Posted on 11/30/2018 3:25:13 PM PST by BruceDeitrickPrice
A real OMG moment occurred last week when the New York Times awoke from a long sleep and published the truth about reading.
Yes, its true. The New York Times came right out and told the world that if you want children to learn to read, they need phonics. No ifs, ands, or buts. No weird digressions into context and balanced this-or-that. No claims that people can learn to read simply by picking up a good book and reading.
The article is titled Why Are We Still Teaching Reading the Wrong Way? Why, indeed? Heres the gist of it: First of all, while learning to talk is a natural process that occurs when children are surrounded by spoken language, learning to read is not. To become readers, kids need to learn how the words they know how to say connect to print on the page. They need explicit, systematic phonics instruction. There are hundreds of studies that back this up. Hundreds!
Well, if its all so clear and obvious, how has our Education Establishment managed to keep tens of millions of American children less than literate? After all, Rudolf Flesch explained everything you need to know in his famous book Why Johnny Cant Read (1955). But somehow our public schools engineered a strange disappearing act. Phonics wasnt taught. Children couldnt read. Almost everybody had at least heard the truth. But somehow an illiteracy crisis was allowed to go on and on and on.
Note now the sly excuses and curious evasions presented in the article:
Its a problem that has been hiding in plain sight for decades. Houdini would be proud of that trick.
[V]irtually all kids can learn to read if theyre taught with approaches that use what scientists have discovered about how the brain does the work of reading. But many teachers dont know this science.
But colleges of education which should be at the forefront of pushing the best research have largely ignored the scientific evidence on reading. Think about that. Are these people on drugs or are they engaged in serious sabotage?
The article continues: The National Council on Teacher Quality reviewed the syllabuses of teacher preparation programs nationwide and found that fewer than four in 10 taught the components of effective reading instruction identified by research .(Some instructors required students to write their personal philosophies about how to teach reading.) Now isnt that special? Personal philosophies were valued but not the one that actually works.
The article adds: Kelly Butler of the Barksdale Reading Institute in Mississippi interviewed more than 100 deans and faculty members of schools of education as part of a study of teacher preparation programs in the state and found that most of them could not explain basic scientific principles about how children learn to read.
Savor it. This has to be one of the greatest examples in world history of see-nothing, hear-nothing, say-nothing. Nearly every big shot in our Education Establishment agreed not to notice that public schools were carefully designed to ensure that children didnt learn to read. Most schools are still designed that way. All of this anti-reading activity should properly be called aiding and abetting. Taken as one phenomenon, you have to label it a vast conspiracy.
And who would be against reading? John Dewey and his Progressives did not, in practice, want to create independent thinkers. Too much literacy was a bad thing for these collectivist ideologues. Controlling people was a concern for Dewey. If Americans learned to read, they were likely to start thinking for themselves. They would insist on being individuals; but John Dewey, a socialist, considered individualism one of the worst features of American culture. So even though parents might demand literacy, the Progressives in charge of the public schools went through the motions but kept reading to a minimum. Thats the politics of illiteracy in a sentence.
CODA: Ive been writing articles for 10 to 15 years saying that if you want children to learn to read, they need phonics. I always assumed that The New York Times (and the media generally) knew this. They were only pretending not to know about Fleschs book or that millions of students couldnt read a daily newspaper. I kept hoping that the Times would stop playing left-wing politics. (Barring that, I wanted to find more compelling ways to explain this whole mess. Doing so remains an enjoyable challenge.)
Finally, maybe the New York Times just got tired of being wrong all the time. Or one part of their organization did. But dont assume too much. Im sure the Reading Wars will continue. Non-phonetic methods are embedded at all levels.
So, did we at least turn a corner? Lets hope so. Meanwhile, the public should keep demanding literacy. Here is some further ammo:
What the experts say: Reading Is Easy (short video)
An introduction to the saccade: Massive K-12 Reading Failure Explained
The central question: Phonics vs. Whole WordTake 2 (video 2008)
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Not a real surprise to many of us.
The "whole word method" prefers kids to guess at what the word may be, rather than actually using the reasoning faculty of their brains and precisely figuring out the word.
Today, any public school using the "whole word method" will have a substantial portion of their students going through reading remediation. And guess what? When they remediate the kids they teach them phonics because it is the only way to teach kid to read properly.
Go figure!
Good Readers
Equate to
Independent Thinkers.
A good friend has branded US public schools as failure factories that turn out barely literate kids by the thousands.
Houston we have a problem!
This has been known for quite some time, decades.
If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.
Glenn T. Seaborg, National Commission on Education
A Nation at Risk: The Imperative For Educational Reform, 1983
https://www2.ed.gov/pubs/NatAtRisk/risk.html
I dont believe things have materially improved since 1983. I would love to be shown to be wrong.
Colorado has the Colorado Early College. High school 9th graders can enter college instead of just high school. They can graduate with an engineering degree at 18.
Just more evidence that the K-12 system is a joke and needs to be demolished. When properly taught, kids can do any subject.
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