Reading Is Reading Essay

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As a child growing up with a mother who was a teacher and a sister who graduated valedictorian at her high school, reading was always present. There was never a time that my mother and sister did not have their eyes glued to the tiny print in a book. I could never understand their infatuation of literature. They wanted me to love reading as much as they did. It got to the point that every holiday or birthday, I did not get awesome toys or money like normal kids. I got books. I must have been gifted about 100 books between the ages of four to fourteen. Honestly, I only read about a handful of them. It was not until I was 16 in my sophomore year of high school that I discovered my love of reading. All I can remember is sitting in my English honors class telling the teacher how reading was pointless and I would hate it for the rest of my days. She just turned around and walked over to a bookshelf, take a book off and brought it over to my desk. She told me to read it, I did. The book was Christine written by Stephen King. I found out very quickly how easy it was to lose myself within the hundreds of pages filled with tiny print. I know all to …show more content…

The future generations have so much waiting for the taking. Two major things they gain from literature is “a new set of mental skills and habits” (Burriesci 1). This allows the upcoming generations to map out their own lives, while simultaneously moving closer toward their dreams. That same dream keeps them in school and fuels the drive to accomplish anything and everything they set their minds to. However, studies have shown that “weak reading skills strongly correlate to lower academic achievement” (Burriesci 1). As a whole, our culture cannot allow this dramatic decline to continue. Without literature, these future generations will have dreams with no skills to achieve

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