NYT:
2.15.2020 by Dana Goldstein
“Bit!” Ayana Smith called out as she
paced the alphabet rug in front of her kindergarten students at Garrison
Elementary School.
“Buh! Ih! Tuh!” the class responded in
unison, making karate chop motions as they enunciated the sound of each letter.
In a 10-minute lesson, the students chopped up and correctly spelled a string
of words:
Top. “Tuh! Ah! Puh!”
Wig. “Wuh! Ih! Guh!”
Ship. “Shuh! Ih! Puh!”
Ms. Smith’s sounding-out exercises might
seem like a common-sense way to teach reading. But for decades, many teachers have
embraced a different approach, convinced that exposing students to the likes of
Dr. Seuss and Maya Angelou is more important than drilling them on phonics.
Lagging student performance and newly
relevant research, though, have prompted some educators to reconsider the ABCs
of reading instruction. Their effort gained new urgency after national test
scores last year showed that only a third of American students were proficient
in reading, with widening gaps between good readers and bad ones.
Now members of this vocal minority,
proponents of what they call the “science of reading,” congregate on social
media and swap lesson plans intended to avoid creating “curriculum casualties”
— students who have not been effectively taught to read and who will continue
to struggle into adulthood, unable to comprehend medical forms, news stories or
job listings.
The bible for these educators is a body
of research produced by linguists, psychologists and cognitive scientists.
Their findings have pushed some states and school districts to make big changes
in how teachers are trained and students are taught.
The “science of reading”
stands in contrast to the “balanced
literacy” theory that many
teachers are exposed to in schools of education. That theory holds that
students can learn to read through exposure to a wide range of books that
appeal to them, without too much emphasis on technically complex texts or
sounding out words.
Eye-tracking studies and brain scans now
show that the opposite is true, according to many scientists. Learning to read,
they say, is the work of deliberately practicing how to quickly connect the
letters on the page to the sounds we hear each day. READ MORE
>>
Based on (7) readability formulas:
Grade Level: 8
Reading Level: standard / average.
Reader's Age: 12-14 yrs. Old
(Seventh and Eighth graders)
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