Given the fact that about half the states have now mandated that teachers teach “the science of reading,” it seems to be a good time to repost what I wrote on November 1, 2023.
Some things never change.
I wrote:
One of my grandsons sent me an article about the national rush to mandate “the science of reading,” and it caused me to explain briefly (without boring him) the background of the latest panacea.
I didn’t tell him the history of the “reading wars,” which I researched and wrote about in Left Back (2000). I didn’t tell him that reading instruction has swung back and forth between the phonetic method and the “whole word” method since the introduction of public schooling in the first quarter of the 19th century. Horace Mann opposed phonics. But the popular McGuffey readers of that century were phonetic and included examples of good literature.
In 1930, the Dick-and-Jane readers were introduced, and they swept the country. Unlike the McGuffey readers, they featured pictures of children (white and suburban), they used simple words that could be easily recognized, and they were bright and colorful. By the 1950s, Dick and Jane style readers were used in about 80% of American schools. They relied on the whole word method, also known as look-say.
In 1955, this national consensus was disrupted by the publication of Rudolf Flesch’s wildly popular book, Why Johnny Can’t Read, which castigated the look-say method and urged a revival of phonics. The fervor for phonics then is similar to the fervor now.
But the debate about which method was best quickly became politicized. “Bring back phonics” was the battle cry of very conservative groups, who lambasted the whole-word method as the conspiratorial work of liberal elites. Phonics thus was unfairly tarnished as a rightwing cause.
The definitive book about the teaching of reading was written in 1967 by Harvard literacy expert Jeanne Chall: Learning to Read: The Great Debate. Chall wrote about the importance of phonics as part of beginning reading instruction, followed up by wonderful children’s literature. She warned against going to extremes, a warning that has been ignored with every pendulum swing.
The 1980s began the dominance of whole language, which brought back whole-word sight reading and de-emphasized phonics. Textbook companies boasted that their programs were whole language. Literacy conferences were focused on whole language. Phonics was out. Many reading teachers held on their phonics books, even though phonics was out of style.
There is always a crisis in reading, so in the late 1990s, the pendulum began to move again. As it happened, a very influential supporter of phonics held a key position at the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Reid Lyon was director of the NIH’s National Institute of Child Health and Development. His field of expertise was learning disabilities.
From Wikipedia:
From 1992 to 2005, Lyon served as a research neuropsychologist and the chief of the Child Development and Behavior Branch of the NICHD at the National Institutes of Health; in this role he developed and oversaw research programs in cognitive neuroscience, learning and reading development and disorders, behavioral pediatrics, cognitive and affective development, School Readiness, and the Spanish to English Reading Research program. He designed, developed and directed the 44-site NICHD Reading Research Network.
Lyon selected the members of the National Reading Panel. Like him, most were experimental researchers in higher education. Only one—Joanne Yatvin— was experienced as an elementary school teacher and principal. She wrote a “minority view” dissenting from the report, and she worried that the report would be misused.
President George W. Bush signed No Child Left Behind into law on January 8, 2002. This law was the single largest intrusion of the federal government into education in American history. Before NCLB, education was a state responsibility. Since passage of NCLB, the federal government established mandates that schools had to obey.
One of the components of this law was the Reading First program. RF was based on the report of the National Reading Panel, which emphasized the importance of phonemic awareness, phonics, decoding, and fluency.
The Reading First program allocated $6 billion over six years to encourage districts to adopt the “science of reading,” as established by the National Reading panel.
There were two reasons that the program ended.
First, there were financial scandals. Google “Reading First Program Scandals”). The New York Times reported here about conflicts of interest and steering of contracts to favored textbook publishers. “In a searing report that concludes the first in a series of investigations into complaints of political favoritism in the reading initiative, known as Reading First, the report said officials improperly selected the members of review panels that awarded large grants to states, often failing to detect conflicts of interest. The money was used to buy reading textbooks and curriculum for public schools nationwide.”
Second, the final evaluation of the program found that it taught what it aimed to teach but there was no improvement in students’ comprehension.
Here is the summary of the final evaluation:
The findings presented in this report are generally consistent with findings presented in the study’s Interim Report, which found statistically significant impacts on instructional time spent on the five essential components of reading instruction promoted by the program (phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension) in grades one and two, and which found no statistically significant impact on reading comprehension as measured by the SAT 10. In addition to data on the instructional and student achievement outcomes reported in the Interim Report, the final report also presents findings based upon information obtained during the study’s third year of data collection: data from a measure of first grade students’ decoding skill, and data from self-reported surveys of educational personnel in study schools.
Analyses of the impact of Reading First on aspects of program implementation, as reported by teachers and reading coaches, revealed that the program had statistically significant impacts on several domains. The information obtained from the Test of Silent Word Reading Fluency indicates that Reading First had a positive and statistically significant impact on first grade students’ decoding skill.
The final report also explored a number of hypotheses to explain the pattern of observed impacts. Analyses that explored the association between the length of implementation of Reading First in the study schools and reading comprehension scores, as well as between the number of years students had been exposed to Reading First instruction and reading comprehension scores were inconclusive. No statistically significant variation across sites in the pattern of impacts was found. Correlational analyses suggest that there is a positive association between time spent on the five essential components of reading instruction promoted by the program and reading comprehension measured by the SAT 10, but these findings appear to be sensitive to model specification and the sample used to estimate the relationship.
The study finds, on average, that after several years of funding the Reading First program, it has a consistent positive effect on reading instruction yet no statistically significant impact on student reading comprehension. Findings based on exploratory analyses do not provide consistent or systematic insight into the pattern of observed impacts.
After the disgrace of the Reading First program, support for phonics dissipated. But in the past few years, journalists (led by Emily Hanford) have trumpeted the idea that the report of the National Reading Panel established the “science of reading.” New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote about the “Mississippi Miracle,“ claiming that the “science of reading” had lifted fourth grade reading scores, and no new spending was needed in a very poorly resourced state. Kristof did not explain why the SOR did not cause a rise in eighth grade scores in Mississippi, nor did he understand that retaining low-scoring third graders raises the percentage of fourth graders who get high test scores. State after state is now mandating the “science of reading.”
And so the cycle begins again.

It is no accident that new educational initiatives often accompany an attempt to disrupt current practice in order to monetize instruction. A one size fits all standardization allows for maximum profits for those that can convince state DOEs and school superintendents that the desired approach is “the be all, end all way” to getting improved results. Then, the marketing campaign convinces states, politicians and educational leaders to jump on the latest educational bandwagon. We have been here many times before.
We have witnessed the push for standardization from NCLB and competency based programs led by Big Tech. We have been riding the wave of Big Tech’s influence for almost a quarter of a century, but we have yet see any of the promised amazing results. Instead, we have a created a generation of young people, with reduced curiosity and poor social skills, that are looking for easy answers on their devices. The never ending influence of Big Money invades education to extract profits by attacking current practice that does not rely on monetizing education. Currently, the bogus “science of reading” to be followed by AI are eagerly searching for easy targets to attack, but none of it is based on actual science or evidence. Phonics is an element of reading that must be mastered students to become fluent readers, but there are many different less expensive ways to teach students phonics and its application to reading.
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What’s new in this latest assault by monied interests to extract more money from public education is the coercion and cooperation of state legislatures and schools of education. The former are absolutely NOT well-informed about reading instruction, and the latter, the schools of education, are mostly just cowardly sheep who don’t want to make a fuss.
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Don’t leave out the big media.
Since they have no critical thinking on this issue, they go with the panacea of the movement.
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Lots of tech. executives are sending children to schools that offer mostly traditional instruction with limited access to technology. Some of them also refuse to buy smart phones for their children. They understand the harmful impact of too much screen time to developing eyes and brains.
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If you want to put a screw into a piece of oak, you should bore a hole about 1/32 smaller than the size of the screw, depending on how big the hole is. If it is poplar, maybe 1/16 less or more.
That is real hole language. Pun intended. But there is a point. No matter what method you use to teach reading, the desire to understand the material is the most important ingredient to the reading recipe. A guy who really wants to know how big a hole to drill will read the piece. If you just think holes are boring, no method will work.
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thanks for sharing the hole story, Roy
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For an extended analysis and discussion see: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/01614681231155688#bibr42-01614681231155688
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I hope you will read my post about Reid Lyon’s ten maxims and let me know which (if any) of his ten maxims you disagree with. That would be a productive conversation. Thank you.
https://harriettjanetos.substack.com/p/the-lion-in-winter-reid-lyon-will?r=5spuf
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I have no idea how this username was generated! I’m Harriett Janetos.
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Hi, Harriett. Hope you are doing well! Nice to see you back here.
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Thank you! So nice to be back.
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I hope you will read my post about Reid Lyon’s ten maxims and let me know which (if any) of his ten maxims you disagree with. That would be a productive conversation. Thank you.
https://harriettjanetos.substack.com/p/the-lion-in-winter-reid-lyon-will?r=5spuf
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All ten are superbly stated.
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And I totally agree with them.
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Harriet, the six-year-old daughter of a good friend of mine was way behind in reading. My friend brought her to me every day for a year for “Bob School,” and we did Jolly Phonics, which the girl LOVED. She just aced her state reading test and reads her chapter books with ease. Way ahead of most of her classmates. Why? Because she doesn’t have decoding issues anymore.
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Love this! Thank you so much for sharing. You may find this post interesting: The Science of Reading Meets the Science of Learning: Fast-Tracking Phonics.
https://harriettjanetos.substack.com/p/the-science-of-reading-meets-the?r=5spuf
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I agree with your tenets as well. I particularly agree with “use student data to differentiate your instruction.” There is no “one way” to teach reading. Instruction should be guided by learner needs.
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Let me try again:
I hope you will read my post about Reid Lyon’s ten maxims and let me know which (if any) you disagree with. That would be a productive conversation. Thank you.
https://harriettjanetos.substack.com/p/the-lion-in-winter-reid-lyon-will?r=5spuf
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