Three literacy experts—David Reinking, Peter Smagorinsky, and David B. Yaden—wrote in opposition to the current “science of reading” frenzy. Unfortunately, their article does not mention the journalist Emily Hanford, who has zealously promoted the idea that American students don’t learn to read because their teachers do not utilize the “science of reading.” Google her name and you will find numerous articles repeating this claim. I wish I had been as successful in alerting the public and the media to the dangers of privatization as she has been in building a public campaign for phonics-as-silver-bullet. She is truly the Rudolf Flesch of our day (he published the best-selling Why Johnny Can’t Read in 1955.)
As I have often written here, I strongly support phonics. I was persuaded long ago by Jeanne Chall in her book Learning to Read: The Great Debate that students need to learn the sounds of letters and letter-combinations so they can decode unfamiliar words without thinking about it. But I am not a believer in “the science of reading.” Different children learn different ways. Phonics adherents cite the report of the National Reading Panel (2000), which consisted of university-based scholars and only one practitioner, Joanne Yatvin, who wrote a dissent. The phonics cheerleaders ignore the ignominious fate of NCLB’s Reading First program, which doled out nearly $6 billion to promote the recommendations of the National Reading Panel but failed to achieve anything.
There is no “science of reading.” There is no “science of teaching math” or any other academic skill or study. If someone can identify a district where every single student reads at a proficient level on state tests, I will change my view. I await the evidence.
This post by Reinking, Smagorinsky, and Yaden appeared on Valerie Strauss’s Washington Post blog, “The Answer Sheet.”
Strauss introduced their article:
The “reading wars” have been around for longer than you might think. In the 1800s, Horace Mann, the “father of public education” who was the first state education secretary in the country (in Massachusetts), advocated that children learn to read whole words and learn to read for meaning before they are taught the explicit sounds of each letter. Noah Webster, the textbook pioneer whose “blue-back speller” taught children how to spell and read for generations, supported phonics. So it started.
In the last century and now again, we have gone in and out of debates about the best way to teach reading — as if there was a single best way for all children — with the arguments focusing on phonics, whole language and balanced literacy. We’re in another cycle: Just this week, New York City, the largest school district in the country, announced it would require all elementary schools to employ phonics programs in reading instruction.
This post — written by David Reinking, Peter Smagorinsky, and David B. Yaden — looks at the debate on phonics in a different way than is most often voiced these days. It notes, among other things, that the National Reading Panel report of 2000, which is often cited in arguments for putting phonics front and center in school reading curriculum, says many things about the importance of systematic phonics instruction but it also says this: “Phonics should not become the dominant component in a reading program, neither in the amount of time devoted to it nor in the significance attached.”
Reinking is a professor of education emeritus at Clemson University, a former editor of Reading Research Quarterly and the Journal of Literacy Research, a former president of the Literacy Research Association and an elected member of the Reading Hall of Fame.
Smagorinsky is a research professor emeritus at the University of Georgia, a visiting scholar at the University of Guadalajara, a former editor of the journal Research in the Teaching of English, and an elected member of the National Academy of Education.
Yaden is a literacy professor in the College of Education at the University of Arizona, a former editor of the Journal of Literacy Research, and a past president of the Literacy Research Association.
Reinking, Smagorinsky and
Reinking, Smagorinsky, and Yaden wrote:
Two of the nation’s most trustworthy news sources, the New York Times and The Washington Post, recently ran opinion pieces asserting that there is a national reading crisis and a single solution: more phonics instruction. The Times followed with a news article about how a “science of reading” movement is sweeping the United States in support of more phonics instruction.
These claims have clearly impressed many politicians, journalists, educational leaders and parents. Phonics has become political fodder with copycat legislation in state after state mandating more of it. There is now a firmly rooted popular narrative of a national crisis in reading achievement supposedly linked to inadequate phonics instruction and unequivocally supported by a science of reading. Those who question it and ask for more evidence are portrayed as unenlightened or even as science deniers, including many experienced, dedicated and successful teachers who contend daily with the complex, multifaceted challenges of teaching children how to read.
As researchers and teacher educators, we, like many of our colleagues, shake our heads in resigned frustration. We believe phonics plays an important role in teaching children to read. But, we see no justifiable support for its overwhelming dominance within the current narrative, nor reason to regard phonics as a panacea for improving reading achievement.
Specifically, we do not see convincing evidence for a reading crisis, and certainly none that points to phonics as the single cause or a solution. We are skeptical of any narrowly defined science that authoritatively dictates exactly how reading should be taught in every case. Most of all, we are concerned that ill-advised legislation will unnecessarily constrain teachers’ options for effective reading instruction.
As for a crisis (always useful for promoting favored causes), the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) has been tracking reading achievement in the United States since 1972. Until the coronavirus pandemic began in 2020, the scores were mostly flat for decades, even trending slightly upward before covid-19 shut down schools. The decline since the pandemic is a clear example of how societal factors influence reading achievement. Given the nation’s increasing linguistic and cultural diversity and widening economic disparities, that upward trend might even suggest encouraging progress.
Less absurd, but no less arbitrary, is using NAEP scores to argue that two-thirds of students are not proficient in reading. Diane Ravitch, a former member of the NAEP governing board, has equated scores at the proficient level with a solid A. Peggy Carr, commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics, which administers NAEP, has said that basic level is generally seen as grade-level achievement. Adding students who achieve at a Basic level (interpreted as a B) or above, two-thirds of students have solid reading skills. In other words, the argument only holds if we expect every student to get an A. We can always do better, but there is neither no convincing evidence of a crisis nor magic that eliminates inevitable variation in achievement.
But crisis or not, is there evidence that more phonics instruction is the elixir guaranteed to induce higher reading achievement? The answer isn’t just no. There are decades of empirical evidence that it hasn’t and won’t.
In the mid-1960s, the federal government funded two landmark national studies of early reading instruction in the United States at 23 sites (districts or regions) carefully chosen to represent a cross section of the nation’s students. One purpose was to determine which of several approaches to teaching reading was most effective, including a strict phonics approach.
The conclusion? All approaches worked well at some sites and less so in others. Phonics worked best when it was integrated with other approaches and is most effective with beginning readers. The researchers leading these multiple studies concluded “that future research should focus on teacher and learning situation characteristics rather than method and materials.”
In the 1980s, Dolores Durkin, an iconic reading researcher, found that phonics lessons dominated reading instruction and that the problem is not phonics-or-not, but ineffective instruction that, as she concluded, “turns phonics instruction into an end in itself but also deprives children of the opportunity to experience the value of phonics.”
The subsequent National Reading Panel report of 2000, much cited today for its support of phonics instruction, actually reported that teaching phonics had only moderate effects, limited to first grade. The report also advocated for balanced reading instruction in which phonics was only one of many components. In Chapter 2, page 97, the report stated unequivocally, “Phonics should not become the dominant component in a reading program, neither in the amount of time devoted to it nor in the significance attached.” And it says this: “Finally, it is important to emphasize that systematic phonics instruction should be integrated with other reading instruction to create a balanced reading program. Phonics instruction is never a total reading program.”
In the early 2000s, there was the evaluation of the massive Reading First program implemented across six years in grades 1 through 3 in more than 5,000 schools across all 50 states and implemented with federal funding north of $5 billion. Teachers were carefully trained to deliver “scientific” reading instruction that included a numbing 1.5 to 3 hours of phonics instruction each day. Yet, students receiving this extensive phonics instruction scored no better on tests of reading comprehension than did students in schools providing more conventional instruction.
These findings do not mean that phonics is unnecessary or unimportant. They simply suggest that there is no basis for the conclusions that the absence of phonics is the cause for a reading crisis and that the sole solution to reading difficulties is intensive phonics instruction for all readers. Nor is there a reason to believe that more phonics is the linchpin to raising reading achievement.
Rather, the lack of evidence supporting an increase in phonics may indicate that there is already enough phonics being taught in schools. Despite nebulous claims that there is widespread neglect of phonics in classrooms, no recent data substantiate those claims. But, beyond phonics, what other factors might inhibit greater reading achievement — factors that could be addressed more appropriately through legislation? There are possibilities, grounded in data, that are at least as reliable and convincing as increasing phonics.
Here are a few examples. There is hard evidence that in schools with a good library and librarians, reading scores are relatively high. Unfortunately, in a growing number of states, libraries are defunded, sometimes for ideological reasons. The number of school nurses has declined during the ongoing assault on school budgets, which we know increases absenteeism, which in turn, decreases achievement. Kids can’t learn phonics or any other academic skill if they are not in school.
What about poverty and hunger? We know that kids who do poorly on standardized reading tests tend to come from the nation’s least affluent homes. And, there is considerable evidence that educational reforms focused only on classrooms and not broader social factors like poverty often fail. What does help is the availability of free meals, which are associated with enhanced academic performance, including reading and math test scores.
So, to boost reading achievement, why not legislate more funding for libraries, school nurses and programs to feed hungry children? The evidence that such legislation would increase achievement is no less, and arguably more, than increasing phonics. The recent declines in NAEP scores during the pandemic, which raise concerns, sharpen the point. Possible explanations include lack of internet connections, distractions inherent to home learning, and untrained and overworked teachers, not phonics.
When pressed on these points, inveterate phonics advocates play a final trump card: the science of reading. They cash in on the scientific cachet of esoteric cognitive and neurological research, often collectively referred to as “brain science.”
There are several reasons to discount that response. Many brain researchers concede that their work is in its infancy using marginally reliable methods with small samples, leading to debatable interpretations that are difficult to translate into classroom practice. They are only beginning to investigate how social factors influence brain activity.
Further, as our colleague Timothy Shanahan has argued, there is a difference between a basic science of reading and a science of how to teach reading. The two are not entirely in sync. He cites several examples of empirical research validating effective reading instruction that is inconsistent with brain studies. Just as hummingbirds fly, even when aeronautical science concludes they can’t, brain research doesn’t negate the reality of instructional practice that works.
But, like the snark, the nonexistent creature in Alice in Wonderland, the narrative about phonics persists, because enough people say so, over and over. For at least 70 years, demanding more phonics has become a shibboleth among those who see, or want to see, reading as essentially a readily taught technical skill. We’ve been fiddling with phonics ever since, while more consequential societal factors burn brightly in the background.
Underlying all of this is the status of children’s “text books,” readers, etc. I am not so old that I remember using the California State reader books, but I collected a number of them and they had excerpts from mark, Twain, Fenimore Cooper, Thomas Jefferson, and yes, the Bible. While I can’t imagine the Shakespeare segments were at all well received, at least the excerpts showed a wide spectrum of topics and good writing.
Todays textbooks, run through readability indexing programs and various state’s banning of certain words and painful to read. They lack any rhythm, any sparkle, etc. They are dull, dull, dull. Then they have to compete with online writings directed at kids which at least seem fresh and on topic of interest to them.
I have advocated that kids need to be allowed to read what is interesting to them. If it is Bride magazine or Road and Track, let it be. Reading is reading. What the goal should be is the development of the facility and a love for what that facility can provide. To open up the wealth of this country’s public domain cannot be accessed if citizen’s can’t read what is there. Adults are far too concerned that what kids read should be .
Steve, great comment! I’ve heard of the legendary California state readers. I wish some publisher would reprint them.
The problem is that they are in the public domain, so it is hard to make a profit off of them, but that would be interesting. They should at least be available as ebooks.
If they are in the public domain, they may be e-books through the Gutenberg Project. When I was researching my first published novel, I found one book there that I couldn’t find anywhere else, a bio written in 1912. I downloaded it from guteberg.org and printed it out. I don’t care for eReaders.
https://www.gutenberg.org/
Welcome to Project Gutenberg
“Project Gutenberg is a library of over 70,000 free eBooks
Choose among free epub and Kindle eBooks, download them or read them online. You will find the world’s great literature here, with focus on older works for which U.S. copyright has expired. Thousands of volunteers digitized and diligently proofread the eBooks, for you to enjoy.”
Steven Krashen’s reading research has shown that students’ recreational reading contributes as much to reading development as reading instruction. Plus, students actually learn to enjoy reading which is more likely to make them life-long readers.
Steve — Yes, we had to use StudySync as they kids’ called it “Study Stink” and boring, boring, boring.
Steve, one of the most important elements of effective reading instruction is to have stories, articles and books which are interesting to students. Interest creates motivation to read. It also increases comprehension ability. Back in my day we had “high interest low level” materials. I used Scholastic Scope every Friday for oral reading day with my inner city high school kids. They loved it. Scholastic often had the classics written down to the intermediate levels, often in play format. Even reluctant readers read out loud. We practiced our fluency in a fun, non-threatening, supportive way.
My teaching experience mirrors yours. I loved Scholastic Scope and used it with my middle and high school students with reading disabilities. I did the district-recommended phonics programs, but my students couldn’t wait for the Scholastic Scope stories. They didn’t mind reading as a group since they all had oral reading difficulties, and they helped each other out. The stories were fun, and between the direct instruction of phonics and Scholastic Scope, the latter helped my students the most.
Also, they once did a feature on Anne Frank. It was one of my high school students’ most moving learning experiences, leading to meaningful classroom discussions.
In DeSatan’s Flor-uh-duh, classroom libraries are being emptied for fear that some hardcore fundamentalist white nationalist nutcase parent is going to object to something.
What should we name the body of knowledge that educational psychologists, linguists, neuroscientists, and educators have contributed to understanding how children learn to read and how best to deliver reading instruction? The instruction based on this body of knowledge is generally called “Evidence-based” or “Structured-literacy.” Indeed, some kids learn enough phonics at home with parents that understand phonics, with an app, with workbooks like Explode the Code, or with parents that use “Teach your Kid to Read in 100 Easy Lessons”, while others need speech therapy and much more repetition of each phonics lesson in school to master it and many kids in-between. Of course, none of this can teach a kid to be a strong reader and an engaged student without teachers who also help them build content knowledge, vocabulary, fluency (on words with mastered codes), and parts of written language (grammar, syntax, arc of story, metaphor, idioms, appositives and more). If not the science of reading, what name do you suggest?
“Indeed, some kids learn enough phonics at home with parents that understand phonics, with an app, with workbooks like Explode the Code, or with parents that use “Teach your Kid to Read in 100 Easy Lessons”
???
This is only anecdotal evidence, but I had kids who were in public schools that used Lucy Calkins methods, and while it had flaws for SOME (often the better readers, fyi), there weren’t parents teaching their kindergarten children phonics at home. Some kids were perfectly fine with the small amount of phonics taught and some kids needed more.
But more importantly, some kids who struggled to learn via Lucy Calkins at age 4 or 5 suddenly learned to read via Lucy Calkins at age 6 or 7.
Isn’t it far more likely that Diane Ravitch is absolutely right, that reading depends on the child, and using terms like “science” gives an entirely false impression that it has to do with the reading program.
Phonics is ONE TOOL. Some kids don’t need that tool at all, as is proven by the truth that when phonics was minimized, students were still learning to become excellent readers.
I just found it concerning that you started by implying that the fact that an extraordinarily high number of students did learn to read without intensive phonics instruction was due to them all getting that phonics instruction at home, which simply isn’t true.
I am positive phonics instruction works for kids, too. But it’s just another tool, not some “science” whereby the effects of teaching phonics versus some other method can be measured.
The “science of reading” claim
Is based on the report of the National Reading Panel, whose members were chosen because of their support for phonics. Only one person in that panel was a teacher and principal, Joanne Syatvin. She dissented. The recommendations of the Panel we see backed up be a program called Reading First, funded with nearly $6 billion. Evaluations showed that the program made no difference in districts that adopted the Panel’s recommendations. And it was marred by scandal, self-dealing, and conflicts of interest.
I’m open to being convinced that I’m wrong. I’m waiting for evidence from a district where every student is a good reader as a result of SOR.
There have been surveys, not studies, confirming the parents with phonics instruction. But also, FMRI science wasn’t available to confirm the effectiveness of reading instruction when the National Reading Panel did its work. and so much more science has been done since the NRP that disproves whole language and backs up explicit, systematic phonics instruction, backs up orthographic mapping. The body of knowledge of how kids should be taught to read continues to grow. Moreover, if we don’t teach most kids to read, we can’t find our dyslexic kids and give them extra instruction because they will blend in with non dyslexic struggling readers and become rather invisible.
“and so much more science has been done since the NRP that disproves whole language…”
“disproves whole language…”?? What do you mean by that?
Diane Ravitch offered a nuanced, open-minded view and the reply here is that whole language approach — which we know for a fact worked with some students since there is no entire generation of illiterates — has been “disproved”.
Maybe I am wrong, but everything that is wrong with this so-called “science of reading” approach is evident in this reply.
Children aren’t robots. They learn to read in different ways.
I respect the open-mindedness of Diane Ravitch. She agrees that phonics is important. But I would hate for my kid to have a teacher who was certain that one approach to teaching reading was the ONLY scientifically provable way to teach.
There is no “best”. There is the best way for each student. That may include a lot or a little phonics. They may include a lot or a little whole reading.
The label Science of Reading should be scrapped. It is as divisive and unproductive as the word planet with no modifier.
One size fits all is as catastrophic for reading as it is for mathematics. Look at all the humanities Ph.D.s that can not even figure out the tip at a restaurant with out using a calculator.
The whole ‘science of reading’ trend is another contrived controversy in order to move early phonics instruction on-line. The study and application of phonics involve an understanding of lot of little discrete items that easily lend themselves to cyber instruction. By making this type of instruction a national concern, it will result in lots of software sold to numerous states. It is a way to further hasten the commodification of education. Using the term “science” gives the whole process a sense of gravitas and legitimacy. Billionaires are eager to get America’s students dependent on cyber instruction. $$$
RT — Yeppers. I saw it over my 32 years. A new program. Another new program. More money. Another program. Teachers finally figure out how to use the program and on to the next.
We live in a world of merchandising. Recently, many outsized companies have gone overboard trying to convince us that there is a one size fits all curriculum. Standardization. Standardization 2.0. Next gen standardization. They’re just selling snake oil.
I totally agree that there is no science of reading or science of learning. Another point to consider in the debate is the myriad of people we all know who learned to read before they went to school. They weren’t taught, yet they learned how to read. My grandson learned to read playing a video game he loved. I believe that learning is primarily sense-making, and why should a child learn to read? Because there’s something he wants to know, he wants to make sense of the world. Phonics is a decontextualized program, there is no inherent reason a child would want to ‘read’ that way. And, however it was that my grandson learned to read, he apparently picked up many rules of phonics along the way. It scares me that he’d have to go to school and sit through a numbing 1.5 to 3 hours of phonics instruction each day.
I am a certified reading teacher, and I share your concerns. I am a strong believer in making good use of instructional time. Efficient and effective reading instruction starts with the student’s needs. Teachers should assess and act accordingly based on student needs. My fear is that many early readers may be needlessly put in front of a screen that will “teach” them what they already know. This may happen if people believe everyone needs direct phonics instruction, and all students get the same treatment.
I totally agree.
I learned to read via mind-numbing instruction. My kid’s school used Lucy Calkins. And while I could see some flaws, it is so much better than what I had.
I find it offensive that an honored teacher here is making claims that the students in my kid’s elementary school had parents giving them phonics instruction at home, based on unscientific “surveys”. What happened was that the kids who struggled were given additional lessons which I assume included phonics since they all learned to read.
Who is this honored teacher you are talking about?
@NYC public school parent. I think you are confusing the poster above (Debbie Meyer, an advocate of the Adams administration’s approach to literacy) with progressive icon Debbie Meier, founder of Central Park East. I am 99.9% sure that the latter Debbie would not agree with the former.
Yup. Two different people. I will supply that .1% that you didn’t.
Thank you, both! You are 100% right 🙂 I was thought it was Debbie Meier commenting and I was definitely shocked!
This commenter is not Deborah Meier of Central Park East fame.
My dyslexic son went to Central Park East 2 and did not get 30 minutes of phonics, delivered systemically with fidelity, so he was illiterate when we moved him to the Windward School. He ended up needing 45 minutes of phonics daily for 3 years to catch up to grade level reading. He did however learn content and great social justice at CPE2. He left many struggling readers behind.
I worked with a severe dyslexic who had had several years of Wilson instruction. It was entirely necessary for him. He hated it, but because his parents could afford to get him instruction outside of school he was able to participate in the regular curriculum as well. It took my telling him he needed to keep going that kept him at it. Not many would have. He had the example of an uncle who was illiterate because of severe dyslexia. He saw how it affected his uncle’s life. My student’s mother handled her brother’s finances. I also worked with many struggling readers who did not need such intensive instruction or rather were ready for an emphasis on roots, prefixes and suffixes in context. Reading for meaning was central to keeping them interested.
“It scares me that he’d have to go to school and sit through a numbing 1.5 to 3 hours of phonics instruction each day.”
This should scare everybody! Where is this happening?
In too many districts. I worked in a district where we were audited to make sure we taught 2 hrs of combined small group and whole class literacy a day.
Phonics is just one component of literacy instruction, which also includes phonemic awareness, fluency practice, vocabulary, knowledge-building through informational text and, of course, writing. Phonics instruction can be covered in a fifteen to twenty minute lesson using fun activities like ‘word chains’, but you can see how covering the other components can make a literacy block much longer, especially if there are knowledge gaps as Natalie Wexler describes in her book The Knowledge Gap.
Your forgot the experience of inquiry and opportunities to explore interest. The problem with a lot of this bouncing off the wall we go through over reading practices is that we forget that being literate is far more than reading the written word. We tend to forget that intellectual reasoning exploded in the Middle Ages, not just because of the invention of movable type, but through a rediscovery of Greek and classical thinkers. Humans already had the capacity for learning and invention and the availability of the written word made this potential revolutionary. However, opportunity was the real catalyst. What has troubled me as an education practitioner is that our learning institutions have narrowed reading to an act rather than an adventure. Finland, that often cited country with admirable learning outcomes, doesn’t begin teaching reading until the age of seven. What they do is get young children out into the world to give them something to read about. All of this angst over reading has dumbed down our curricula because we put literacy in a narrow window of activities that only apply to certain students whose way of thinking complies with this practice. I was recently watching an interview of Mike Rowe disparaging the fact that we have 7.5 million men between 25 and 55 who are not seeking work. The typical response is that these people are lazy or they like government handouts. In my experience, what we are really seeing is the consequence of an education mindset that focuses far too much on task and not enough on possibility. We will never have 100% reading for all sorts of reasons, but we would have far more reading if we provided children the reason to pursue it.
Who isn’t doing phonics these days? LAUSD has been doing it for decades. I hope these hysterical reading goons remember the research that showed that an academic push in preschool leads to negative outcomes in middle school.
There was a time in the 1980s when California went overboard for Balanced Literacy. That was decades ago.
Thank you for raising the issues. They are dear to my heart and I woke up this morning thinking about writing a book about what I have learned over the years about the teaching of reading. I served as a reading specialist and the Title 1 Reading Coordinator at University City H.S. in Philadelphia from 1975-1995, and then as an AP and principal for 14 more years. I now work as an advocate for the best practices in public education in Pennsylvania.
I am now learning to teach reading to my 9 year old autistic grandson, little Johnny, who lives with my wife and me along with my son who is a single parent. I have worked with his teachers and paraprofessionals since he was 2 years old. I walk him to the school door every day and hand him off to his para and his teacher and pick him up. His para, “Mrs. S”, tells me if he had a good day which is almost every day. Since he has gone to Manoa elementary school, our neighborhood school in the Haverford School District he has flourished in the autistic support program we have developed for him. It is an ideal program. He has learned to talk and is now learning beginning reading with the help of a certified reading specialist who I fought for to be added to our program. He has many friends from the regular ed classes he attends with his typically developing classmates.
I am especially concerned about the “Science of Reading” mantra. Reading is “an ability” which has to be coached like any other ability. The teaching of reading is an Art and Craft which is learned over the years, through practice, study and experience. We do not read letters and sounds, we read words. We read phrases and sentences and paragraphs. It is an imitation of language. The purpose is “comprehension.” Just like language.
Yes, word recognition is part of what we must coach. Phonics is part of word recognition and must be taught and learned as we go. So do whole word approaches. The best way to teach phonics is to teach it through reading authentic reading materials. Stories and factual articles that have interest and real life meaning to children. That is also the best way to teach comprehension.
Most children learn to speak by age two or so. They learn phonics without any formal instruction at all. They learn the phonics of talking in words. They listen in words, too.
We learn by doing and being coached as we go. I am interested in leaning how to teach reading to autistic children. I am also interested in learning what is being taught in our education methods courses. What books and articles are required?
But there is one thing I know for sure — struggling readers who are taught by certified reading specialists in small groups by reading authentic materials at their instructional levels, learn to read better.
That is the “Science of Reading” which I can prove.
Exactly!
Exactly!
Well said. The ultimate goal of reading is understanding. I’ve always followed Frank Smith’s belief that “reading is thinking.”
Yes! it is. The method most used in my day teaching reading from 1975-1995 was “Festinger’s Reading/Thinking Activity.” It was a five step guided reading process. I taught my kids to read to find the important facts, make inferences as you read, think, and draw conclusions that you can support from the text.
I joke that the best teacher of reading will always be “Socrates.” Socratic questioning is how we teach comprehension. The “probing question” is an important aspect of teaching reading.
Having worked in reading education for almost 50 years, I agree with this narrative. Thank you for sharing the information.
The science of reading is the body of knowledge. We should talk about instruction differently. In medicine, science is about illnesses and injuries. How you address them is based on science. We shouldn’t treat bacterial infections with anti-virals or viral infections with antibiotics. We clearly have science to back up medical treatment, as we have science to back up the right kind of educational instruction. So let’s separate the body of science from the instruction, continue to build the body of science and refine the instruction in response to the science.
I am stunned that you just compared treating a medical illness with teaching reading to a young child.
Here is something to consider: It is possible to scientifically test antibiotics because many variables can be controlled. It doesn’t matter if a patient is in a room of 100 patients and gets a dose of penicillin or whether that patient is one on one with a doctor. It doesn’t matter whether the person giving the injection is a student nurse or a specialized doctor with 20 years of experience.
And even science recognizes that some patients will have a very bad reaction to the medicine.
Scientists would abhor anyone who tried to compare the methods used for real scientific research with the shoddy and evidence-free claims made by education researchers who would be drummed out of science if they tried to pass their “research studies” off as science.
Reducing the “crisis” to a
fluency issue, smacks of
endless debate, that has
yet to convince the
“experts”, that their
attempt at assigning
finite terms to infinity,
is NONSENSE.
Do the math.
How many thoughts exist?
How many reasons exist?
How many behaviors exist?
Yet the “experts” prattle
on and on…
Good morning Diane and everyone,
Sometimes I like to put scientism aside and consider my own personal experience. I’m glad my mom taught me phonics, read to me, and encouraged me to read. I know the sounds the letters make, and I can sound out words. I can spell properly – even in foreign languages. But beyond all that, I can focus, follow directions, use capitalization and punctuation properly. I have legible handwriting. I can write a coherent sentence, formal letter, essay or research paper. I can focus for longer than 2 minutes. I remember being able to do all of these things in high school. In high school I remember writing at least 3 long research papers. Both my husband and I have been teaching for 30 years. We both have noticed a serious decline in the ability of students to do all these things. And we are not the only teachers who have experienced dealing with this decline. Something is wrong somewhere. Maybe many things are wrong. Perhaps these skills aren’t valued anymore. Perhaps we must consider the wider problem of constant distraction. Or the undervaluing of focus on detail. I think it’s all these things and more. I also feel like now with ChatGPT and other online tools, students will become even more lazy and thinking, reading wnd writing skills will suffer even more. I see it in my own classroom. But in terms of the science of reading….how did some of the greatest minds in history learn to read and write without the science of reading? 🙂 They didn’t even have teachers who knew about the science of reading. I think of Emerson, Jung, Goethe, etc. I wonder if we’ll have people like this in the future.
Mamie,
My guess is that you are seeing the effects of social media. Most people, maybe most students, have access to websites and social media that are very distracting. When one becomes engaged with instant gratification and thinking in the moment, does it become harder to read a book or plan ahead or concentrate on details? I think it is.
My own experience was similar to yours, superficially. I read the Dick and Jane books in school but my teachers also taught phonics. I have always been an excellent speller. The Houston public schools focused on the mechanics of language—spelling, grammar, syntax. We disagramned sentences, we learned the parts of speech. All of these gave me lifelong skills.
Thanks, Diane. Yes, you are correct. I was diagramming sentences in 5th grade! I think what is even more frightening is the lack of interest in anything other than phones, games and social media. It is literally ruining children’s lives.
@Diane — Yes. When they said phones would be allowed at school…egads! There are far too many cool things to view on social media. And these kids are phenoms at finding short cuts. They could get through firewalls and found answers to math problems by taking a picture of the problems. So, if they could get what they needed with the least amount of work, why should they take steps to learning? I am a “How this works” type of guy. I loved showing my students, “Check this out, see pretty cool. huh? You can solve this by using the words around other words. You can also find this or this and it does work. You ‘MacGuyver it.” But, this took time. And time is not on the side of teacher. Most kids need time. And a person who can sit with them. Make them realize it is not a race. And, most importantly, if they don’t get it now, they aren’t stupid. We are filling your toolbox so later in life when you look and YOU need to fill out a job application or think on your feet, YOU CAN. I loved Daily Oral Language — something I did on my own because we would learn not only about grammar, but also about themes. Daly Oral Language had thematic readings/grammar and I taught the kids about proofreading marks. And, of course, I never could just do what the book said, so I would always take it further with more interesting reading and short investigations on people like Sybil Ludingtion and Henry Osawa Tanner (it coincided with the DOL sentences). Diagramming (most do not know subject and predicate, adverbs, or the use of a semi-colon) does work. I found it fascinating, but nowadays, the attention spans are, “…Mr. Charvet did you see the squirrel?” I wanted to give the kids the tools and when it was time to use them, they could. And, knowing how it works, so also knowing how to “go your own way” when needed. I think Picasso said something about “…learning the rules to understand how to break the rules…” But, as usual, I took too much time and so on and so on…
I interviewed a doctor yesterday who had a rigorous medical education in the 1950s. As he explained the time commitment demanded of each student and from subsequent clinical research, we realized that the physical search for books and files was an integral part of the learning process. It bred habits of patience, tenacity, and order. Whereas today, if it doesn’t come in a search in a nanosecond, we lose interest. For a long time I hid the fact that I was a slow reader and writer. Now I celebrate it.
Another thing the old style did was get us off our butts and walking around. We didn’t have to count steps then and our collective waistlines prove it today.
I decided to bypass history as a major in college because of the amount of reading the courses demanded. I could not read 100 pages in two days and digest the information to my satisfaction. I got reading glasses in high school not because my visual acuity was poor but because my eyes often got too blurry to read during a long study session. Call me silly, but I wanted to absorb the information not scan it. I’m not sure reading slowly is necessarily a weakness.
Writing was a challenge for me more because no one ever really taught it, and it wasn’t an integral part of most classes. We should have been writing every day especially in classes in which we were expected to read every day. I have found that it really helps me to refine my thinking, and has made me more thoughtful.
Last year, Diane posted an article by Nancy Bailey about Science of Reading. The Gates Foundation was referenced. The following is an update about who gets leadership roles in education at the Foundation. It appears Allan Golston, whose professional background is “consulting, public accounting, consumer packaged goods, software development, finance, health and education,” has replaced Josh Edelman (Harvard and Stanford grad) as US Program senior advisor. Golston is a grad of a Jesuit college. Heading up K-12 education strategy at Gates is Bob Hughes, grad of Stanford and Dartmouth. I don’t know what religion he is but, years ago he was a law clerk at a Jesuit Volunteer Camp. (It’s included on his Linked In profile so it must be an important bit of info. for readers to know.)
IMO, it would be a better look for the Gates Foundation if its education proposals for public schools came from grads of public universities.
If legacy admission and religious school grads are making proposals funded by the organization of Gates (attended Harvard) and Melinda (attended Catholic schools), they should be limited to implementation at private schools.
Emily Hanford went to Amherst. All inclusive cost per year at the school is $80,050.
The middle class carries the unproductive Wall Streeters and the wealthy, in part, because public policy originates with the grads of legacy admission, private colleges and the “elite” education departments like those at Harvard and Brown. No Ivy League graduate should be hired for the public sector and no policy that comes from the ivy leagues should be implemented. Few who are involved have skin in the game. The public should suspect their goal is making bank for themselves.
Here’s what I know…I came into teaching being ignorant to all the “…isms” and “teacher speak.” I am a person who can quickly analyze things, think about it, and find solutions — not perfect, but a move in the right direction. I remember my first class and I watched as they all struggled to read (I listened) and my first thought, “You all don’t know sounds” — later I found out that was called “phonemic awareness.” I inherited a class that two teachers left them and they were mostly EL students. Then it was the year for “Whole Language” so throw out the phonics books. Rather than organically keeping things that worked, the school system loves to move onto the “next best thing.” As an anomaly, I taught elementary, middle, high school, and mostly at-risk students. It is a hard job to try to help an 18-year old when they read at a primer level. But, I knew from my previous years, e.g., how the breath comes out between the lips to form words. How to stop and say, “So, what did you think about that?” “What do you think that means?” I could go on and on, but how would you like it if you wanted to read about astronauts, but the “Lexile Police” kept telling you, “No, dear, you cannot read about astronauts. You can read about cows because that is your Lexile number. I remember the “sales job” I had to do about reading. The schools made us have a “competition” to encourage reading. And if I didn’t turn in my “Just Read” count, I would hear about it. I often thought, “My goodness, this is way too difficult to just to read.” And oh, silent reading. “C’mon, we HAVE to do this.” “Why, Mr. Charvet. I HATE reading. They make us read things we don’t like. Why can’t I read this National Geographic because it has a story about giant spiders?” “Now, you know the rules: no magazine journals; no Goosebumps; no anything you like, get it?” As the years went by, more and more kids HATED reading except the select few. I recall walking the continuation high school campus and finding one girl, at lunch, reading her book. ONE! Another girl loved to read, but then the staff was concerned she might get too many extra points for reading books, “We can’t have her reading all the time!” As I reflect, as a teacher, there were so many, “…then you put this into the data box, adjust this, enter it this way, cross check that…” I often asked myself, “Uh, this all seems so technical when do the kids get to the joy of reading part.” And we all know, good readers tend to make good writers — “Mr. Charvet I hate writing!” So sad.
Your post points out the importance of flexible instruction and providing students with material that interests them. When my son was young, I tried to get him interested in fiction for read aloud choices. He always drifted to non-fiction. At age 40, most of his reading is still focused on reading for information.
RT — Absolutely. Schools are more going away from fiction (I am a dreamer, cartoon comic, make-believe person — but can read what I need to for the purpose), but that is dense reading. With that said, I always developed a relationship with a student, found out their likes, and went out and bought materials for them. During Covid, I bought books for my students via Amazon and had them delivered right to their door. It made a huge difference. One student was an emerging reader and the other was a creative and the other wanted to learn coding. We always had a rule for picking books. If you do not understand the first five words, then the first five sentences, perhaps it was too difficult a read. But, that doesn’t mean you can’t come back to it later on. It just means we need to “fill your toolbox” a tad more. It was painful for me to watch these kids “read in pain.” No joy.
My youngest son announced one day that stories were okay, but he liked “real reading”/nonfiction. That was in second grade. His teacher had an extensive library of books from every genre that the kids were free to read.
So, enhance student visual, tactile, and social experience in early childhood, provide libraries or other welcoming reading environments that encourage student choice for content, and provide extensive wrap around services that bring health care, parenting, and employment services to young parents. If we do this reading will become the force to support learning and inquiry. How do we get this message out?
To make the necessary changes, we need to abandon privatization and the commodification of education. Education that nurtures and supports was what we had in New York before NCLB, and it worked in districts that embraced it.
I felt that way in Charlotte as well. When NC introduced the precursor to NCLB in 1993, the “ABCs”, I cringed. Intellectual inquiry within the schools has diminished significantly since that time.
Diane, your ignorance is almost as great as your arrogance. I can’t do anything about the latter, but to educate yourself, listen to this episode of Sold a Story featuring Stanford researcher Claude Goldenberg expressing concerns about an over-emphasis on phonics instruction and then read his article about how the science of reading (which is simply reading research) helps English learners. As a reading specialist, I lament your continued uninformed pontificating.
https://features.apmreports.org/sold-a-story/
Your Words
Messages poured in: voicemails, emails, tweets. We got a lot of messages from people after they heard Sold a Story. In this bonus episode, we bring you some of their voices. A 10-year-old figures out why he has struggled to read. A mom stays up late to binge the podcast. A teacher confirms what he’s suspected for years — he’s not really teaching kids how to read.
TRANSCRIPT | DOWNLOAD
https://www.colorincolorado.org/article/bilingual-brain-and-reading-research-questions-about-teaching-english-learners-read-english
If you were being genuine, you would admit that the data on reading effectiveness of most reading programs including the so-called science of reading is all over the map. This article does not debunk phonics, but clearly states that it should not be the predominate strategy to teach reading. There are numerous sources in this piece that are not arrogant, but factual. As an educator of 38 years, I can tell you that too many times I have watched arduous applications of phonics turned students away from reading and learning. In one school we discovered that we could increase student fluency dramatically by second grade, but that comprehension remained a struggle grades 3-8. American students typically read because they want to. There is a reason to read. If we spend half of the school day on practices promoting phonemic experience at the expense of intellectual inquiry, then students will simply check out. I am not sure why you see Diane’s position as arrogant. I see it as advocacy.
Harriett-
Read your first sentence and the final sentence in your first paragraph and ask yourself, “should I, in my glasshouse, be throwing stones?”
Diane’s intelligence is proven daily at this blog.
Great ideas often get a fair hearing unless big money wants to quash them. Presumably, big money doesn’t want to stymie science of reading. If you feel a need to package defense of your product as you do, there’s reason to assume your product is a design failure.
Please remind me what my ‘product’ is. Educating all students using research-backed methods supporting both foundational skills and comprehension? Is that my product?
Harriett
I presume your condescension and product are related to the campaign of Fordham Institute. Btw- Read the Non-Partisan Education Review research by Michael Phelps about the history of Fordham.
Dan Chu, a senior visiting fellow at Fordham, grad of private school- the ever present, perennial favorite of Silicon Valley-Stanford, is high on Emily Hanford’s opinions. Dan’s bio tells us that he helped to develop and implement all of the state’s (Indiana) key ed reforms from…collective bargaining and school choice. Maybe he’s a miracle worker, a founding principal at a high performing urban charter school who raised the pass rate on state assessment from 26-96%. I’m incredulous.
Harriett
Dr. Paul Thomas, at his blog, Radical Scholarship, answered your question, 9-1-2022, “Don’t Buy SOR Propaganda (that) APM Reports is Selling.” He provides references.
Linda, here are my references in Getting Reading Right: On Truths, Truce, and Trust: Diane McGuinness, Anita Archer, Timothy Shanahan, Mark Seidenberg, Daniel Willingham, Nadine Gaab and Natalie Wexler.
https://pamelasnow.blogspot.com/2023/01/guest-post-getting-reading-right-on.html
There are reading experts on all sides of the spectrum.
“There are reading experts on all sides of the spectrum.”
Exactly! And it’s up to us to rigorously examine the claims of each and every one of them. I don’t know anyone (including Emily Hanford) who’s saying phonics is BOTH necessary AND sufficient to gain reading proficiency. No one. It’s one side of Gough and Tunmer’s Simple View of Reading equation: word recognition multiplied by language comprehension equals reading comprehension. If either word recognition or language comprehension is a ‘zero’, you will not have reading comprehension. Both are necessary. The ‘phonics first, phonics forever’ claim is a strawman argument, and yet it surfaces over and over and over again.
Harriett
If you care about the big picture values of public education, a good question to ask is, why is Fordham, Gates et al so enamored with SOL. They’ve had a funny way of showing that their interests aren’t an elimination of local democratic control, the legalized taking of community assets and decimating the middle class. Best case scenario is SOL as a Trojan horse. Worst case scenario is the absence of a ruse to hide their intent.
Amherst grad Emily Hanford on twitter, “Any discussion about ‘equity’ in education that is not first and foremost about literacy is unserious.”
Initially, I thought it was Hoover Institute’s feed promoting regressive taxes.
Correction – Dale Chu, not Dan
Media reported a decade ago (one source out of many was the Tampa Bay Times) about Chu, Tony Bennett (state education commissioner) and a GOP donor’s charter school (Christel De Haan’s charter school).
Given Fordham’s position in public policy advocacy and its funders, the info should be made readily available in bio’s?
I thought we were talking about the science of reading (?) I recommend a new book, Handbook on the Science of Early Literacy (2023), by Cabell, Neuman and Terry. After you’ve read it, I’d love to know which of the research cited you disagree with and why. Let’s have a professional discussion based on the research and not keep raging at windmills. Those of us in the classroom working with underprivileged children know how much it matters getting reading right.
https://pamelasnow.blogspot.com/2023/01/guest-post-getting-reading-right-on.html
“Those of us” who understand the dire implications of libertarian education policy, don’t compartmentalize as the richest 0.1% want us to. If the effort that people like Diane is committed to, is tilting at windmills, you might as well seek employment out of public education now before you are forced out by the schemes of Silicon Valley. There’s a reason for the parents to hold on as long as they can, receiving tax support for face-to-face teaching. Bridge International for profit (and the Christo Rey chain) will be their future, as it is in countries with citizens ill-equipped to fight off Zuck and Gates. Soon enough, the families of the 90% will be forced to live in Koch’s social Darwinist wrap around.
By sheltering in your cloister, I view you as tilting at windmills while carrying freight for groups like Fordham and the Impatient Optimists of Bill Gates. Looking back in 10 years, we will be able to assess who did more for the next generation, you, or Diane.
I understand that Diane, in at least the past
10 years, has had sizable
impact. And, I and many others, are exceedingly grateful for it because the fight for democracy is important.
Harriette,
In light of the info about Bennett, your tunnel vision is indicative? Teachers in Atlanta were forced to be part of a testing scheme funded and devised by the rich. The teachers tried to ameliorate the situation by changing circles on a test. The charge against Bennett was that he changed the grade for a charter school owned by a GOP donor.
The Atlanta students were presumably similar to the ones you profess to care about. Their teachers went to jail.
Giving Bennett et al a pass while teachers are jailed. What message does that send to kids?
In Diane’s post she clearly states that, “As I have often written here, I strongly support phonics.” Knowing how to apply the sound system to print is an essential element of reading, and reading specialists and classroom teachers know and accept this. The article, however, is mostly about how the so-called science of reading has become politicized quagmire.
Someone in their infinite wisdom decided that we high school special ed teachers should give our caseload Aimsweb reading tests every one to two weeks. The administrators who mostly oversaw the special ed in the elementary grades periodically tried to apply inappropriate tools to us. I think Aimsweb had recently been sold to a for profit company, which had miraculously found that you could apply the research on eight year olds to high school students. Fortunately no one followed up on this bit of idiocy because I found it incredible disruptive to teaching. I was supposed to pull random students (who were on my caseload) during my regular classes and test them. I’m not sure what the rest of my class was supposed to do during these sessions. Anyway, by all measures, two of my Latino students appeared to be fast and fluent readers…until you asked them what they had read. They had almost no idea. They could pronounce every word correctly but comprehension was next to nothing. Overload of phonics instruction? I wonder.
About Fordham’s Dale Chu (Stanford grad) who is a fan of the efforts of Emily Hanford (Amherst grad)-
He collaborated with a professor at one of the Koch- funded
university economics centers to write an article. The conclusion states, “Gov. Daniels (GOP) was a popular governor and also among the most highly regarded state executives in the nation…Daniels supported expanding parental choice.”
Parental choice is a term that the state Catholic Conferences use to promote school choice.
Dale is a board member of the Colorado League of Charter Schools. Btw- the Executive Director of the Colorado Catholic Conference was formerly with the Koch network and EdChoice.
An internet search for Dale produced, “Testing 1-2-3 commentator Dale Chu kicked off a new Power Ranking Series on the Collaborative’s Assessment HQ platform…”
Each citizen can decide for him or herself the motivations of
those aligned with libertarians who have self-appointed to steer ed policy. Josh Cowen has provided insight from his own experience in posts at the Ravitch blog.
The so called science of reading is predominately promoted by those who discovered that reading programs are very profitable. The latest Lincoln Project podcast interviewing David Pepper, Ohio politico, does an excellent job of highlighting the sins of the privatization movement and how any government sector it has taken over has failed. David states that Ohio was once the fourth highest rated public school system win America and now is in the mid 20s and declining. I have seen superintendents get downright giddy when talking about getting hold of the 700+ billion dollars spent on public education in this country. The New York Times and Washington Post represent corporate entities with narrow profit margins. I am typically hearted by Valerie Strauss’ reporting, but in the end the headlines get most of the attention. Their reporting is typically responsible, but in the end the bottom line matters and much of their reputation depends on such wealthy celebrities as Bill Gates. It doesn’t matter if kids learn to read. It’s all about the Benjamins!
I think privatization from the outside in or the inside out is the primary motive for this so-called science of reading movement. It is all part of the scheme to commodify education. It is a contrivance to make education profitable and transfer public funds into private pockets.
Fordham Institute endorsed what Emily Hanford wrote.
retired teacher- you may be right
Retired teacher, you are exactly right. When I look back on all of the money that was wasted on computer programs and print programs, including “scripted lessons” it is just jaw- dropping. All we really need for the effective teaching of reading are interesting and compelling stories, articles and books and poems at our students’ instructional and independent levels. Some beginning reading stuff. And a few good diagnostic assessments, mostly informal.
And of course, most importantly — a few good reading teachers and reading specialists in every schoolhouse.
Thank you for your insights and comments.
Fear not. In his latest brilliant idea that fixes everything, Master of the Universe Bill Gates has decided that something like ChatGPT will take over for Reading teachers and solve the education problem.
Meanwhile, I just read about an Eating Disorders hotline where the staff voted to unionize, so the owners replaced the staff with a bot. The future of health care for the Proles, as opposed to the Masters.
Of course, it is the next logical devolution in trying to turn education over to bots. That would make lots of money for Gates and others from Silicon Valley.
The Science of Reading is little more than a marketing slogan.
This has been a very interesting collegial discussion. What I have learned over my years is that there is no substitute for the human interaction of creative and knowledgable reading teachers with our students.
The effective teaching of reading depends on a chemistry between and among the teacher and his or her students. It is a social-emotional and cognitive development activity. It depends on the effective coaching of an ability throughout every year. Struggling readers need support and help and safe spaces to learn.
There is a science of baseball, too. But how we teach it is to coach it and develop it over years of playing the game. We learn through our successes, our effort and our mistakes. But we learn as we go.
It is a developmental process.
“There is a science of baseball, too. But how we teach it is to coach it and develop it over years of playing the game. We learn through our successes, our effort and our mistakes. But we learn as we go.”
Yup. The only change I would make is to put quotation marks around that pesky word “science.”
yep! There was a science of playing tennis, too.
Then Martina Navratilova got basketball player Nancy Lieberman to train her – not in how to hit a tennis ball, but how to become one of the most fit, strongest women’s athletes in the world. And she became almost unbeatable and women’s tennis was never the same.
“Yup.”
Yes, but the best baseball players are the best baseball players. No specific training could turn me into Hank Aaron. All humans are unique with different gifts. This “science of reading” tends to ignore this important fact.
I think I understand what you are saying (and agree), but I never thought of teaching reading as the quest for a “Hank Aaron” of reading. I wanted my kids to be able to read for meaning and enjoy it as well. I know that is an oversimplification, but I imagine that Hank Aaron felt a similar way about baseball. Yes, he had innate talent, but that would not have gotten him anywhere without a love of the game and an (undeniable) desire to hone his skills.
Very true. I guess I was responding to the overuse of data in baseball as well (I am a fan who is frustrated by numbers that dismiss athleticism). I think I am growing into curmudgenhood too easily…
I have been accused of the same thing on occasion. Being a curmudgeon that is. I’m trying to wear it as a badge of honor (dammit!). Somebody has to see the elephants in the room.
Paul, you are absolutely right. I am deeply interested in seeing how my autistic grandson develops in his reading ability. He turns 10 tomorrow and is learning beginning reading with the help of his reading specialist who has worked wonders with him. I can’t wait to see what he can comprehend and and what he will not be able to comprehend as we go down the road.
I recently read of an autistic man who did not learn to talk until he was 11 years old and learned to read when he was 18. He is now a professor at Columbia University. I would love to talk with him. The “autistic mind” is fascinating to me.
The little guy just woke up and hopped up on my back and slid down into my chair. That means he his taking over “his IMac” to watch his YouTube videos. He learned to talk through “scripting” the videos and his movies. That is one way that he assimilates words and language into his brain. He comprehends them all including the adult videos of the animal world. He is smarter than me in so many ways! Scripting is a phenomenon that I am only beginning to understand. He effortly memorizes every word of every scene and says the lines whenever he wants to. But he will not engage in a conversation with you or me as a typical kid would do.
Enjoy your weekend.
One thing I noticed while teaching language arts to a boy who was on the high end of the autism spectrum (Asperger’s then)was that he did not understand imagery. Metaphor and simile were puzzling to him. His language tended to be very concrete. Describe dewdrops as “glistening drops of sun,” and he wouldn’t know what you were talking about. He was in seventh grade and highly intelligent but his social emotional skills were so weak that he alienated his classmates. He just did not pick up on the social cues that most of us take for granted. I know this description doesn’t fit your grandson, but you may be able to relate.
I have a child on the spectrum as well. Between my experience with her and with the growing recognition of spectrum disorder experienced in schools I have come to agree with those who say when you work with one child with autism, you work with one child with autism. It’s wonderful and maddening all at the same time. I think much of this reading debate is the same way. We have a plethora of ways to communicate in this era, struggling with reading does not need to be an intellectual dead end.
“…when you work with one child with autism, you work with one child with autism…”
True no matter who you are working with, spectrum or not.
We’ve learned a few things about Bill Gates since his mask was dropped.
(1) He hung out with Epstein. (2) Suspect that his education schemes will harm teachers’ employment/status (the teaching career is largely female).
And, (3) suspect all data claims that the libertarians’ minions cough up.
Diane says: “There is no “science of reading” . . . The “science of reading” claim is based on the report of the National Reading Panel, whose members were chosen because of their support for phonics . . .I’m open to being convinced that I’m wrong.”
Diane, you’re wrong. As a former high school English teacher, if I asked my students to defend or refute that there is a ‘science of reading’, I would expect them to examine the research conducted into reading (not just up to the year 2000), analyze their findings, and establish a thesis that they developed in an argumentative essay. I would be very concerned if they proclaimed that there was no science of reading without examining the evidence, and if the discussion that followed included tangential topics, guilt by association, and political digressions, that would also be problematic.
So the next time you’re tempted to proclaim that there is no science of reading (as you often do), I recommend reading, analyzing, and either defending or refuting the research and recommendations cited in the 2023 book Handbook of the Science of Early Literacy by Cabell, Neuman, and Terry.
Here are the sections:
Part I: Conceptualizing the Science of Early Literacy
Part II: Development and Instruction of Code-Related Literacy Skills
Part III: Development and Instruction of Meaning-Related Literacy Skills
Part IV: Using the Science of Early Literacy in Staff Development and Family Engagement
Part V: Using the Science of Early Literacy to Support Equity
Part VI: Using the Science of Early Literacy to Learn Across Boundaries
In addition to personal anecdotes (which prove nothing), here are the digressions I found in the comments that did not address the research behind the science of reading.
cyber instruction
standardization
Socrates
social media
Picasso
Gates Foundation
Tuition at Amherst
Wall Street
private colleges
elite education departments
libraries
wrap-around services
privatization and commodification of public education
NCLB
big money
Fordham Institute
Silicon Valley
collective bargaining
school choice
local democratic control
taking community assets
decimating the middle class
Hoover Institute
libertarian education policy
Christo Rey chain
Zuck
Koch
Colorado Catholic Conference
Suddenly, everyone’s an expert on reading instruction without taking the time to develop expertise. Meanwhile, the choices we teachers make on a daily basis affect our students, so getting reading right matters.
https://pamelasnow.blogspot.com/2023/01/guest-post-getting-reading-right-on.html
I read a sample and stopped at this ridiculous sentence:
“Decoding skills are also essential for literacy but need to be explicitly taught starting in the preschool years.”
As someone who grew up when Kindergarten was play, and “decoding skills” were NOT explicitly taught in the preschool years (most kids didn’t even go to preschool, and the ones that did were not “explicitly learning decoding skills”, this sentence is the opposite of “science”.
According to this ridiculous sentence, no one ever learned to read in first grade back in the 1950s and 1960s! And I should believe your “science” over my own lying eyes.
Yes! I listened to Sold a Story because it seemed everyone I knew was referring to it, usually positively, or at least not negatively. I became almost immediately turned off when I realized that, when spinning one particularly dire story about failed literacy instruction Hanford was talking about a kindergartner! Kindergartners don’t need to read or decode! I have a child with a November birthday in a state with a Dec 31 cutoff; in other words, she was 4 for the first several months of kindergarten. One day on the playground I met a fellow mom who was a reading intervention specialist. She told me that most students who were referred for intervention had October, November, and December birthdays. That is, their relative immaturity was a factor, not the method that they were taught reading. My November birthday kid did not read in K and in fact did not read until nearly the end of first grade. I was worried because many of her (older) peers were reading independently in the beginning of first. Thank goodness she went to a school that recognized this as normal. By the end of second grade, she had surpassed most of the students who were reading before her in terms of both the complexity of what she was reading and her stamina for reading. I understand that for kids who do have disabilities like dyslexia, early screening can help because those kids might need an earlier start in explicit instruction. But not all kids not reading in K or 1 have a problem! My daughter may not have been reading then but she was always building and making things. She’s an amazing problem solver and I credit that time spent in play as providing her that foundation. Harriett, in her laundry list of what’s putatively not related to reading instruction includes “standardization.” But it is SO related because children are not standardized!
Children in Finland start school at the age of 7. There is preschool before that, but they emphasize play, not academics. https://amp.theguardian.com/education/2016/sep/20/grammar-schools-play-europe-top-education-system-finland-daycare
Did I read once on this blog that Dewey said children should read at 8? We live longer now. So what’s the hurry?
Yes, Paul. Dewey wrote that.
Smart guy 😎
Why do people compare Children learning a language that has 26 letters, 44 sounds, and 250 symbols (letters/groups of letters that make one sound) to children learning a completely transparent language like Finnish. Even Russian is less complicated than English. Spanish is too. Hebrew and Arabic are nearly 1:1 except those diacritics.
Nobody is claiming that reading doesn’t matter here. The obvious reason we have this discussion is because none of the many educators with significant expertise have found a process that gets all students to reading mastery. There have been numerous sources posted on this thread and many other conversations that make the argument for the use of phonics as well as its failings. The article we are discussing not only uses research data but acknowledges our ongoing conundrum. If you have batted 1000 with your students, I would like to see the evidence. Anecdotally, I was a latent reader who could have cared less about letter sounds until I found it necessary to read at around 8 years of age. I read voraciously now. My son was the same way and now as a 23 year old reads philosophy. I hate to think what might have happened to my intellectual acuity if I had been forced to sit through the phonemic pabulum we force on all students from kindergarten on now. Many students respond well to that instruction, but what I have witnessed as an elementary principal is the insanity of cramming these same practices down the throat of students who do not respond with improved reading or comprehension. I also don’t understand why you insist on demeaning Diane because she sees things differently than you.
Yes! It is so ridiculous that pro-Hanford/pro-SoR folks think they own the civil rights argument around reading. Neither I nor anyone else I know thinks that reading is just some incidental frippery and that it’s ok if children aren’t reading. Far from it! What we object to is a standardization and orthodoxy of approach to the teaching of reading (or really anything else). I don’t believe in mandated curriculum, period. Children are individuals and as such require different paths to get where they are going. One commenter here said her child needed 30 minutes of phonics a day. He should get it, then. My child did not need that even remotely. In fact, knowing far less then than I do now, I borrowed a set of those super basic phonics oriented books and tried to use them with her since she wasn’t reading when many of her classmates were. She HATED them. Luckily I did not insist or who knows if she would have become the sophisticated reader she is—which she did on her own time, when she was ready. What she needed to be doing in K and first was building, making, drawing. (She just graduated with a degree in engineering, by the way.) What is happening now, with Mayor Adams’ SoR curriculum mandate in NYC, and in similar states champing at the bit to substitute one orthodoxy for another, is that what was necessary for the other commenter’s child will now be forced on other people’s children, whether or not it’s what they most need. But it is growing a whole new industry of products and speakers, not to mention directing focus away from what could help teachers better get to know what each child needs: adequate funding to make school buildings welcoming and reducing class size.
Harriette wants to write the rules for dialogue at the blog. She follows the script of the Gates echo machine, “look at the trees, not the forest.”
I’ll offer my rule…based on general principle, refuse to take seriously or entertain a book author’s prescription for educational solutions if he/she says the following, “Any discussion about ‘equity’ in education that is not first and foremost about literacy is unserious.”
Is a statement about equity that is arrogant and authoritarian, a good starting point? Is there a course about poverty and/or empathy at legacy admission schools?
It is to my credit that I don’t expect a different result when repeating behavior. As example, are there any Hoover papers that don’t boil down to the rich should get special treatment? When Fordham writes the foreword to the papers it funds, do they tell the truth about what’s in the research?
If Harriette hasn’t read the mea culpa of Josh Cowen in Ravitch posts, she should.
Btw- please add Josh Cowen to make your list 29 items. And, please add Koch’s name and social Darwinism to the wrap around entry in order to clarify its context. To make a round 30 items, add Harvard Prof. Roland Fryer’s two-tier education.
I want to thank you all, Diane, and Paul and Speduktr, who commented about their personal experience with autistic children, along with Everyone who responded to my comments and responded to each other in this “very vibrant discussion” about our experiences and the best practices in the teaching of of reading. It is how we learn the truth about what really are the best ways to teach reading. What I miss about schools are those Great Debates” that we had over the years about the best methods to teach our students to read well.
I returned home from the shore last evening for “Little Johnny’s” 10th birthday celebration with his Dad and my wife. He spent his birthday weekend alone with his Dad in “Johnny’s world” in our backyard and every room in our suburban Philadelphia home. Johnny’s world is a magical place where he is free to be his autistic self. It is a Magical world where he is free to play and learn in Johnny’s own little way. He lives in his world with his hundreds of animals and fish and frogs, and the flowers, trees and gardens and his cat and dog. He talks with them and builds swimming pools for them in the mud from the hose. He lives in his fantasy world. He surfs YouTube where he finds videos of his animals and dinosaurs of every kind. And he repeatedly chooses and watches videos of phonics being taught through the names of those animals.
Autistic children are “Uniquely Human” and so is how they learn. As Paul points out – so are all children Uniquely Human and every kid learns in his or her unique little way.
It is our job to learn to “meet their needs” and discover the best ways to teach each student. Individualized instruction in small groups and classes was a keynote of my times. There are only three ways to teach phonics — synthetic phonics, analytic phonics or whole word approaches. The best practice is to use them all in authentic ways as each child needs.
The head of Speech Pathology at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, a leading research hospital for autism, said to me that children with autism usually learn to read best through “whole word” approaches. She sent me a couple research articles. Johnny’s reading specialist said in his IEP that Johnny learns best through whole word approaches. Temple Granden, the most well known successful autistic person I have read about said in her book, “Thinking in Pictures”, that her mother taught her phonics from reading real books and that she still has difficulty comprehending other people’e feelings. And I know that Johnny has “phonetic awareness” from the way he has now learned to talk.
But the most important thing in his amazing growth in learning to talk and read and learning to be socially engaged is the magical school that he attends. Our neighborhood public school, Manoa elementary school, has worked miracles for Johnny where he is accepted for “who he is” by every child there, every teacher, and every parent who says hello to him as we walk up to the schoolhouse in the morning. His growth has been “Amazing” because of that “Manoa Magic” of that schoolhouse and the “Joy” of that schoolhouse. They meet all of his needs in an inclusive way.
Children learn to read when they are “ready to read” as the people of Finland know so well. As Diane and others explain, they put little pressure on children to learn reading in early years and they repeatedly have the highest scores on international reading tests. Effective teaching depends on play and the “Joy of schooling.” Joy is part of their curriculum. It is a key to learning to read along the way. So is play.
This is my favorite article bout reading, and I have read many hundreds of articles over my years — “The Joyful, Illiterate Kindergarteners of Finland” —
https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/10/the-joyful-illiterate-kindergartners-of-finland/408325/
Thanks again Everyone — I read your comments again last night — with Joy.
Thank you! A key component to learning is the joy brought by discovery. This is what opens a child’s world to seek understanding. Our task as educators is to find that practice that creates that spark. For those of us with children on the autistic spectrum, the challenge is great, but as I have discovered with my now 28 year old, the reward from the labor is profound.
Here’s how I wrote about joy in Getting Reading Right: On Truths, Truce, and Trust:
Ideally, we would have knowledgeable district leaders vetting practices and programs for time-strapped teachers who are changing the tire while driving the car. But this is not commonplace, so diligent journalists have filled the void. Emily Hanford has investigated a truth that is part of settled science: how readers do not use multiple cueing systems for word identification (though they do use them for word confirmation). Over four years, she has brought us tidings of comfort and joy. We should gratefully take comfort in the fruits of her labor and in another truth as well: knowing that the joy of teaching and learning comes through the “thrill of skill”, as Anita Archer reminds us, which is essential if teachers want to get reading right.
Picture this joyful scene: children beaming with pride as they crack the alphabetic code. It’s the delivery of the lesson that can and must be joyful–not the dilution, misdirection, or downright deceit conjured up through good intentions that have led to bad outcomes. Ignorance is not bliss; it hurts children.
We need the truth. No more making it up. No more stories.
https://pamelasnow.blogspot.com/2023/01/guest-post-getting-reading-right-on.html
Everyone has the right to their own opinion, but not to their own facts.
Emily Hanford is an excellent journalist.
She is a graduate of Amherst College.
She has never taught reading.
She has never conducted reading research.
There are experienced reading teachers and reading researchers (like the three who wrote the article posted by Valerie Strauss), who disagree with her zeal for phonics.
I am not a reading researcher, but I have studied the history of the teaching of reading.
The pendulum has gone back and forth, since the 1820s, when Horace Mann denounced what we call phonics today.
Jeanne Chall, who was both a teacher and a reading researcher, warned against the extremes.
She warned that if reading instruction is carried to an extreme, we can expect someone to rediscover”the reading crisis” and begin the cycle again.
“Everyone has the right to their own opinion, but not to their own facts.”
Finally, something we agree on. I look forward to your blog on the recent research cited in the 2023 Handbook on the Science of Early Literacy–what you agree with and what you disagree with and why. Let’s have a thorough discussion about the facts related to reading research and not where we all went to college. Most importantly, let’s talk about actual reading instruction rather than the history of reading instruction. The lives of our most underprivileged and underserved children depend on our getting reading right. Literally. I was lucky to have stumbled on the books by Diane McGuinness two decades ago, so I never succumbed to the siren call of balanced literacy, but others have only recently learned and changed–know better, do better. And we must support them, not undermine their progress.
I was never a fan of balanced literacy. In fact, I was outspoken in criticizing Chancellor Klein in NYC when he mandated it citywide in 2003.
Emily Hanford has no credentials or experience as either a teacher or a researcher. Do you disagree?
“Emily Hanford has no credentials or experience as either a teacher or a researcher.”
Totally agree! She is an investigative journalist, and like all good journalists, she’s done her homework. She belongs to two of the literacy networks I belong to: Developmental Disorders of Language and Literacy (DDOLL) based in Australia, and SPELLTalk, based in the U.S. Many of the leading reading researchers post on these two cites, and she uses their insights to pursue avenues of investigation. She has read the current research and has interviewed reading researchers, some of whom have appeared in her audio documentaries: Keith Stanovich, Mark Seidenberg, Reid Lyon, Claude Goldenberg, and Susan Neuman, who is co-editor of Handbook of the Science of Early Literacy (2023). She always cites her sources. In the final two bonus episodes of Sold a Story, she laments that many see a so-called ‘phonics fix’ as a panacea for improving reading, which she flatly denies is the case because she understands the importance of other literacy factors like vocabulary and background knowledge in order to make meaning from text, which is the goal of reading.
This is what I care about: Are the facts that she reports on in her audio documentaries accurate? Yes, they are.
I listened to a couple of Hanford’s pieces and it struck me that most of her examples were anecdotal. It also concerned me that she would focus on kindergartners where most research I am aware of states that there are many children who are not yet ready to read in kindergarten. It’s great she is an advocate, but her confirmation bias stands out.
Reid Lyon was George W. Bush’s reading advisor. He picked the members of the National Reading Panel, and picked only university researchers on one side of a vigorous debate.
Can you please cite those reading researchers on the ‘other side’ of the ‘vigorous debate’? I would like to analyze their research. And can you also cite researchers on the other side since the NRP report? Thank you!
You were responding to the article they wrote:
Paul Thomas has also written about the reading wars.
If you are interested in Rae adding the best book about teaching reading, read Jeanne Chall, “Learning to Read: The Great Debate.”
“You were responding to the article they wrote: Literacy Experts: There Is No ‘Science of Reading’.”
Yes I was (and also to your statement that certain researchers were barred from the NRP–who are they?). I’ve just reread the piece. I don’t see any specific research cited about reading research post-2000. Emily Hanford would agree with these points in the article:
1) From the NRP: “Phonics should not become the dominant component in a reading program, neither in the amount of time devoted to it nor in the significance attached.”
2) There is no “reason to regard phonics as a panacea for improving reading achievement.”
3) “As our colleague Timothy Shanahan has argued, there is a difference between a basic science of reading and a science of how to teach reading.”
Timothy Shanahan is well-versed in the science of reading in general and in the topic of Sold a Story in particular: that good readers do not use the 3-cueing system for word RECOGNITION (though they do use context for word CONFIRMATION).
Here’s research on 3-Cueing if you’d like to look it up:
“Multiple research studies have also provided evidence that skilled readers recognise a word’s spelling and pronunciation before its meaning (Stanovich, Nathan, West, & Vala-Rossi, 1985; Forster, 2012; Maurer & McCandiss, 2008; Perfetti, 2011). Therefore learning to read via mapping of grapheme-phoneme correspondences is more efficient than learning to read words by context.” (https://fivefromfive.com.au/phonics-teaching/the-three-cueing-system/#:~:text=The%20three%20cueing%20model%20says,Graphophonic%20(letters%20and%20sounds)
As I mentioned, I never used 3-cueing because I had discovered the science of reading through the books by Diane McGuinness before becoming a reading specialist. Here’s how I explained this point in my piece:
“Sold a Story delivers another powerful truth related to word recognition: The three-cueing system that has been promoted through Balanced Literacy over the past two decades is not what good readers use to read. In fact, that system describes what poor readers do. Accepting this truth should be non-negotiable and has implications for instruction–MY instruction. As a reading specialist faced with administering flawed assessments based on three-cueing that masked whether my beginning readers could decode, I rewrote those predictable test booklets to make them decodable, thereby obtaining meaningful data. So reference to a “fabricated phonics debate” in the open letter “rejecting the newest reading wars” simply adds insult to injury.”
https://pamelasnow.blogspot.com/2023/01/guest-post-getting-reading-right-on.html
The ‘story’ we were all told was that good readers use the 3-cueing system for word recognition. I think generalized attacks on the ‘science of reading’ are not productive. It makes more sense to pick a claim that Hanford (or anyone else) makes in her audio documentaries and directly dispute that claim with specific references to research.
That would be very helpful to those who are trying to make sense of the discussion.
Amen! As a practitioner my experience with student joy is through discovery of ideas and unbridled inquiry. Reading is a tool to get to that discovery, not the end in itself.
How much did Emily Hanford make on her book? What percent of the amount did she give to the needs of kids living in poverty (exclude any largesse to right wing organizations)?
Thank You Paul! Your words are heartfelt.
Johnny just came in from his backyard with a white Dandelion ball in his hand and a sparkle in his eye. He looked me in the eye and scripted from the movie Horton Hears a Who —
“Be careful with that speck — people live there.”
For those who question Emily Hanford’s knowledge of reading as an investigative reporter, do you also question Woodward & Bernstein? After all, they weren’t burglars!
That’s a very poor analogy.
It makes no sense.
Good journalists are good detectives .
But they don’t know more about teaching reading than those with deep knowledge of teaching reading.
Next time you need surgery, call a journalist%
That analogy doesn’t hold up. Woodward and Bernstein reported on an investigation of corrupt activity. They didn’t make assumptions about policy or pretend they had legal insights. Hanford has taken the position many in educated circles take by treating teaching as if it isn’t really a profession. When I started listening to the podcast she started giving the impression that she doesn’t believe teachers know what they are doing. That they simply act on instinct and not on training or professional experience. Hanford makes numerous assumptions that, in my experience as a principal in two different states and districts, simply is not true. Many districts have been using many of the strategies she recommends that she likes to call the science of reading. All the elementary schools I served focused on phonics, decoding, and DIBELS (Another product by the way). What Hanford described as practice has not been the rule in schools for at least two decades, probably three. When she reports on dyslexic children she doesn’t bother to differentiate between dyslexic students with educated households versus those in poverty. We used specific strategies for dyslexic students in my last school and the students from supportive environments improved while those from poverty typically continued to struggle. I am not denouncing the strategies espoused by Hanford, but I do think her lack of experience and training in reading keeps her from understanding the whole picture. Hanford, as a reporter certainly has the capacity to investigate practice, but the problem I have with her methods is that she simply doubles down on what she believes, seeking confirmation bias encouraged by those who might profit from demeaning actual instructional practice while failing to do a deep dive into what is actually happening in the public school classroom. Woodward and Bernstein reported on a crime. They didn’t question law enforcement practices in the process.
Paul, thank you for your wise comment.
The teachers, reading teachers, reading specialists, language arts teachers, English teachers, content area teachers, special ed teachers, speech therapists and occupational therapists that I have taught with and rubbed elbows with over the years from 1975 to today in Philadelphia’s public schools and in its suburbs were and are “true professionals.” Our reading teachers and reading specialists are well schooled in the art and craft and science of reading instruction and its methodology. There are no new ideas discussed here or anywhere that were not discussed and debated 50 years ago and when I was a child in a wonderful public school, Lower Moreland elementary school. When I walked through the schoolhouse door as a newly hired HS English teacher in 1975, I was asked to become a reading teacher because the Title 1 Regulations required reading programs in our schools.
We all rushed to get our reading specialist certifications and Masters degrees. I earned my Masters degree from Temple University’s nationally known and respected “Reading Clinic.” The University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education also had an outstanding program led by Morten Botel. We collaborated with the GSE as our school was University City HS.
We studied the research studies of the experts of our day which included the science pertaining to reading. I still have the books and texts in my home library that we used then and that I have read over the years. We had professional development programs throughout all of those years in our schools and as Title 1 Reading Coordinator and Reading Department Chair, I was responsible for providing professional development to our content area teachers. I was an AP and principal in several schools and was testing coordinator. I read the International Reading Association’s Annual Summary of Investigations Related to Reading every year as well as article after article discussing that research. It is now the International Literacy Association.
Over the years I have seen many so-called experts walk into our schools and profess that they knew the answers. In reality most knew little unless they actually taught reading for years in schools.
My School District, the Haverford S. D., has had professional development this year in the Science of Reading. Our School Board’s Curriculum and Student Service’s Committee recently had our teacher leaders, principals and head of ELA present on how they “meet the needs of our students in reading” and assess their reading needs. I was truly impressed and spoke about how thrilled I was about what they were doing. We have several experienced reading specialists in all of our schools with graduate degrees.
One of our school board members recently received her doctorate in literacy development and is a certified literacy specialist who works in a leadership position in the Philadelphia School District. The PSD has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on Science of Reading professional development for this year. She expressed to me her concerns about what is being taught as science in reading and the lack of quality of the PD our teachers are receiving.
I now work as an advocate for the best practices in public education and work as an attorney for student and teacher rights. This is what I recently said to my grandson’s autistic support teacher as she has lost both her parents and her sister due to cancer in the last three years all the while dedicating herself to our children —
“When I look back over my life my best and most productive years were when I taught reading. To me teaching and learning will always be The Greatest profession.
“Mrs K” is a true professional. So are all the teachers and principals in Manoa elementary school, our neighborhood public school.
Those who commented on this thread look to be pretty sharp to me.
Maybe we should stop making reading curriculum a business/money maker and give teachers what they need to teach. I see you don’t mention any of the research from the podcast “Sold a Story” and also the fact that pushing children to read in kindergarten when they are not developmentally ready. That is when phonics and letter sounds should be taught to get them ready to read.
Teacher tired of “experts” selling their knowledge instead of working together to do what’s best for kids.
I absolutely agree!
Yep, and not to mention lots of Read-aloud, and exploration of arts, phys ed and pre-social studies and pre-science, pre-math. Do you know how much you can learn from just baking bread? Measuring ingredients, talking about yeast and sour dough starter, and where the recipe came from – culture/social studies.
So true Debbie! Even if the child is autistic and can not talk yet!
This is why my kid learned content, but since his progressive school did not phonics ever, he didn’t learn to read. He wouldn’t have had to go to a school for dyslexic kids if he had been taught phonics early and maybe got some quality MTSS phonics instruction to supplement. Instead he got an IEP and no systematic phonics. They waited to fail and indeed they failed to teach him to read.
This is such an important point! I work with 48 struggling readers three times a week (8 groups of 6), and I can see how many of them are instructional casualties simply because their needs were not addressed in Tier I classroom instruction. Of course, differentiation is very important. The last year I taught second grade, the reading level of my students ranged from kindergarten to sixth grade. But my sixth grade reader really wanted to play ‘sound ball’ with the rest of the class, so I would, for example–when practicing the ‘au’ and ‘aw’ spelling patterns–give her the word ‘claustrophobia’ while the rest of the class got ‘sauce’.
Diane, what do you think of Reid Lyon’s ten maxims for how children learn to read? Here’s what he says and the link he provides gives the research supporting his maxims.
Over the last 50 years, there’s been a vast outpouring of research about reading development, drawing on insights from neuroscientists, psychologists, linguists, speech pathologists, educators and other experts. I’m sometimes asked to summarize, in plain language, what we’ve learned so far. These ten maxims represent my best attempt at doing that.
This may seem like a fool’s errand, because no set of maxims can fully convey the scope or the nuance of thousands of studies. I hope nevertheless that these maxims might be useful in crystallizing some of the most essential findings. In collaboration with some outstanding researchers and practitioners, I’ve compiled here a selective list of studies that underlie each of the ten maxims (https://www.readinguniverse.org/10-maxims-research). The research behind the maxims addresses a wide range of individual differences in reading development, reading difficulties and reading instruction. Taken as a whole, the studies encompass children identified as having dyslexia and other learning disabilities as well as children who struggle with reading as a result of inadequate instruction. Many of the studies also include proficient readers.
Because these maxims are very broad, there is of course more to say about specific subpopulations of students with distinct strengths and needs. I encourage advocates for these students to formulate additional maxims that are not adequately covered by these first ten. Any additions should be in clear, consumer-friendly language and supported by cited studies that report relevant empirical findings.
The overarching message is that learning to read is a complex process involving multiple abilities, skills, and knowledge. Each is essential but none is sufficient on its own.
With that as prologue, here are my ten maxims:
Almost all children learn to speak naturally; reading and writing must be taught.
Literacy begins at birth. It is rooted in early social interactions and experiences that include regular exposure to oral language and print. Strong roots tend to produce stronger readers.
All good readers are good decoders. Decoding should be taught until children can accurately and independently read new words. Decoding depends on phonemic awareness: a child’s ability to identify individual speech sounds. Decoding is the on-ramp for word recognition.
Fluent readers can instantly and accurately recognize most words in a text. They can read with expression and at an appropriate rate for their age. Reading fluency requires comprehension AND it supports comprehension.
Comprehension—the goal of reading—draws on multiple skills and strengths, including a solid foundation of vocabulary and background knowledge.
One size does not fit all: use student data to differentiate your instruction.
Direct, systematic instruction helps students develop the skills they need to become strong readers. Indirect, three-cueing instruction is unpredictable in its impact on word reading and leaves too much to chance.
These maxims apply to English Learners/Emergent Bilinguals, who often need extra support to bolster their oral language as they learn to read and write in a new language.
We should support students who speak languages or dialects other than General American English at home, by honoring their home language and by giving them expanded opportunities to engage with General American English text.
To become good readers and writers, students need to integrate many skills that are built over time.