|
Why Johnny Isn't "Hooked" on Any Phonics Program...And What You Can Do About It
It's kind of like ping pong. A report by the U.S. Government insists that the best way to teach reading is to start with phonics. A few years ago, California adopted a whole language approach to teaching reading. Phonics; No Phonics; Phonics; No Phonics. Back and forth. Ping pong. If you have been around education for very long, you realize this political "pendulum" swings back and forth. It doesn't seem to matter which approach is currently "in" and being used, most kids learn to read without much trouble. With the popularity of commercial phonics programs these days, you would think that all reading problems would be solved - the reading failure would have disappeared by now. But there are always some children who either can't read or have a lot of trouble learning to read and spell. So despite changes in the school's approach to teaching reading, and despite the popular commercial phonics programs, "Johnny" still can't read. How Bad Is The Problem? How Many "Johnnies" Are There? Here is what the best research tells us:
Phonics, the relationship between letters and sounds, plays a key role in learning to read. Many students "pick it up naturally" whether or not it is "taught" formally. But 30% of students have a specific difficulty being able to process (or think about) the sounds inside of words. That sounds strange to people who have no problem understanding phonics. It is kind of like colorblindness. If you can see colors, it is hard to imagine people who don't see them the same way that you do. The same is true with phonics. This is not the same as "hearing." These students can hear just fine. Instead, it is the way the brain processes those sounds. The bottom line is, for these students make any sense. And slowing down the phonics program is kind of like someone talking to you in a foreign language - slowly. If you cant understand their words, it doesn't make nay difference how fast or slow they speak - it's still gibberish. The ability to think about the sounds inside of words is called auditory conceptual judgment. A Single "Flaw" in Reading Programs Is Cause of Failure How Does The Problem Show Up? Often, parents know there is something wrong, but no one can quite "put their finger on it." They know their child is smart, but why aren't they doing better. The usual conclusion is that the child is lazy or a behavior problem. Many times, these students are just smart enough to "slip through the cracks" and not even qualify for help at school. But learning is not the comfortable process it is for others. Fortunately, there is a solution to this problem. It Doesn't Have to Be That Way! This opens a whole new world to a person who previously could not read. Auditory conceptual dysfunction has been found to be a key and often crippling factor in reading and spelling disorders. But it doesn't have to be that way! Auditory judgment can be trained. Reading and spelling disorders can be corrected by using programs that train this valuable processing skill. |