Metro
Effective Reading Culture Panacea For Social Vices – Stakeholders
One of the greatest disincentives to full maximization of youth potentials in our society is the depletion of creative values through the abuse of the mind which is the fundamental resource base. The fragility and vulnerability of the mind therefore require conscious efforts to cultivate it for positive impact. Unfortunately most youth today seem to have lost their minds to boredom which is evidently the disease of the age.
The consequences of this social misadventure are not farfetched; unbridled crime, craving for lawlessness, culpable indolence, brain drain among others social vices.
As part of measures of curbing the menace of boredom and other attendant vices, stakeholders have called for the rejuvenation of the faltering reading culture among youths.
A cross section of stakeholders who spoke with The Tide Metro in a random interview, traced the rot in our social systems to dearth of intellectual acumen on the path of youth.
Consequently, the stakeholders want the reading culture to be actively revitalized to make our youth productive and economically viable. Andy Akpotive, a Public affairs analyst, who spoke with The Tide Metro decried the decline in the reading culture in the society.
He pointed out that today’s youth have been carried away by some trappings that they neglect the key objective of developing themselves for the challenges of the future.
According to the analyst, the absence of a good reading culture has produced half baked graduates in the society who could barely write a good sentence or communicate effectively.
To avert the rot in our educational system, Akpotive, said debating and reading clubs should be fully reintroduced in schools.
He said, “greatness cannot be attained through loyalty to a political systems, or cutting corners, greatness comes through diligence, and hard work, the secret of greatmen are buried in books, and only by reading and acquiring knowledge can one be truly great.”
Akpotive also called for the offering of special grants to writers as incentives to enable them develop good literary works. He regretted that although Nigeria was fecund with literary creativity the world of arts, particularly in writing was yet to be fully developed.
On his part, Mr Austin Nwaeze, the founder and director of Garden City Library Project, called for investment in library services to boost reading culture among youth. Nwaeze who runs a free library services with a huge collection of books, called for Public/Private sector partnership in the promotion of reading culture; ‘I been at the forefront of promoting the reading culture for the past decades through my personal efforts, I am passionate about mobilizing young minds to read because the future lies in their abilities to develop their minds, but my personal efforts has some limits, I want to use this opportunity to call government and key stakeholders, particularly the multinationals to complement our private efforts to revive the reading culture”.
Nwaeze who is also Director of Project Read advocacy, said he had over the years floated a mobile children and adult libraries in \port Harcourt and its metropolis, and solicited for partnership to reach out more people, particularly within the rural areas.
Dr Mbee Daniel, a lecturer at the University of Port Harcourt, who spoke with the Tide Metro, called for the proper equipping of public libraries across the state with recreational facilities to create good ambience for people to read.
Daniel said the advent of the social media have also to a large extent impeded the art of writing and reading, as most people now resort to abbreviations, making them to barely write good essays.
On her part, Ijeoma Aguba, the coordinator get Nigeria reading again said, reading was essential to human development as “a mind that is not functionally equipped through reading is inured to vices”.
She said the target of the get Nigeria Reading Project, was children. “When you get them at the Kindergarten level, the culture of reading stuck. Parents, should also encourage their children to read by buying them books as presents and not toy guns”.