There is an ongoing debate about the balance between fiction and non-fiction in school curriculums. Some argue that students should spend more time reading fiction to foster skills such as empathy, while others believe that non-fiction is more important to learn essential facts about the world. In your opinion, should schools spend more time allowing students to read fiction rather than just books about facts?
☆Let’s Think
1.
What
other benefits than strengthening empathy does reading fiction provides?
2.
Share
your experience of learning from a non-fiction book.
☆Hints for Points
Fiction
1. Stories and dramas are necessary
to make life rich and enjoyable.
2. Fiction is good for emotional
education. Students get, even partially, the brain wiring of the author, a
great intellect, as well as the author’s vocabulary, world view, attitude, and
so on.
3. Good fiction reflects reality
and tell the truth in the way non-fiction cannot.
4. A novel is in itself is a raw
data of a period of history.
Non-fiction
1.
Non-fiction
books have more information than fiction. Students need to learn more about the
real world to make the most out of life, to avoid problems, and to help those
who are in trouble.
2.
Students
may not read non-fiction after graduation, so they should be assigned to read
as many non-fiction books related to their studies as possible while at school.
3.
“In
the end, fiction doesn’t go beyond the author’s world, while non-fiction does.”
– Takashi Tachibana, an award-winning journalist, who kept reading fiction all
day every day for 8 years at Tokyo University
☆Sample Answer
【Thesis】I agree with Ella in that
fiction provides insights into real events and real people. People tend to
think that fiction is for emotional education for children, and teens and young
adults, whose mentality and personality are almost established, don’t need it
in their curriculum. However, I think reading fiction is even more important in
higher grades because of simulated experience it gives to the reader.
【Supporting Details】Students need the power of
fiction to maintain their interest in the subjects that become increasingly complicated
and layered as grades go up. Fiction helps relive the real events or issues
effectively, and thus it makes students assimilate and feel related to them. Stories
of victims of war or pollution, for instance, help students experience the
tragedies vicariously and this leads them to understandings of and interest in
the issue. In other words, students can acquire imagination necessary to learn
advanced level subjects by reading fiction.
【Counterargument-treatment】Certainly, fiction has its
limits. It cannot beat the value of non-fiction as facts. But good novels are
not fantasies or delusions. They usually have models in the real world. The
difference from non-fiction is that authors filter and process the reality into
the truth just as artists filter the image a camera lens projects on the film
to capture the intrinsic nature of the matter and process it into what is
universal and eternal or something new. As a result, although fiction doesn’t
have all the information non-fiction has and it contains the author’s imagination,
it often comes closer to the reality than non-fiction does.
【Conclusion】Although the risks of confusion
between facts and fantasy always exist, the tremendous power of fiction that helps
students sympathize with those involved and have insights of the issue cannot
be ignored. If used carefully, it will boost the students’ studies. Therefore, I think fiction should be used
more at school, especially in the advanced level. (314 words)
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