Milwaukee is 29th most literate
city in america
By OMC Staff Writers
OnMilwaukee.com
Published Dec. 5, 2005 at 11:24 a.m.
America's Most Literate Cities 2005, a
ranking based on the culture and resources for reading in the 69
largest U.S. cities, aims to rate cities not on whether their
citizens can read, but whether they do. The study, released last
week, attempts to capture one critical index of our nation's
social health-the literacy of its major cities (population of
250,000 and above).
This year's report ranks Milwaukee No. 29, up from No. 34 last
year, and ahead of many cities like New York, Tucson, Las Vegas,
Buffalo, Chicago and Jacksonville. Madison did not make the
population cut this year, but was in the top ten in past years.
The data was collected by author and education researcher John
Miller, president of Central Connecticut State University in New
Britain.
A total score for each city was tallied across six different
literacy categories: Booksellers; Educational attainment;
Internet Resources; Library Resources; Newspaper Circulation;
and Periodical publications. All categories were compared
against the city's total population.
For the Internet resource category, the study used number of
library connections, commercial and public wireless access
points per capita, online book orders and percentage of adults
who have read newspapers/sites online. Seattle, Boston and
Austin were the top three, respectively, in the category,
helping lift Seattle into the top overall spot. Seattle was
second to Minneapolis last year.
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