNews February 25, 2008)
The greatest predictor of a child’s future academic success is the literacy level of the child’s mother. – National Institute for Literacy
There are no “typical” nonreaders. They can be businessmen,
students, farmers, housewives, truck drivers, office clerks, nurses’
aides, military personnel – anyone. They live in all kinds of
neighborhoods. – National Institute for Literacy
Older people unable to read and comprehend basic health-related
materials such as prescription bottles, appointment slips, and hospital
forms had a 50% higher mortality rate during a five-year study than
people with adequate reading skills. – Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine
Half of the nation’s chronically unemployed are not functionally literate. – Ohio Literacy Resource Center
Many people with low literacy do not perceive their skills as a
problem until a crisis such as the loss of a job, a child’s need for
help with school, or a health care emergency makes them aware of their
literacy needs.” – National Coalition for Literacy
Of the 2 million immigrants who come to the U.S. each year, about
50% have low literacy levels and lack a high school education and
English language skills, severely limiting their access to jobs and job
training, college, and citizenship." – National Commission on Adult Literacy
On average, the more education a person has, the less likely that person will go to prison or back to prison. – National Commission on Adult Literacy’s June 2008 report: Reach Higher, America Overcoming Crisis in the U.S. Workforce
We face an adult education crisis that permeates every dimension of
American life. It saps the energy and capability of our people, our
economy, and our institutions. It feeds our national unemployment, the
welfare rolls, and our correctional institutions. It literally robs
America of its future. If we fail to act, not only will we lose our
ability to compete in the world marketplace, we will be unable to
maintain our standard of living, preserve our democratic principles, or
protect national security. – National Commission on Adult Literacy report: Reach Higher
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