Kids in public schools should read Free Republic every day. They would quickly obtain literacy. The phonics would come about while arguing with others about the content.
Somalis with sub 80 IQs arenβt helping the average much either
Retired public school teacher here (not union). The first thing you have to realize is that half of everyone is below average. That’s just math, no matter how much people try to deny it.
The second thing is that current students lost 2 years of education (good or bad) from the Wuhan disease.
The third thing is that standards and expectations of students and teachers has been dropping for at least the last century. Don’t believe me? Go to Gutenberg.org and download or just read McGuffey’s Sixth Eclectic Reader and see what was expected of 6th-graders back at the turn of the 20th century. Compare it to what 6th-graders are reading now.
Something went wrong after the Founders.ππ
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787: “Religion, morality, and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged” π¨βππ©βππ«ποΈ
I don’t remember what reading-education method was used in the public schools when my siblings and I were young, because all six of us had learned to read before the start of first grade. My mother taught us, using phonics.
bttt
I’m trying to learn Russian.
Learning to read a language in a different alphabet is difficult.
English is sourced from many different languages. One begins with phonics and works up to whole language.
In Spanish, pronunciation is fixed by certain simple rules.
In Russian, the letter that looks like ‘o’ has various pronunciations depending on if the syllable it is in is accented and where it is in the word. The letter that looks like ‘e’ has lots of pronunciation rules.
The pronunciation guide in Romanov’s dictionary is over six pages long.
A man in New York City was recently declared a felon for using the two words “legal expenses” when he paid a lawyer.
l
e
g
a
l
e
x
p
e
n
s
e
s
There’s more to reading than sounding out letters.