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      • Illiterate is the right term. The important thing is to use it in a neutral way and not write as if illiteracy deminishes a person's value or innate intelligence.
      english.stackexchange.com/questions/216647/is-there-a-politically-correct-term-for-illiterate-people
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  2. Sep 1, 2022 · Labeling someone as “illiterate” is deficit minded - it focuses on what someone can’t do, and blames individuals for not having certain skills. Using this label shifts focus away from the real systemic issues we have around education in this country.

    • Sarah Glazer
  3. Feb 12, 2015 · But as discussed below, illiterate isn't an altogether unambiguous word either. The point of euphemistic speech is to avoid using words that some hearers might find vulgar, offensive, or otherwise unpleasant—and it can hardly be denied that, in a society that prizes literacy, illiterate has negative connotations.

  4. May 31, 2022 · Starting in school, illiteracy leads to feelings of inadequacy, shame, and isolation. Students with low levels of literacy are more likely to be chronically absent, suffer behavioral problems, and drop out of school, leading to a cascading chain reaction of negative consequences.

  5. Mar 6, 2017 · People who can’t read and write are easy to forget about entirely. Illiteracy is also culturally exclusionary: if you don’t read books or newspapers, your frames of reference become more...

    • Tom Rasmussen
  6. In general, as you're aware, calling someone illiterate is insulting. However, if you're using it in a formal or academic way to describe someone or a group of people then it would be nothing more than an accurate description and shouldn't be seen as insulting.

  7. It is a mistake to think that illiterate people don’t live all around us; they are but they are ashamed to reveal their difficulties. To find out if you know a person who is illiterate or has reading difficulties, check off the situations you have encountered from the following statements.

  8. False. 19% of Quebecers are illiterate (literacy levels -1 and 1) and 34.3% have great difficulty reading and are at literacy level 2. The latter are often referred to as functionally illiterate. These are not fictional, but actual numbers.

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