Increase in Literacy through Mobile technology

HER Team
According to a study by UNESCO, mobile technology is facilitating reading and improving literacy in developing countries where illiteracy rates are high and physical text scarce. The report "Reading in the Mobile Era" highlights that thousands of people currently use mobile technology as a portal to text however, the study reveals another startling fact. "Findings show that in countries where illiteracy rates are high and physical text is scarce, large numbers of people read full-length books and stories on rudimentary small screen devices," said an official statement. According to the statement, there are 774 million people in the world, including 123 million youth, who can't

read or write. The study was conducted in seven developing countries: Ethiopia, Ghana, India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

Drawing on the analysis of over 4,000 surveys and corresponding qualitative interviews, the study found that a large number of people

read stories to children from mobile phones. It also inferred females read far more on mobile devices than males, and both men and women

read more cumulatively when they start reading on a mobile device.

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