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What's
the best way to teach children to read? According to the National Reading
Panel, "teaching children to manipulate phonemes in words was highly
effective under a variety of teaching conditions with a variety of learners
across a range of grade and age levels and that teaching phonemic awareness to
children significantly improves their reading more than instruction that lacks
any attention to Phonemic Awareness." [1]
This is a statement made by the National Reading Panel (NRP) in their report
titled "TEACHING CHILDREN TO READ: An Evidence-Based Assessment of the
Scientific Research Literature on Reading and Its Implications for Reading
Instruction."
Phonemic
Awareness instruction was selected for review by the NRP in their report
because studies have identified phonemic awareness and letter knowledge as two
of the best predictors of how well children will learn to read in their first 2
years of entering school. There is strong Scientific evidence to suggest that
phonemic awareness instructions are an important part in helping children
develop reading skills.
One
study discussed the presence of phonemic awareness in Austrian children aged 6
to 7 that were unable to read when first entering school. This study found that
many children had not one correct response in their test of a simple vowel
substitution task. However, a few children who exhibited high phonemic
awareness scored close to perfect on this same task. The study further stated
that "there was a specific predictive relationship between initial
phonemic awareness differences and success in learning to read and to spell."
Even more importantly, the study indicated that it was phonemic awareness
abilities, and not IQ, that predicted the accuracy of reading and spelling at
the end of grade one. Children with high phonemic awareness at the beginning of
grade one had high reading and spelling achievements at the end of grade one,
compared to some children with low phonemic awareness who had difficulties
learning to read and spell. [2]
In
the National Reading Panel report, they also determined that the beneficial
effects of phonemic awareness on reading lasts well beyond the period of
training. While phonemic awareness instructions are proven to significantly
help children learn reading, it is not a complete reading program. What it
does, is provide children with a foundational knowledge base of the alphabet
language. The NRP analysis also showed that phonics instructions produces
significant benefits for students from kindergarten through grade 6, and is
also helpful for children with learning to read difficulties.
Children
who are taught with phonics and phonemic awareness instructions are
consistently able to decode, read, and spell, and even demonstrated significant
improvement in their ability to comprehend text. Even older children who
receive these similar teachings improved their ability to decode and spell. The
NRP made a key statement saying that "conventional wisdom has
suggested that kindergarten students might not be ready for phonics
instruction, this assumption was not supported by the data. The effects of
systematic early phonics instruction were significant and substantial in
kindergarten and the 1st grade, indicating that systematic phonics programs
should be implemented at those age and grade levels."
However,
I would like to further expand on that by saying that children as young as two
years old can learn to read through phonics and phonemic awareness
instructions. If a young child can speak, then they should be able to learn to
read, even if they are as young as two years old. In fact, I have proven this
with my own children. We started teaching our daughter at 2 years and 8months,
and she was very capable at reading by the time she was just 2 years and 11
months old.
References
1. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
(2000). Report of the National Reading Panel. Teaching children
to read: An evidence-based assessment of the scientific research literature on
reading and its implications for reading instruction (NIH Publication No. 00-4769). Washington, DC: U.S.
Government Printing Office.
2.
Cognition. 1991 Sep;40(3):219-49.
The relationship of phonemic awareness to reading acquisition: more consequence than precondition but still important.
Wimmer H, Landerl K, Linortner R, Hummer P.
University of Salzburg, Austria.
The relationship of phonemic awareness to reading acquisition: more consequence than precondition but still important.
Wimmer H, Landerl K, Linortner R, Hummer P.
University of Salzburg, Austria.


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