
Teaching Reading Is EASY!
Q. Is
it the parents' fault that so many kids today can't read very well? Did we do
something wrong years ago, since half of today's high-school graduates cannot
comprehend text written at the college level? Are parents too busy and not
reading enough to their young children in the early years?
With what we're
spending on K-12 education these days, it's pretty hard to blame the parents
for reading deficiencies. With spending per pupil levels around $8,000 per
year, that's more than $100,000 that we'll drop per child over 13 years of
schooling.
You'd think, for that expense, kids
could master the basic skill of education, which is reading. Instead, it
appears that the more we spend, and the more complicated we try to make the
process, the less able to read the students are becoming.
There may be some deficiencies in
today's homes, but it's not fair to ignore the deficiencies in our methods of
teaching reading. And it's high time we took a hard look at them.
The "pre-reading" activities in the
homes, before kindergarten, that educators are always urging parents to do -
reading aloud to toddlers and preschoolers - are nice and helpful. But they are
by no means a cure-all or a guarantee of reading success. The government
preschool program, Head Start, has consistently failed to make any impact on
the reading performance of children from disadvantaged homes despite billions
of tax dollars spent.
So many children develop reading
disabilities despite coming from advantaged homes, or going through elaborate
preschool programs, that the blame for why they can't read must not rest with
what goes on in homes - but what DOESN'T happen with reading instruction in
schools.
The simple truth is that the direct
instruction of phonics in the early grades teaches nearly 100% of children to
read very quickly and efficiently, irrespective of what kind of homes they come
from. Yet shockingly few schools teach reading with phonics, because it has
fallen out of style in the teachers' colleges.
It could be that it's too easy and
inexpensive to be attractive to the education establishment, with its voracious
appetite for more revenue and "programs."
The reason it's so easy to teach
reading with phonics is that children are taught the regular features of the
language first. So they seldom have much trouble learning progressively more
complex patterns later on. That's the "systematic" nature of correct phonics
instruction. In contrast, most schools use a complicated mixture of methods,
relying more on sight reading and memorization, that doesn't build on itself
systematically from week to week or month to month.
The actual process of learning to
decode words and employ the rules of spelling is actually very easy. In the
1700s in Wales, for example, the sheepherding population was totally
illiterate. Then Griffith Jones, an Anglican vicar, organized traveling
schools. Tutors were paid three pounds per year to go from one parish to the
next. People housed and fed them, and they taught children and adults how to
read. After three months, they moved on to the next village. Within a few
years, the level of culture and literacy in Wales was astounding.
Teaching reading is the easy part.
Convincing the education establishment that it is easy, and shouldn't cost very
much, is what's hard.
Homework: See the website of the National
Right to Read Foundation, www.nrrf.org
By Susan Darst Williams • www.GoBigEd.com • Show 'n' Tell
for Parents • 4/24/06 • © 2006