[Reading-hall-of-fame] A Penney for Adult Literacy
tsticht at znet.com
tsticht at znet.com
Thu Dec 3 23:26:30 GMT 2009
December 2, 2009
A Penny For Adult Literacy!
Tom Sticht
International Consultant in Adult Education
Each morning my wife and I take an early morning walk of about four miles
around our home town of El Cajon, California. This morning on our walk I
noticed something glittering on the ground. I bent down and picked it up
and found that it was a penny. But as I looked at it carefully I realized
that it was unlike any penny I had seen before.
When I got home I looked up the new penny using Google and discovered that
it was one of four new pennies for 2009 that depict different phases in the
life of Abraham Lincoln. This year I learned is the 100th anniversary of the
familiar Lincoln penny, and the 200th anniversary of Lincoln's birth. In
celebration, the U. S. mint is producing four new pennies, one of which
depicts his childhood in Kentucky (1809-1816), the second depicts his young
adult years (1816-1830), a third depicts Lincoln's working life in Illinois
(1830-1861), and the fourth depicts the incomplete U.S. capitol as it was
at Lincolns inauguration and Presidency in Washington, DC (1861-1865).
What struck me most is that the second new penny shows the young Lincoln
taking a rest during his work splitting rails for the railroad. In his
rest, Lincoln sits upon a large log with a large mallet leaning on the log
and a wedge driven upright into the log while Lincoln is sitting on the log
reading a book!
Susan Headley, writing at about.com, comments about Lincoln reading and
says, quote I love the graceful portrait of the young Lincoln, with his
tall, lanky frame relaxing as he caresses the book in his arms.end quote
I love this new penny too, because it depicts the importance of reading in
the history of the United States. Further, the picture of Lincoln lovingly
holding a book while reading can serve as a testament to the importance of
reading as an adult, and the importance of adult literacy education as a
means of stimulating reading by todays adults with the aim of an educated
citizenry capable of preserving the civil rights and freedom so necessary
to the maintenance of our democratic way of life.
What a great opportunity, now, to say, A penny for your thoughts. while
advancing adult literacy in America!
Tom Sticht
tsticht at aznet.net
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