So Australia certainly has more than one voice crying in the wilderness. The problem is that they have no impact on the education establishment. While Marion De Lemos is now retired, one should note that she never at any stage belonged to any University Faculty of Education. GS
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=2662
Phonics: The building blocks to reading.
By Marion de Lemos - posted Wednesday, October 20, 2004 Sign Up for free
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Do children learn to read
by being read to, or do they need specific instruction to understand the
relationship between the letters and words they see in print and the spoken
words they hear?
In
It is also the driving
force behind the Australian Labor Party’s policy of improving literacy levels
by providing free books to parents to encourage them to read to their children
from infancy.
Of course, it is a good
thing for parents to read to their children: some 96 per cent do anyway. It is
entertaining, stimulating and enjoyable. And it develops children’s vocabulary
and oral language skills, as well as their conceptual understanding and
capacity to recall and connect ideas. It also encourages a positive attitude to
books and reading, and may lead to a life long passion.
But it does not, in itself,
teach children to read. For this, something more is required.
To achieve independent
reading, children need to understand the connection between the marks on the
page and the sounds they hear. For some this comes very easily, without any
apparent teaching, but for others it does not, and so when they get to school
and are expected to learn to read independently, they struggle. And if the
school does not provide them with the building blocks they need to develop
reading skills, they get frustrated, bored and angry. They will get further
behind in their reading, and gradually start to lose interest and turn to other
seemingly more stimulating and rewarding activities.
The research evidence is
strongly opposed to the view that children learn to read naturally by being
exposed to reading and print. There is now a consensus among reading
researchers that the skills underlying the facility to read are the ability to
break up words into sounds (phonemic awareness), and the ability to connect
these sounds to letters or clusters of letters by a process of blending and
segmentation (phonics). Without specific teaching, many children fail to
develop these skills.
There has been a series of
reports in the
In 2002, one billion
dollars was allocated to Reading First,
a programme designed to improve reading achievement through the adoption of
effective teaching practices based on scientific research, as documented in the
2000 report of the National Reading Panel. The implementation of this programme
has involved significant changes to school curricula and teaching practices, in
addition to extensive retraining of teachers to implement the new
evidence-based teaching programmes. While the
The call from a group of
leading Australian reading researchers and educators for an independent review
of approaches to the teaching of initial reading in our schools has gone
unheeded. The educational bureaucracy seems reluctant to acknowledge any need
for a critical examination of curricula, teaching practices, or teacher
training.
If children in our schools
were learning to read, this would not be a problem. But as we know, some 20 to
30 per cent of children have difficulties, and by the end of their first or
second year of school are in need of extra help. This assistance is currently
provided by the extremely expensive, and ineffective, Reading
Recovery programme.
But even that is not
enough. We now have a $700 literacy bonus to fund private tuition for children
in Year 3 who are still failing to read, despite the claimed effectiveness of
current teaching programmes.
Perhaps it would make sense
to start looking at where the origin of the problem lies - in the initial
teaching of reading.
Article edited by Darlene Taylor.
Marion de Lemos is a
retired psychologist and researcher who is a member of the Developmental
Disorders of Language and Literacy Network Group.
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