July 11, 2003

America's most literate cities

A new survey from the University of Wisconsin (Whitewater) ranks America's 64 largest cities by their literacy "quotient." The magic number is crunched from U.S. census data, newspaper circulation rates, library resources, and number of booksellers, among other things. The top city? Minneapolis.
Unsurprisingly, L.A. isn't in the top 10 or even the top 20. It's at number 54, tied with Toledo, Ohio (gulp.)

posted by Laila Lalami at 10:11 AM

Comments

I'm not surprised by LA's rating. Is there a link to the list?

Posted by: thehiker on July 11, 2003 10:41 AM

Ooops. I'm sorry. I'll add the link.

Posted by: moorishgirl on July 11, 2003 10:42 AM

Is that the same Minneapolis that is so far north it is practically Canada? Figures.

Posted by: Larry Lurex on July 15, 2003 07:07 AM

Don't fret...the study doesn't take into account socio-economics. For example a city with a large population of poor people is likely to have a diluted average education level and education level is highly correlated with "literacy". Cities like LA and NY actually have a large populations of poor people AND large populations of non-english speakers.

Perhaps a more interesting, and more sophisticated study would try to match socio-economic groups across cities and compare their literacy...that would give a greater indication of the cities "culture" of literacty.

Posted by: Steve on July 17, 2003 10:35 AM

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