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Approaches to Reading Instruction

Approaches to Reading Instruction. Amber Allen Dawn Hermann Jamie Milanowski. History of Reading. Textbooks were created to teach reading McGuffey Readers – now the basal reading series Teacher centered – students rote memorization Progressive Education Movement

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Approaches to Reading Instruction

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  1. Approaches to Reading Instruction Amber Allen Dawn Hermann Jamie Milanowski

  2. History of Reading • Textbooks were created to teach reading • McGuffey Readers – now the basal reading series • Teacher centered – students rote memorization • Progressive Education Movement • Interests of students, science • Dick and Jane books • “Whole Word” approach • 1955 Why Johnny Can’t Read (1955) • Attacked the whole word approach • Children’s stories with controlled vocabularies • Children need to be able to sound out words. • Whole Language started in Late 70s • Popular in 80s/90s • Students struggling with Whole Language approach • Decoding of words was not taught • Each child learns differently • Balanced Literacy approach to reading (Brown, 2011; Reyhner, 2008)

  3. Whole Language Approach • Example: • Learning to read through Whole Language approach

  4. Whole Language Approach • Focus on meaning and strategy instruction rather than decoding • Looks at language as a whole rather than individual parts • Teaches reading and writing through oral language experiences of the child

  5. Components of Whole Language Approach • Top-down approach • Literate Environment • Oral Language and Literacy used across all content areas • Student-Centered • Reading and writing for real purposes

  6. Cons of Whole Language • No focus on language structure • Literacy Sub-skills are taught as the need arises

  7. SLP Role with Whole Language • Provide services consistent with school’s approach to literacy • Ideal program for SLP-Focus on oral language • Assessment procedures-ongoing in natural environment • Service Delivery-classroom based model • Provide teachers with suggestions for using oral language to promote literacy learning • Help students acquire oral language skills • Help students acquire written language skills

  8. Phonics Approach • Focuses on the relationship between the letter (or grapheme) and the sound it makes. • Direct, explicit, and systematic teaching • Teaches reading in a hierarchy type of fashion • Teaches each letter sound • Sight words also taught • my, the, at, to • Sentences • Paragraphs • Bottom up approach (Byrd, 2008)

  9. Phonics Approach • Cons • No one-to-one sound symbol relationship • English homonyms create difficulties for spelling (even college level) • E.g., to, too, two; Their, there, they’re • “Outlaw words” need to be memorized • About half of the English language cannot be pronounced correctly using phonics • Differing vocabulary sizes • Differing dialects of English that vary in pronunciation (e.g., Minnesota vs. Texas) • Children with articulation disorders struggle

  10. Phonics Approach • SLP Role • Phonological awareness • Teaching specific sounds • Service delivery: • Pull-out • Small groups • Collaboration with teacher or co-teach • Speech groups or whole group teaching

  11. Phonics Example • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BELlZKpi1Zs • Reading Mastery

  12. The Great Debate • Whole-Language vs. Phonics • California implemented whole language in the 1980s, but then offered school districts financial incentives to return to the phonics method in 1996. • The National Research Council made a public statement in 1998, asking to end the “reading wars.” The Council cited for more than two decades bouncing back and forth between the two methods resulted in little academic gain.

  13. The Great Debate • The “reading wars” were not just about academics, they were also political. • Conservatives saw whole language as a freewheeling approach that was missing standards and rules needed in education. • Liberals said phonics perpetuated patronizing “drill and kill” strategies which turned kids into reading robots and turned them away from wanting to learn. • Whole language was used in more liberal states, phonics in conservative states.

  14. Balanced Literacy Approach • In 1997, Congress asked NIH to create the National Reading Panel to consider the debate question. In 2000, the panel released its “meta-analysis” and deduced that all children must master five skills:

  15. Balanced Literacy Approach

  16. Balanced Literacy Approach • Children need to learn to both sound out words and look at context to become effective readers. • The 1998 National Research Council report stated, “ If we have learned anything from this effort, it is that effective teachers are able to craft a special mix of instructional ingredients for every child they work with.”

  17. Balanced Literacy Approach • In a balanced literacy approach how you teach and what you teach are equally important. • Some sound-letter patterns are more consistent, and should be taught early as a foundation for literacy. • Books such as kindergarten standards like “ChickaChicka Boom Boom” work well to introduce blended literacy.

  18. Balanced Literacy Approach • Example: • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nv6jKXQ6Voo

  19. Children with Language Delays/Disorders • While both methods can be effective with normally-developing readers, choosing one method over the other could harm children’s development, especially those with language impairments (LI). • Children with LI tended to benefit most from phonics, while gifted children did well with the whole language approach. • The whole language approach has been found to be particularly detrimental to children with dyslexia.

  20. Take Away Points • Important to know literacy approach school uses. • To collaborate your services • Not one approach works for all children • Take both interests and skills into consideration

  21. References • Brown, E. (2011). History of reading instruction. The Phonics Page. Retrieved on July 27, 2013 from http://thephonicspage.org/On%20Phonics/historyofreading.html. • Byrd, C. M. (2008). Reading instruction beliefs and practices of early elementary school teachers. Psi Chi, The National Honor Society in Psychology, 13(2), 76-85. • Chaney, Carolyn. (1990). Evaluating the Whole Language Approach to Language Arts: The Pros and Cons. Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 21, 244-249. • Dahms, Joel (2006). Spelling out dyslexia: Northwest researchers shed light on spelling problems in dyslexic children, provide hope for new treatment. Northwest Science & Technology. Retrieved on July 28from https://depts.washington.edu/nwst/issues/index.php?issueID=fall_2006&storyID=800. • Kolker, Robert (2006). A is for apple, B is for Brawl. New York. Retrieved on July 28, 2013 from http://nymag.com/news/features/16775/index1.html. • Reyhner, J. (2008). The reading wars: Phonics versus whole language. Retrieved on July 26, 2013 from http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jar/Reading_Wars.html. • Schory, M.E. (1990). Whole Language and the Speech-Language Pathologist. Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 21, 206-211. • Strickland, Dorothy. Practical strategies to help you build a truly balanced classroom literacy program. Scholastic Instructor. Retrieved on July 28, 2013 from http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/balanced-literacy.

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