Decoding
Words
Chapter
27 (new for the 7th edition of The Home School Manual)
Author: Theodore
E. Wade, Jr. © 1998
The place of phonics
in teaching reading has always been a hot issue. And, as with most volatile
topics, intelligent answers arent quite as simple as the questions. I
hope to help you make sense out of what you hear, and to give you a basis
for sound planning in teaching your own child.
Phonics is the relationship
between the individual sounds in a word and the letters that represent
them. Everyone agrees that readers need to understand how sounds relate
to words. The issue involves how this should be taught. To explore this
area, lets first trace the history of education as it involves reading.
(You could skip it if you are in a hurry). Then we will look at the options
for teaching the basics of how to read.
How the curriculum has
changed
Looking back helps
us view modern pressures on the curriculum in perspective. An expert in
the history of education might see events a little differently from the
way I sketch them below, but this can give you a fair idea.
l
Education for the European elite class during the Middle Ages is described
in my chapter, Structure for Learning.
l
Not until after the US civil war in the 1860s did education slowly
begin to become widely available to common people. I explain a little of
this history in the chapter, Keeping Peace With School Authorities.
l
At the entrance of the 20th century, elocution or public speaking employing
gestures and vocal delivery was considered an important art. Thus the
reading program in schools employed oral reading with inflection, distinct
pronunciation and, of course, phonics. This was McGuffeys time.
l
A change occurred when good methods of standardized testing were developed,
and educational measurement promised to find scientifically accurate answers
to every problem. Researchers discovered that students well-trained in
oral reading tended to read slowly. Silent reading then became a primary
concern, and teaching techniques began emphasizing quick word recognition.
The new challenge was see and say, rather than sound it out.
l
Then the project method came into vogue. Instead of the various school
subjects taught one at a time in isolation, projects were chosen that required
application of math, reading, social studies, science, and so on. Learning
was shown to have a purpose beyond pleasing the teacher and getting good
marks on a report card. Research studies showed better achievement from
schools trying the new method, likely influenced by the higher expectation
of the students involved.
Teaching through projects
(reincarnated recently as the unit study method) is still a good idea and
works well for home schools. That is, its good if you are alert and avoid
its pitfalls. For one thing, projects dont tend to foster the reinforcement
of basic skills so essential to thorough learning and remembering. Other
points are covered elsewhere in this book.
l
As the project method was adopted far and wide, basic skills, including
reading, began to suffer. Neither word recognition nor phonics drill was
getting much attention.
l
In the 1930s and again after World War II, schools were loudly criticized
(although students were learning well) and they turned back to more basic
skill-building.
l
In 1955 Rudolph Flesch published his book, Why Johnny Cant Read.
The answer? Neglect of phonics instruction. A sequel appeared in 1979.1
l
Then in the 60s the cry became, We want it relevant, and drill (and,
to some degree, phonics) wasnt.
l
In the 70s national test scores began to slip and the watchword was back
to the basics.
l
The 80s could be characterized by a call for life application and realistic
preparation for a changing job market. Skills for processing numbers and
words were emphasized a little less.
l
In the 90s, the emphasis has been on usefulness of learning as indicated
by abilities achieved. The call for the various states to specify outcomes
in their lists of achievement objectives has been viewed with suspicion
by many who are concerned about public education. I discuss reasons for
caution in the chapter, Developing an Educational Framework.
l
In reading, whole language has been popular in many schools but has gotten
a bad reputation and phonics is again in vogue.
I have oversimplified
some of this so you can see the bigger picture. The educational pendulum
swings back and forth. Good school teachers have always worked for what
they feel is best for kids and home teachers should, too.
Incidentally, I dont
believe that a lack of relevance or a lack of basics or a lack of phonics
or too much phonics or prescribed outcomes has been the real problem in
schools. Drugs, sex, alcohol, tobacco, violence, TV, broken homes, teacher
unrest, and similar influences are certainly more prevalent now than in
the past and cant help but interfere with the operation of schools.
In spite of this,
national test scores have been steadily improving, perhaps due to better
methodology. I discuss this in chapter 2.
Clear thinking about phonics
arguments
What is the great point
of controversy about how children should be introduced to reading? Some
feel that decoding skills, specifically phonics, should be taught thoroughly
as a foundation before any reading occurs beyond words or sentences for
which the rules have been learned. By blending the succession of sounds
made by letters or letter groups children are to be able to decode words
and become good readers. Without this, it is felt that they will be poor
readers and spellers.
At the other end of
the argument are those who feel children should, with a few words recognized
from sight, begin reading words as they naturally appear in stories. This
is believed to help them learn better and faster without sacrificing the
knowledge of the combinations of letters that make up the words. New words
are recognized by comparing them with known words.
I began a serious
investigation of this whole topic in the early 80s soon after I began
writing about home education. Although I make a conscious effort to be
objective, I didnt begin my study of the reading-methods debate without
some ideas. I felt children should be taught a modest amount of phonics
as the key to decoding words. My wife is a better reader than I am, and
she studied phonics as a child. I vaguely remember a little phonics instruction
and more clearly remember learning whole words. For both of us, this was
in the early 40s. This is good personal-experience evidence, although with
a rather small sample size for research reliability. Incidentally, my reading
skill has gradually improved. It took a jump during the time of my doctoral
studies in the late 60s and again in the 80s.
As mentioned earlier,
kids are amazingly adaptable. If we can motivate them, they will learn
even with faulty methods. Still, there are principles for good learning
and we all want the best for our kids. This a call to listen with both
ears, separating fact from inference and trends from anecdotes.
As we consider a topic
of this nature, we need to cut through the emotional level of favorite
ideas and sensationalism. Reading methods are sometimes denigrated or elevated
on the basis of claims about sinister motives of teacher educators and
about particular methods of instruction. Thus people are often frightened
into choosing or avoiding particular materials or methods.
Lets look at the
options beginning with specific phonics approaches and ending with a plan
developed in recent years.
Some
home schoolers, concerned about giving their children a solid reading foundation,
like to use reprinted editions of the old McGuffey readers, evidently feeling
that in the good old days educators really knew how to teach. McGuffey
used a phonics approach although he considered whole word memorization
to be an option.2
For
several editions of The Home School Manual prior to this one, I
have included a specific phonics methods chapter by Frank Rogers with
no regrets. Lets consider the case he makes for what he calls "vertical
phonics." Rogers system follows some of the principles in the Writing
Road to Reading method. He believes, differently, however, in many
ways including, # that reading is the
road to writing, # that children should
learn the names of the letters before phonics instruction; and #
that word decoding can start with knowing the sounds of just four letters.
He is very methodical.
For him, the child is to be taught all the significant sounds of each vowel,
each consonant, and certain letter combinations in the order of how frequently
they occur in general reading material. For example, to discover the correct
sound of the letter a in a particular word, the first sound tried is the
one a makes in the word, at. If that sound combined with the other letters
doesnt make a word he or she recognizes, the sound of a in ate is tried;
then its sound as in all. The a sounds in again and any must be treated
as exceptions.
In the more popular
phonics method, the short vowel sounds (which occur in more words than
others) are taught first. To Rogers, this is like learning the names of
the presidents by memorizing all their first names, then going back to
learn the last names. We have had some good discussions about how learning
presidents is different from learning words, so he may hesitate to use
that analogy. But learning presidents names together does describe his
system. As he sees it, vertical phonics is first logical, then it works
so it must be the best.
If
we change uniforms and join the ranks of believers in the more popular
phonics methodology, we find a defensible logic fortress there, too. By
first teaching the short vowel sounds the ones occurring most often
kids can decode more words earlier. The logic of this plan isnt as nice,
but the plan seems more natural, with simpler attack rules. Without solid
research, we cannot say which is better or if it matters. As far as I know,
kids learn well either way.
Practicing
with word families is another approach. Certain letter combinations are
learned by lists like Sam, ham, jam, dam slam. This method, too, is backed
by good learning rationale, especially if taught with rhyming stories.
In one of Bobs Books booklets, which I have reviewed, I remember two lines
in a story: Into the tent the ten men went. Then to bed the ten were sent.
Even without cute stories, the supposedly dull lists of words hold a pleasant
challenge for the young student. In reading mop, drop, stop, crop, pop
I can see how the easy decoding allows the child to focus on word differences
while the op word-pair sound settles into the subconscious.
Advocates following these three approaches feel, to varying degrees, that
words should not be taught before the rules that govern them. This has
a certain logic, but so does the argument that Mark Thogmartin uses. As
you can see from his chapter, He uses childrens story books. The teacher
sits with the child and, when a word appears that doesnt make sense, assistance
is provided to help analyze it, thus teaching a sort of phonics. Interest
in the story provides incentive and a context for remembering the new word
as well as the letter patterns in it.
Neither
analogies nor success stories are reliable evidence for a best way to
learn to read. They may appear convincing but we need to be careful in
accepting them as arguments.
|
What
Phonics Instruction Does
#
A systematic and logical instructional pattern in any subject tends toward
more successful learning.
#
Children often enjoy decoding, and the experience strengthens confidence.
#
Phonics instruction builds the habit of looking closely at words. Seeing
them more clearly, the mature reader processes them more efficiently.
#
Knowing phonics principles make decoding easier.
#
Reading decoded words develops them into sight words and builds the readers
inventory.
#
Knowing more words makes it easier to recognize new ones.
|
Phonics and new information
From reading Rudolph
Fleschs 1979 book, Why Johnny Still Cant Read, I learned that
the phonics issue was emotional and political. The educators (and politicians)
hadnt listened much when his earlier book came out in 1955 and again he
was taking his case to the people. Unfortunately, politics still drives
reading methodology in US schools. More on this later.
I have questioned
the relative importance of one reading approach over another as discussed
earlier in this chapter. Now, just as Im already late in getting this
seventh edition to press, I discovered some information you may not have
known about. Id like to share some of it.
Phonics offers a nice
way to analyze words and, as we have seen. It follows logic. But some have
questioned whether it provides a suitable model for effective teaching.
In the 60s the reasonableness
of phonics instruction was questioned by Theodore Clymer.3 He took four
popular reading programs and identified 45 clearly stated phonics generalizations
in them. Then he looked at the words used in those programs. Among the
rules he listed as being taught in the four programs is When there are
two vowels, one of which is a final e, the first vowel is long and
the e is silent. It was seen to work with bone, came, date, and
time. but not with done, come, have, and were. This is not too surprising
because there are exceptions to phonics rules (all but one of his 45 have
exceptions). The problem Clymer saw was that more than a third of the words
in the texts classified as exceptions to this rather fundamental phonics
rule just described! In fact, of the 30 rules involving vowels, only half
worked 60% or more of the time in the reading texts. The more reliable
phonics rules tend to apply to the less frequently appearing patterns.
Several other researchers did studies to test his results and got similar
results.4
At about the same
time, other researchers were asking if children were even able to identify
the phonemes. D.J. Bruce5 found that none of the five- and six-year-old
children in his study were able to remove a phoneme from a given word to
make a new word. For example, they could not take the word fork, remove
the /k/ sound, and say the new word for. Seven-year-olds succeeded on an
average of 2 out of the 30 words. At eight and nine years (by the time
they would have been reading well) the kids could score 50%.
How can children figure
out new words in a story without sounding them out? In 1965, Kenneth Goodman6
took a group of children to see if they could recognize words in context.
For each child, he found a list of words on which only a few words were
not recognized. Each child was then given a story which used all the words
on his or her list. Instead of the unrecognized words, only blank lines
appeared. When reading the stories they were able to recognize, from the
context, most of the words they had not known in isolation. If they had
used letter-sound correspondences to read the words, they should have done
at least as well reading the words on the list. One might think children
would learn errors this way or that they would not easily remember the
new words, but this does not appear to be the case. Children are guided
in analyzing letter sounds for these words as they are in phonics methods.
An interesting comparison
between whole language (learning from context as well as other cues) and
phonics instruction appeared in the statistics from The National Assessment
of Educational Progress (NAEP) test of fourth-grade readers.7 Teachers
were asked to identify their teaching method as "whole language" or "phonics"
and the degree of emphasis they gave it. There was no apparent difference
between student scores of "moderate" emphasis teachers. However, scores
of students with "heavy" emphasis teachers of whole language were 9% higher
than those of heavy emphasis phonics teachers. Other studies have shown
similar results but are not as impressive statistically because they were
conducted with specific classes rather than with the masses of kids across
the nation in the NAEP. We must also not miss the point here that, although
not scoring quite as well, children with phonics instruction were learning
reasonably well.
See the notes at the
end of this chapter for more about phonics and whole language.8 It is not
a matter of one all good and the other all bad.
How are children guided
in learning from continuous (whole language) text? v We described the key
word method in the reading chapter. v "Shared reading" is another technique.
A story where illustrations that show the story are discussed, then the
teacher reads it pointing to the words. After several readings, over a
period of days, children memorize the language and "read" to the teacher
and to each other as they figure out the printed words. I have seen a variation
of this using Bible passages with words to be learned shown in bold face.
After reading a passage several times, the teacher can stop at the special
words, point to them, and have the child say them. This would logically
(but maybe not strictly the whole-language way) be done after, or in connection
with, helping the child know the sounds of the letters and letter-groups
or phonemes. v Mark Thogmartin's chapter explains his ideas for teaching.
In this initial stage
of building a sight vocabulary, I would also help my child analyze the
word by blending the letters left to right phonetically, discussing any
variations from the expected such as in the diagraphs "ch" or "th" or other
phonemes.
|
| Children in US colonial times learned form wooden paddles
similar to what is illustrated above. A printed sheet was protected by
a layer of animal horn which was adequately transparent. The devices were
called horn books. |
How children recognize
words
Research we have discussed
reveals that children learn new words better from story contexts than from
traditional phonics, although we see a little of each method in the other.
How do minds do so well at recognizing new words in print without learning
a large set of letter-phoneme relationships? Phonics advocates tend to
claim that these children are just memorizing the whole words, a seemingly
impossible task given the number of words in a good vocabulary.
Let's stop a minute
here. Learning whole words without relating to the sounds of their letters,
as was in vogue when I learned to read, is now condemned by both whole
language advocates and phonics people. This is my excuse for being a not-so-good
reader. But I lose at least part of it because my younger brother, whom
I taught to read in sessions after I came home from school, is an excellent
reader. Nice try. Well, maybe I'm a good teacher. Sorry, that's only a
distraction. Let's get back to the topic.
Until 1972, whole
language people didn't have any good explanation for how good reading happened
without traditional phonics. Then Donald MacKay9 studied speech errors
resulting in words with parts replaced from other words in the sentence.
For example, "Fix the big mixture" could become "Mix the big fixture."
The brain hears "fix" as /f/+/ix/ and "mix" as /m/+/ix/. In this type of
error, word parts tend to get hooked up in the wrong way. The slash marks
( / / ) here indicate sounds instead of printed words.
MacKay's study led
him to describe syllables in spoken words as heard into two parts: (1)
any consonant sound that comes before the vowel sound, and (2) the vowel
sound with any consonant sound that may come after it. The two parts are
now known as onset and rime. These two sound parts for fix are /f/+/ix/.
If no consonant precedes the vowel, then the word has only a rime. Let's
take a few more examples: "home school" = /h/+/ome/ /sch/+/ool/. (The h
by itself in home doesn't seem like a significant word part until we
compare with Rome which is /r/+/ome/.) "ice" is only /ice/ no onset.
The phonics breakdown
for "school" would be /s/+/k/+/oo/+/l/. Studies verify that the brain tends
to lump the phonemes into larger chunks, seeing words as onset and rime,
and to make letter-sound correspondences using them.10
Several studies have
shown that children recognize new words better from analogous words than
from their knowledge of phonics.11
In summary, rather
than seeing the letters in words as phonemes, children tend to group the
letters into onsets and rimes. The rimes are actually conceptual groups
of phonemes. When encountering new words in print, the mind remembers two
parts of syllables (and, of course, whole syllables) in known words and
judges the new word by parts from the old ones. According to the whole-language
advocates, this means that children don't need to separate all the sounds
and blend them into words before learning to read but they separate the
sounds naturally as a result of reading.12
Raw
material for learning from whole language
#
A predictable story line so attention can be on new words.
#
A few, but not too many, new words (like 1 in 20).
#
A background knowledge of the topic being discussed
#
Familiarity of the word flow of print (from being read to)
#
A relatively large sight-word vocabulary
#
The availability of many suitable children's stories.
#
Patient instruction which protects from the pitfalls. |
What happened in California?
Unless you are familiar
with the reading controversy, California might not seem relevant to reading.
The state chooses educators who are experts in their curricular areas to
set up standards for instruction. This is done every seventh year. When
the standards are out, textbook publishers get busy preparing or revising
their books because California decides what books its schools may choose
from. Being the countrys largest buyer, they have the greatest influence.
The following year the textbook lists are composed.
In 1986 the group
working on reading had been excited by the research showing the effectiveness
of whole language reading methods and had established standards accordingly.
Many citizens are advocates of traditional phonics, and Congress consequently
asked Marilyn Adams, who works with a private research firm, to find out
how to teach phonics better. Whether the method was effective was not the
question and was not part of the support gathered to back the objective
of her book, Beginning to Read.13 The research we have discussed about
the difficulty in identifying phonemes was cited, and the goal became "phonemeic
awareness."
In California, the
1994-'95 Framework Commission reaffirmed the 1986 decision noting that
teachers needed more preparation with the methods, which I assume may not
have been followed carefully especially with the appearance of the "phonemic
awareness" book.
In 1995, the results
of the recent national examinations (NAEP) was published. California was
not at the top or even near the top, although children were reading. They
were next to the bottom of the 39 participating states. No state should
be near the bottom of such a list! Or so it seems. What could be the matter?
Whole language, of course! The title of a Los Angeles Times report
expressed the prevailing sentiment. "Dole Sees Problems in Schools and
Blames Liberals."14
Conclusions were not
based on an examination of the situation.15 The following facts were ignored
in defending the move to change reading instruction: 4 The size of classes
in California was the largest or next to largest in the nation (depending
on when they were measured). 4 The state's school libraries were among
the poorest. 4 Californias Hispanic students scored the lowest of any
ethnic group in any state. Their scores influenced the average. (Scores
of Californias non-Hispanic groups matched those in other western states).
4 Twenty-five percent of the states population were new immigrants. 4
Only 2 percent of the teachers had been exposed to whole-language methods
and sample lesson plans were only in preparation. (We may infer that some
would have been teaching phonics and some would have let the children read
without proper instruction.)
California's new superintendent
of public instruction authorized a Reading Task Force under the direction
of a citizen who was prominent for promoting the phonics system. No reading
professionals and not even any teachers below the fourth grade were on
the committee. They recommended "an organized, explicit skills program
that includes phonemic awareness, phonics, and decoding skills to address
the needs of the emergent reader."
In the meantime, in
the cycle of their appointment, 110 professional educators established
the list of recommended books, and the state board, in a rather unusual
decision, promptly removed from the list books from two publishers of "predictable"
books. Then in the middle of the cycle a new group of teachers was asked
to write another framework. Next the legislature established a bill requiring
books to include phonics, and teachers to be proficient in teaching it.
Then the legislature acting through the fall of 1996, changed from their
call for "balanced" reading instruction to a position of actively discouraging
materials that enable children to figure out words in print in the natural
way.
This is the story
of California. It is why the nations schools (and those in other English-speaking
countries) have returned to a heavy emphasis on phonics.
The new phonics rationale
Before learning most
of what I have just shared, I found an article entitled, Research-Based
Reading Instruction: The Right Way.16 It sounded good but was not what
I expected. Because the author, Bill Honig, has clearly articulated the
strong phonics position in language that appeals to educators, Ill share
some of his thoughts with a few comments.
After describing the
nations reading failures, Honig explains that the solution is to be found
by looking at poor readers in the upper grades. He writes of a powerful
and persuasive consensus of educational, cognitive, and medical researchers,
as well as our best teachers, about the causes and cures of reading failure.
The more than 10,000 teachers he asked to describe them, report that they
have poor decoding skills. And he adds that they struggle with too many
individual words not knowing how to tackle new ones. They are also weak
in vocabulary, spelling, strategic reading, etc. all because of reading
failure.
Honig points out that
first grade decoding ability predicts 80 to 90% of reading comprehension
in second and third grade and 40% in the ninth grade. Predicts is the
correct word. We cannot say that good decoding causes good comprehension.
Both poor decoding and poor comprehension must, to some degree, be caused
by the same inadequate language ability. Reasons could be homes where English
is not spoken or where children are not read to, or where children are
not mature enough to begin school, etc. Also, we may assume that most of
these children would not have learned the word-attack skills promoted in
whole language programs. Likely lack of success with either type of program
would lead to poor comprehension.
According to Honig,
No method but full alphabetic screening of a word produces fast enough
retrieval for the huge numbers of words in English. . . . Context-driven
decoding, even aided by partial alphabetic clues, is too slow and unreliable
to serve as a fluent decoding tool. Although this sounds logical, those
who teach whole language carefully would disagree. The research we looked
at and more that we havent, clarifies that kids can learn well with good
whole language instruction. According to the NAEP test results, they learn
better.
My opinion
I would read to my
kids letting them watch. We would talk about the stories. I would teach
the alphabet and the sounds the letters usually represent and let them
play with plastic letters or make letters with strings of clay. When they
were ready I would let them see what words in the story were saying. I
would explain common letter-combination phonemes and let them enjoy some
phonics exercises. Then I would apply the principles we have discussed
and which Mark Thogmartin explains in his chapter including stopping to
help them sound out words. In brief, I would combine good principles from
both methods.17 And as reading began, I would apply whatever method helped.
You might do something different. Your kids will learn, too.
New, since the 7th edition
went to press
According to
a brief article in U.S. News & World Report, Specialists from
the National Research Council agree that children need both phonics and
whole language instruction. 18
Teaching your beginner
If your reader learns
to stop often (maybe not always) to figure out new words using word-attack
principles and confirmed by the context, reading skills will develop.
Lack of success may
not be from using the wrong methods. It could be a signal to wait for more
maturity. Pushing is a temptation because you want the excitement of seeing
your child learn to read. Use restraint. Pushing too soon or too hard could
bring frustration to a child who is not ready. Unless your child is way
past the typical reading age, dont hold out the carrot saying, as soon
as you can read, you can enjoy such-and-such.
Whether with traditional
phonics or a more casual approach, be diligent. You need to spend time
with your child to help him or her avoid rushing over words which are not
understood. Even with a word or two blocked out, most sentences can be
understood correctly. (The principle is called close.) If your reader
is depending on this, however, for meaning and not stopping to learn the
words, carelessness develops and reading skill is in danger.
In our teaching, we
must avoid letting kids bypass the thought process by telling them a word
before they have tried to figure it out or by letting them by with too
many wild guesses losing their opportunity to understand the sentence.
Neither should we hold them to instant perfection. We dont in any other
type of learning. In our own learning, we begin imperfectly and move to
excellence.
We must also avoid
the idea that pronouncing strings of words is reading or that pronouncing
individual words indicates knowing what they mean.
Good readers have
good habits of concentration and looking at the words. They also figure
out, perhaps unconsciously, how letter combinations affect word sounds.
Endnotes
1. In 1955, Rudolph Flesch created a great stir by his book, Why
Johnny Cant Read. He correctly condemned the look-say instructional
method of whole word memorization only, but his solution wasnt, in my
opinion, as good as it might have been.
2. McGuffeys Eclectic Primer, Rev. ed., 1909, p. iii.
3. T. Clymer, 1963. The Utility of Phonic Generalizations in the
Primary grades. The Reading Teacher 16: 252-258.
4. M. H. Bailey, 1967. The Utility of Phonic Generalizations in
Grades One Through Six. The Reading Teacher 20: 413-418.
5. D. J. Bruce, 1964, The Analysis of Word Sounds. British Journal
of Educational Psychology 34: 158-170.
6. Kenneth Goodman, A Linguistic Study of Cues and Miscues in Reading."
Elementary
English 42: 639-643, 1965. First graders correctly read, in the story,
nearly two-thirds of the words missed on the list, second graders, 75%,
and third graders 82%.
7. I. Mullins, J. Campbell, and A. Farstrup, 1993. NAEP 1992 Reading
Report Card for the Nation and the States. National Center for Education
Statistics. The score ratio for whole language / phonics rated as "little
or no emphasis" was 218/222.
8. Jeanne Chall wrote: a code-emphasis method i.e. one that views
beginning reading as essentially different from mature reading and emphasizes
learning of the printed code for the spoken language produces better
results, at least up to the third grade. Jeanne S. Chall, Learning
to Read: the Great Debate. McGraw-Hill, New York, 1967, p. 307. The
book was revised in 1983.
In a
1988 article, Marie Carbo challenged Jeanne Challs conclusions that a
code emphasis (bottom-up) is more effective than a meaning emphasis (top-down),
and Chall responded in the same journal citing more studies that Carbo
hadnt mentioned. Then, in an article, The Great Debate Can Both Carbo
and Chall be right?4 (Phi Delta Kappan, 1989, pp. 276-283.) Richard
L. Turner reviewed the studies Chall had used in support of her ideas and
found all but nine of them to have flawed methodology. From the few studies
with a good research base, he concludes that systematic phonics is a little
better than the whole-language approach until the beginning of the second
grade, but after that, the difference disappears. I don't know why these
results differ from those drawn from the NAEP scores. They would have been
older studies.
Also
see my comments in Chapter 2 under Public Schools for research reports
of general success of schools including a report on reading success in
the US and New Zealand.
Nancy
Larrick, De-trivializing our methods of reading instruction, Phi Delta
Kappan, November 1987, pp. 184-189. Children in one of the most difficult
New York City school districts, many of whom didnt hear English at home,
showed remarkable success in reading. They were part of theSesame
project which uses large numbers of ordinary childrens books instead of
the typical basal readers. In this method (1) the teacher reads systematically
to the children; (2) they are encouraged to read from many library books
displayed in the room; (3) activities such as dramatization, discussion
and illustrations make the books that are read to them more memorable;
(4) key words (at the kindergarten level) are chosen by the children and
displayed on cards around the room; and (5) the most interesting characteristic
phonics is not stressed. It is taught as children ask for help with their
writing, and in quick crash courses before taking standardized tests.
By late
spring, 1987, all 350 first graders in theSesame project were reading
in English, and all but three (who had been in this country less than six
months) passed a comprehension test given by a school district evaluator.
The project is based on an earlier research study comparing ten second-grade
classes learning from this approach with ten more using conventional readers.
9. Donald D. MacKay, 1972. "The Structure of Words and Syllables:
Evidence from Errors in Speech." Cognitive Psychology 3: 210-227.
10.
R.E. Wylie and D.D. Durnell, 1970. "Teaching Vowels Through Phonograms."
(The terms "onset" and "rime" had not yet been coined.) Also R. Treiman,
1983. "The Structure of Spoken Syllables: Evidence from Novel Word Games."
Cognition 15: 49-84.
11.
U. Goswami, 1986. "Children's Use of Analogy in Learning to Read. . . ."
Journal of Experimental child Psychology 42: 73-83. U. Goswami, 1992 and
F. Mead. 1992. "Onset and Rime Awareness and Analogies in Reading." Reading
Research Quarterly 27: 150-162. M. Moustafa, 1990. An Interactive/Cognitive
Model of the Acquisition of Graphophonemic Systems by Young Children. Ph.D.
Dissertation, University of Southern California.
12.
Margaret Moustafa, Beyond Traditional Phonics, Research Discoveries
and Reading Instruction. Heineman, 361 Hanover St., Portsmouth, NH
03801-3912. 1997. p. 51. This book has been the souce for much of the material
in this chapter. I've left you plenty to read.
13.
Marilyn J. Adams. 1990. Beginning to Read: Thinking and Learning About
Print. Cambridge, MA; MIT Press.
14.
E. Chen and R.L. Colvin, The Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1996.
15.
Mustafa, op cit. pp. 35, 36 She explains more problems with the condemnation
of whole language.
16.
Bill Honig, Research-Based Reading Instruction: The Right Way, Education
Digest, Dec. 1997, pp. 15-22. Condensed from The School Administrator
Sept. 1997. Honig, who is President of Consortium of Reading Excelence,
in Emeryville, Calif., has also written Teaching our Children to Read:
The Role of Skills in a Comprehensive Reading Program. Corwin Press.
17.
An Illinois school was concerned that their whole language program needed
more phonics. They found the combination successful. Kathy Batjes and Theresa
Brown. ERIC Report ED409539. Improving Reading Achievement of First
Grade Students by Integrating Phonics Skills into a Whole Language Curriculum.
May 1997.
Also,
Barbara Matson. Whole Language or Phonics? Teachers and Researchers Find
the Middle Ground Most Fertile. The Great Reading Debate. Harvard Education
Letter (v12 n2 p1-5 Mar.-Apr. 1996).
18.
U.S.
News & World Report, "Two Good Ways to Teach Reading," March 30,
1998.
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