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Thai Children Lag Among Asian Readers


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EDUCATION

Thai children lag among Asian readers

PUANGCHOMPOO PRASERT

The Nation

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BANGKOK: -- Thai children read only two to five books per year, while those in Singapore and Vietnam read 50-60 books annually, a specialist from the Office of the Non-Formal and Information Education (ONIE) said yesterday.

Kulthorn Lerdsuriyakul, specialist in curriculum development at the ONIE, said Thai children must be encouraged to read more books, as reading influences people's education and economic status.

He said reading should be promoted among people with low education and living in poverty, as they are the largest group in the community. Reading should be included as part of their way of life.

Authorities should start by helping them understand how reading can influence their lives and careers.

Kulthorn and Worapan Lokitsataporn, president of the Publishers and Booksellers Association of Thailand, were speaking at a news conference of Book Expo Thailand 2012 at Queen Sirikit National Convention Centre.

Worapan cited a National Statistical Office reading survey from May-June 2011 on 53,000 households. It found that 68.8 per cent of Thais aged from six years read books outside their studying and working time. The figure is higher than the record set in 2008 at 66.3 per cent.

Men have a higher proportion of readers, 69.3 per cent, while 68.3 per cent of women read. Each read for 35 minutes per day on average. Children and juveniles spent the longest time on reading - 40-41 minutes daily, while people of working age and the elderly people spent 31-32 minutes on reading a day.

Worapan said Bangkok had the most readers, 89.3 per cent, while the smallest number of readers were in the Northeast with 62.8 per cent.

Newspapers are the most popular among people who read outside their studying and working time; 63.4 per cent said they read newspapers. They were followed by textbooks, knowledge books or documents, fiction, cartoon books, books for leisure reading, magazines and textbooks - 32.4-36.6 per cent of the respondents chose them.

"New lifestyles in which people spend their time playing games or surfing the Internet will probably affect their reading time. They are likely to spend a shorter time on reading," Worapan said.

About 1,000 booths of publishers and booksellers will be available at the 17th Book Expo, the most exhibitors since the association began holding the event. About 5,000 book titles will be sold there. At least 1.5 million visitors are expected to join the event and a million books will be sold to generate revenue of Bt400 million.

The Book Expo Thailand 2012 will run from October 18-28 from 10am-9pm at Queen Sirikit National Convention Centre. For more information visit www.pubat.or.th or www.facebook.com/BookThai.

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-- The Nation 2012-10-03

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Worapan said Bangkok had the most readers, 89.3 per cent, while the smallest number of readers were in the Northeast with 62.8 per cent.

Didn't know that so many in Isaan read books. Are schoolbooks included? ----wai.gif

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The lack of reading, or books for that matter, was something I instantly noticed when I first came to Thailand. Early upon my arrival I also inquired about Thai literature and Thai novelists...only blank looks all around. As far as I can tell, the art of literature never really developed in Thailand.

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I recall some years back the Thaksin Govt saying Thailand had a literacy rate of 93%. I guess they only surveyed Bangkok. Probably also about 2,000 people by the specialist surveys they undertake. Keep the population illiterate and you can maintain control. Sad for the population at large.

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It hardly helps that there are no compulsory books included in the curriculum. It is all about reading short passages passed out in photocopy form. Give kids a 100 page book to read every 2 weeks and right something about it, and amazingly, they end up reading.

I don't think my kids have come home with a book that they have to read as part of their normal school work.

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On the extremely rare spotting of a Thai reading a book - it is a remarkable thing. I do see them browsing in a bookstore, but mostly they are standing there flipping pages in a comic style rag. They are younger Thais. It's impossible to spot an adult Thai with a book. Think about all the Thai apartments and houses you've been in. How often do you ever see a book much less a book case?

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I am surprised by this, one only has to see the difference in education between Singapore or Hong Kong to That's excellent high standards,how many air conditioners can be found in most schools, let alone books, so that students would like to come to school in the hot months.sad.png

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It doesn't help much when in Pattaya:

1) Most don't know that there is a library.

2) Of those that know most couldn't tell you where it is.

3) It is located far outside the city and far off any public transport route.

4) The mobile libraries never seem to move from their parking spot.

5) On any occasion I've visited it there are almost no people there.

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I am surprised by this, one only has to see the difference in education between Singapore or Hong Kong to That's excellent high standards,how many air conditioners can be found in most schools, let alone books, so that students would like to come to school in the hot months.sad.png

Those with the power don't want an educated populous. They want the underclass to remain stupid and manipulated.

Give em bread and games! It worked for 2000 years!

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My kids do read. English books, that is.

I wonder if the complexity of the Thai script discourages learning to read.

That's what my older daughter complains about, although she reads and writes Thai very well. She reads books and stories in Internet in English instead (kids books, not Plato's Republic). Another complaint from her is that the Thai kids books are boring.

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