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| Wonder Why Kids Can't Read? | Ever Wonder Why Kids Can't Read?
If we are interested in our children doing better in
school, then it's important to understand the reasons why
they are not. During the last couple of decades new views
of reading instruction emerged and morphed in school
districts nationwide.
The question became - are phonics versus whole language
methods better for beginning readers? It has ended up that
educators are now struggling to blend these reading
programs and tailor them for individual children.
It was known as "the reading wars," which were initially
waged during the 1980s and '90s, and it was around 1987
when personal journals became one of the latest classroom
tactics for teaching reading to kids. Known as whole
language, it was an instructional philosophy emphasizing
that children focus on meaning, which contrasts with
phonics based methods of teaching reading and writing.
Then, many people believed that children were poor readers
because the old school approach emphasizing phonics. The
fact that memorization ended up turning reading into a
chore alienated many of the kids from reading, period. The
National Reading Panel reported findings about Phonics for
Reading as a research-based program that: delivers direct
instruction in phonics increases fluency with Second and
Third levels provides word-recognition and spelling
instruction, plus story reading, and independent activities.
It is also important to realize that the parents are a
child's first teachers. Toddlers learn a lot at home so it
is critical to talk alot. Children will learn about spoken
words just from listening to their parents. Parents take
note: read to your child; share books you loved and try
some new ones from the library and then reread favorites
over and over again.
It is also important to realize that the parents are a
child's first teachers. Toddlers learn a lot at home so it
is critical to talk alot. Children will learn about spoken
words just from listening to their parents. Parents take
note: read to your child; share books you loved and try
some new ones from the library and then reread favorites
over and over again.
Ultimately whole language proved to be a disaster, and
eight years after whole language first appeared in
California grade schools, by the mid-90s, the state's
fourth-grade level reading scores had plummeted nationally
to the bottom. This was according to the National
Assessment of Educational Progress(NAEP).
By 1997, Congress formed the National Reading Panel to
evaluate the research on teaching practices wiht the intent
on determining what worked. Then soon after, a federal
program called the No Child Left Behind Act required school
districts to use scientifically proven instructional
methods. The goal? To make all children proficient in math
and reading by the year 2014. Six years after No Child Left
Behind's passage, a lot of data has been collected about
the academic performance of both students and schools.
Today there is a trend towards balanced or comprehensive
literacy, and most educators agree that there's no one
single program that fits all children for developing
reading skills.
----------------------------------------------------
Kristin Gabriel is an author and social media marketing
professional and works with Rocco Basile
(http://www.roccobasile.org ) of the the Basile Builders
Group based in New York. Basile is involved
with several charities including Children of the City and
the Joe DiMaggio Committee for Xaverian High School.
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