消费者健康信息

Pub Date : 2014-07-23 DOI:10.5596/C09-032
M. Wise
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引用次数: 0

摘要

www.ccl-cca.ca/literacy您地区的哪一部分将从家庭识字计划中获益最多?你们图书馆周围地区的平均文化水平是多少?这种关于不同社区识字率的细粒度数据现在可以免费获得。加拿大学习委员会推出了一个交互式在线地图,显示了全国5200个城市、城镇和社区的成人散文读写水平。该地图允许你放大并获得特定社区的数据,或者缩小并看到一个城市、城镇或地区内不同文化水平的拼凑。该地图使用了2003年国际成人识字和生活技能调查(IALSS)的数据,该调查由加拿大统计局和经济合作与发展组织(OECD)进行,并将其与2006年人口普查数据相结合。它显示了散文素养的水平——也就是说,理解和使用文本信息所需的知识和技能,比如新闻故事、社论、诗歌和小说。这张地图说明了一个发人深省的问题。根据2003年的数据,近一半的加拿大成年人的文化水平较低(2级或以下),这意味着他们对当前社会的需求准备不足。你们很多人都知道,成人的读写能力通常是用1到5的等级来衡量的。3级被广泛认为是应对全球知识经济需求的最低门槛。近一半的人口无法应付今天的识字要求,这应该是一个警钟,特别是对我们这些关心健康的人来说。
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Consumer health information
www.ccl-cca.ca/literacy What part of your district would benefit most from a family literacy program? What’s the average literacy level in the area surrounding your library? This kind of granular data on literacy levels across different communities is now available, for free. The Canadian Council on Learning has launched an interactive online map that shows adult prose literacy levels in 52 200 cities, towns, and communities across the country. The map allows you to zoom in and get data on a particular neighbourhood or zoom out and see the patchwork of different literacy levels within a city, town, or region. The map uses data from the 2003 International Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey (IALSS), which was conducted by Statistics Canada and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and combines it with 2006 Census data. It displays levels of prose literacy — that is, the knowledge and skills needed to understand and use information from text, such as news stories, editorials, poems, and fiction. The map drives home a sobering point. According to the 2003 data, nearly half of all Canadian adults have low literacy levels (level 2 or below), meaning they are ill prepared for the current demands of society. As many of you know, adult literacy is often measured on a prose literacy scale of 1 to 5. Level 3 is widely considered to be the minimum threshold for coping with the demands of the global knowledge-based economy. That nearly half the population can’t cope with today’s literacy demands should be a wake-up call, especially for those of us concerned with health.
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