US Kids Can’t Read’: The Revolt That Is Taking On the Education Establishment - Hooked on phonics worked for me!

In suburban Houston, parents rose up against a top-rated school district, demanding an entirely new reading curriculum.

At an elementary school in Hutchinson, Minn., a veteran teacher is crusading for reform, haunted by the fear that, for 28 years, she failed children because she was not trained in the cognitive science behind reading.

And Ohio may become the latest state to overhaul reading instruction, under a plan by Gov. Mike DeWine.

“The evidence is clear,” Mr. DeWine said. “The verdict is in.”

A revolt over how children are taught to read, steadily building for years, is now sweeping school board meetings and statehouses around the country.

The movement, under the banner of “the science of reading,” is targeting the education establishment: school districts, literacy gurus, publishers and colleges of education, which critics say have failed to embrace the cognitive science of how children learn to read.

Research shows that most children need systematic, sound-it-out instruction — known as phonics — as well as other direct support, like building vocabulary and expanding students’ knowledge of the world.

The movement has drawn support across economic, racial and political lines. Its champions include parents of children with dyslexia; civil rights activists with the N.A.A.C.P.; lawmakers from both sides of the aisle; and everyday teachers and principals.

Together, they are getting results.

Ohio, California and Georgia are the latest states to push for reform, adding to almost 20 states that have made moves in the last two years. Under pressure, school districts are scrapping their old reading programs. Even holdouts like New York City, where hundreds of elementary schools were loyal to a popular but heavily criticized reading curriculum, are making changes.

About one in three children in the United States cannot read at a basic level of comprehension, according to a key national exam. The outcomes are particularly troubling for Black and Native American children, nearly half of whom score “below basic” by eighth grade.

“The kids can’t read — nobody wants to just say that,” said Kareem Weaver, an activist with the N.A.A.C.P. in Oakland, Calif., who has framed literacy as a civil rights issue and stars in a new documentary, “The Right to Read.”

Science of reading advocates say the reason is simple: Many children are not being correctly taught.

A popular method of teaching, known as “balanced literacy,” has focused less on phonics and more on developing a love of books and ensuring students understand the meaning of stories. At times, it has included dubious strategies, like guiding children to guess words from pictures.

The push for reform picked up in 2019, when national reading scores showed significant improvement in just two places: Mississippi and Washington, D.C. Both had required more phonics.

But what might have remained a niche education issue was supercharged by a storm of events: a pandemic that mobilized parents; Covid relief money that gave school districts flexibility to change; a fresh spotlight on racial disparities after the murder of George Floyd; and a hit education podcast with a passionate following.

“There is this urgency around the story, this unbelievable grief,” said Emily Hanford, a journalist at American Public Media. Her podcast, “Sold a Story,” detailed how stars of the literacy world and their publisher diverged from scientific research. It racked up nearly 5 million downloads.

The movement has not been universally popular. School districts in Connecticut and teachers’ unions in Ohio, for example, pushed back against what they see as heavy-handed interference in their classrooms.

Even within the movement, there are quiet rumblings of worry. There is no established curriculum for the science of reading — it refers to a large body of research that must be woven into the craft of teaching.

Can such a sprawling and enthusiastic movement stick to the science — across thousands of schools and classrooms? Can real change be executed and sustained?

“I saw this post where somebody said, ‘Reading wars are over, science of reading won,’” said Mark Seidenberg, a cognitive scientist at the University of Wisconsin.

“I’m sure it will be on a T-shirt soon,” he said. “But actually, nobody has won until we’ve actually seen we’ve improved literacy outcomes — especially with kids in groups where there is a long history of being left behind.”

A ‘Perfect Storm’
It all feels a bit familiar to Susan Neuman, an education official under former President George W. Bush.

In 2000, at the behest of Congress, a National Reading Panel recommended many strategies being argued for today. And the Bush administration prioritized phonics. Yet that effort faltered because of politics and bureaucratic snafus.

Dr. Neuman, now a professor at New York University, is among those who question whether this moment can be different. “I worry,” she said, “that it’s déjà vu all over again.”

Today’s movement, though, is less top down, and far more dynamic.

“You had this perfect storm happening,” said Jennie McGahee, a mother in Hudson, Ohio, who watched her son James muddle through reading and writing in elementary school.

A former teacher, Ms. McGahee tried to help at home. But she came to believe a central problem was the curriculum: a popular program by Lucy Calkins of Columbia University’s Teachers College. Until recently, the curriculum had put less emphasis on phonics and more emphasis on children reading and writing independently.

During pandemic Zoom lessons, Ms. McGahee said, other parents in her affluent, mostly white suburb known for its schools also began to question why their children were not getting more explicit instruction.

Then last fall, “Sold a Story” scrutinized the work of Professor Calkins and others, giving ammunition to parents like Ms. McGahee. She emailed the podcast to her school board, and at a recent meeting, marched up to the microphone.

“This will end with our curriculum changing — it’s just a matter of how long we need to fight to get this done,” said Ms. McGahee, whose son, now 12, still finds reading taxing. The district said it was piloting another program to boost phonics.

Professor Calkins rewrote her early literacy curriculum last year to include, for the first time, daily, structured phonics to be used with the whole class. In a statement, she said she had always treated phonics as critical. But she added: “To reduce the teaching of reading to phonics instruction and nothing more is to misunderstand what reading is, and what learning is.”

For many communities, the urgency of literacy is not new.

“These arguments have been made for a long time by a lot of people,” said Sujatha Hampton, the education chair for the N.A.A.C.P. in Fairfax County, Va.

But amid calls for racial justice after the murder of George Floyd, Dr. Hampton saw an opportunity to address gaps in reading outcomes for Black and Hispanic students, compared with white and Asian students in her district.

She pressed for structured literacy in 2021 — and saw swift change.

“I told them, ‘If you don’t switch this, I’m going to make sure that every time anybody Googles your name, what’s going to come up is your statistics and the racial discrepancy in how kids are learning to read here,’” Dr. Hampton recalled.

Science of reading advocates say they are gaining momentum, in part because their battles have converged.

“We had no traction when we were dyslexia moms,” said Amy Traynor, who co-founded a parent group that recently won a curriculum change in Katy, Texas, a Houston suburb. “When we abandoned the use of dyslexia and started talking literacy for all children, that’s when progress started to be made.”

Avoiding Pitfalls
At Panther Valley Elementary, a rural, low-income school in eastern Pennsylvania, the science of reading has been transformative, said the principal, Robert Palazzo.

His school had been using a reading program by the influential educators, Irene C. Fountas and Gay Su Pinnell, whose work has been questioned by science of reading advocates. The district even took out a loan to afford the curriculum, which cost around $100,000, he said.

But teachers complained: It wasn’t working. Just a quarter of third graders were meeting benchmarks.

“I had to swallow my pride and realize that selecting that was a mistake,” Mr. Palazzo said.

Dr. Fountas and Dr. Pinnell pointed to research supporting their program and said “countless schools” had achieved positive results. Their approach, they said, includes phonics.

Panther Valley, though, used grants, donations and Covid relief money to buy a new phonics curriculum. The school also recently added 40 minutes of targeted, small-group phonics at the end of every day.

Nearly 60 percent of third graders are now proficient in decoding words, up from about 30 percent at the beginning of the school year, progress Mr. Palazzo hopes will translate to state tests this spring.

Still, experts foresee a number of pitfalls to meaningful reform on a national scale.

For starters, bringing reading science to commercial curriculums is still a work in progress. Schools may scrap their old textbooks but find there is no perfect replacement.

“What’s coming along is in the right ballpark at least,” said Dr. Seidenberg, of the University of Wisconsin. But he warned against treating anything as “gospel.”

There is also the danger of overemphasizing phonics. To establish true literacy, students need to be able to not only sound out words, but also read quickly and build enough vocabulary and background knowledge for comprehension.

Another risk: impatience.

When Mississippi improved reading scores in 2019, it was touted as a “miracle.” In fact, progress came over many years, with systemic reform that included sending literacy coaches to the state’s lowest-performing schools.

“I don’t want the science of reading to be the shiny object — ‘look here, look here,’” said Jack Silva, the chief academic officer in Bethlehem, Pa., an early adopter of the science of reading. “You forget the hard work that it takes to implement.”

In his district, principals were trained first, then teachers, grade by grade. Eight years later, training is now underway for middle and high school principals, an area that Timothy Shanahan, a professor emeritus at the University of Illinois Chicago, says deserves more attention.

Literacy for early readers is not an “inoculation,” Dr. Shanahan said.

Students must keep building skills — moving from “The Snowy Day” to Steinbeck and Shakespeare.

In Columbus, Ohio, Joy Palmer is still fighting for her daughter Dey’Leana, 18.

Dey’Leana struggled with reading from an early age. Her mother blames, in part, an ineffective reading intervention Dey’Leana received during elementary school. Even after Dey’Leana was diagnosed with dyslexia at age 9, her mother said, she did not get all the support she needed.

The Columbus district, as it moves toward the science of reading, is no longer using that early intervention program, and said it was working closely with Ms. Palmer and her daughter.

School has not been easy for Dey’Leana. By middle and high school, she stopped raising her hand, pushed back at teachers and at times skipped class.

“I would be stressed,” Dey’Leana said.

Now a junior, she is nowhere close to reading on grade level, her mother said.

“What are they going to do now that we are in the repercussion and damage stage?” said Ms. Palmer, who is pushing for the district to provide Orton Gillingham tutoring, a highly structured approach for struggling readers.

Even if executed flawlessly, the science of reading movement cannot solve everything. Poverty plays its own damaging role in students’ lives. And some children may always need specialized instruction.

Cathy Kucera is determined to try.

Fueled by regret for what she did not know in her first 28 years as an elementary schoolteacher, she and a colleague, Heather Vaillancourt, are on a two-woman crusade at their school in Hutchinson, Minn. They begged for a phonics-based curriculum and even wrote their own kindergarten lessons, incorporating research they say they were never taught.

“If it means we aren’t making friends or we aren’t the most popular people on campus, we don’t care,” Ms. Kucera said. “It’s about kids learning to read, and I’m not wasting another day.”

 
It doesn’t work for everyone. I was reading at two (which is abnormal) and just did some kind of absorption and word recognition. But for most, phonics works.
BUT, and it’s a big but, without reading at home, it all fails. We had a house full of books, and I read compulsively, I used to get upset of i was in the supermarket and stopped halfway through a row of labels… I read everything. Constant exposure reinforces phonics with word recognition on top I think,
Similar. I'm fairly sure I probably wasn't two (I'm now picturing you like the baby version of Megamind) but it was pre-school when I was reading. And I loved books. They were my primary form of (non-social) entertainment.

I need to get back to that... :(
 
BUT, and it’s a big but, without reading at home, it all fails. We had a house full of books, and I read compulsively, I used to get upset of i was in the supermarket and stopped halfway through a row of labels… I read everything. Constant exposure reinforces phonics with word recognition on top I think,
Yep. That's all it boils down to. You can blame teachers for not using the correct arcane incantations to instill literacy upon children, but illiteracy is a parental failing 90% of the time.
 
Similar. I'm fairly sure I probably wasn't two (I'm now picturing you like the baby version of Megamind) but it was pre-school when I was reading. And I loved books. They were my primary form of (non-social) entertainment.

I need to get back to that... :(
Hyperlexia is a symptom of autism … lol. Yeah I do t read as much as I’d like to. Modern life is not conducive to sitting and reading all afternoon.
 
"Research shows that most children need systematic, sound-it-out instruction — known as phonics — as well as other direct support, like building vocabulary and expanding students’ knowledge of the world."

I thought this was common knowledge? This is how I was taught to read.
There was a retarded white woman who thought she knew better.

She actually thought that children could guess how to spell words from pictures. Oh and she became a multimillionaire with her retarded bullshit.
 
The processes used to convince young teachers-to-be of the virtue of "whole language learning" were literally cult brainwashing. 15 years ago when I took those courses (before ditching my education major as hopelessly fucked up), I talked about a lot of these issues and said phonics seems like a much better equalizer.

Everything else in the class agenda stopped as the entire class, professor and students, began a full-court press to ensure none of these wrongthink ideas gained any traction with any other individual. Eventually I was told that even if I didn't understand why whole language learning was better, I needed to listen and accept that People of Color had made this determination, and continuing to speak up against this clear and obvious equalizer was an indicator of my colonialist thinking allowing me to believe that a white college student could have a more relevant contribution than education scholars of color.

Literally, "phonics is racist" was simply accepted dogma at my university and many others. It was an article of faith.

Lots of things are like that in education. Common core math. Masking. Pre-kindergarten existing at all. Each of these things was supposed to be pro racial justice, pro equality. They were all to be taken on faith. Asking for an evidence basis was met with a wall of theory and zero experimental evidence from well-designed, well-controlled studies.

The issues continue. Did you know there's no evidence from well-designed studies that early intervention works for autism...early intervention of any type? All meta-studies have found that the only studies showing a strong effect size were poorly controlled and/or non-blinded, and that the studies with better controls and more objective scoring criteria showed no impact. Yet if you have a kid with autism the first thing people say is "get them early intervention! It's SO important! They can do so much!" No, they can't, you wish they could, but they can't do anything ... except spend a fuckton of money for zero real results.

Education in the US would also rather spend $100,000 on getting one or two profoundly retarded children to indicate a few nouns with eye movements than enrich education for 10 of the best and brightest to help avoid the burnout genius problem and ensure they become productive taxpayers. It doesn't even matter if it works or not, if some snake oil salesman can rig up a study showing an effect, schools will spend endless money trying to add an IQ point or two to their biggest tards and expect smart kids to just politely behave when the work they're expected to do is 4 or 5 grade levels discrepant from the kid's ability.
 
Welcome to Common Core Reading. As with math, where they skipped the boring memorization of tables and skipped to the tricks to do math faster (i.e. what kids who are advanced in math pick up intuitively), they realized that advanced readers were doing whole word reading, therefore if they only taught whole word reading then the kids who were behind would become advanced readers as well.

Obviously neither works well, as there have been multiple articles already pointing out how common core math is fucking up kid's understanding of basic principles, and so too does common core reading. The extra problems with the fuck ups with reading is that we did this all before. "Hooked on Phonics" came out in 1987 after the whole education system spent the 70's trying to teach whole word style learning and fucking up a generation of kid's minds. This is not a new problem, it's fucking repeating the failures while doing the same shit the left/education does every goddamn time of "this time it will work!"

For those that said they were never taught phonetics, that's because you got the very basics more or less internalized by listening to how your parents pronouced each word at an age when that can easily become bedrock knowledge. Your parents likely even followed along with a finger as they read, pronouncing the words to help you when you were a toddler and don't have any clear memories of that time. However for the feral children of nogs, school is likely their first time seeing somebody read out loud, and they have none of that basic bedrock to grow from, thus phonetics is helpful.
 
It doesn’t work for everyone. I was reading at two (which is abnormal) and just did some kind of absorption and word recognition. But for most, phonics works.
BUT, and it’s a big but, without reading at home, it all fails. We had a house full of books, and I read compulsively, I used to get upset of i was in the supermarket and stopped halfway through a row of labels… I read everything. Constant exposure reinforces phonics with word recognition on top I think,
How would you remember how you learned at two years old lol
 
For those that said they were never taught phonetics, that's because you got the very basics more or less internalized by listening to how your parents pronouced each word at an age when that can easily become bedrock knowledge. Your parents likely even followed along with a finger as they read, pronouncing the words to help you when you were a toddler and don't have any clear memories of that time. However for the feral children of nogs, school is likely their first time seeing somebody read out loud, and they have none of that basic bedrock to grow from, thus phonetics is helpful.
thanks for explaining it, I was wonderinf if I was taught that way and then remembered my mom telling me how I learned to read at 4 because she would read to me all the time and one day found me reading to myself.
There's also libraries that gave out story time to young children and that probably also encouraged reading at a young age.
 
Oh I get it now. The article is trying to re-frame the issue that Lefties created with whole word now that its become a completely untenable position and make it look like the left is now and always has been championing for the right way to teach kids to read, when in reality it was the right who championed for phonics against the left.

To address the wider thread, a big part of the problem is teachers hate teaching phonics, they think standing at the front of the classroom and doing rote memorization of word structure for the whole class is backwards and bad teaching. They would rather do more close attention trying to get individual students to learn how to gain meaning of words from the text as a whole, which sounds much nicer and more enlightened. The problem is the decades of research showing that doesn’t work at all.

I don't think the push for whole language method is part of the broader left's agenda, it's specifically a sacred cow for the teachers' unions. With phonics, the teacher is simply a guide to the methodology, and they have to do a bunch of work that someone else conceived, and the focus is on the students attaining skills. With whole language, the teacher is the centerpiece, who picks the literature that will draw forth the student's inner reader, and coincidentally there's a lot less the teacher actually has to do.

Even in Oregon, there's now a major push to go back to phonics, and the local papers (that are obv left-learning) will go so far as to admit that the shift away from it was driven by ed schools and teachers' unions. The unions are even having to make conciliatory noises, such is the pressure.
 
How would you remember how you learned at two years old lol
I don’t. It’s recorded in my medical notes and ‘amusing family anecdotes.’ They told the docs at the checkup I could read, the doc laughed at them, and they picked up something lying around and told me to read it and I did. Some kids pick up reading very very fast. It’s associated with autism.
I was deficient in most other areas physically and very under developed in terms of physical milestones. But spergery was built in from the start.
 
To add to this discussion, Reading Partners is a program that does teach phonics to students who are not reading at grade level and back when I was a volunteer, I got the distinct impression I was picking up the failures of teachers and parents. After all, if their parents were reading to them, I wouldn't be necessary. I didn't know that teachers were also screwing up to this degree. At the time, I just assumed these students happened to be behind on this one subject.

I can't say I can recommend Reading Partners today. For one, the school nurse has to sign off on your current vaccinations. At the time, I needed one for TB, which made sense. Knowing people like I do now, I can safely assume they'll demand COVID vaccinations too. As a pureblood, the vax is a sign of weakness and retardation as demonstrated by all the people who took the vax. Reading Partners as an organization is also woke.
 
Let's be clear, the "system" isn't failing children here, parents are. If a kid is completely illiterate by the time they walk into their first day of school, the parents have fucked up. A teacher dividing their attention between thirty screeching demons is not going to be able to lay the foundations for education in those children, that is the parents' job. At the very minimum, the parents need to have gotten across that the kid needs to sit the fuck down, shut the fuck up, listen, and think. If the kid's spent the first five years of their life with no supervision aside from the family pitbull and youtube, they're going to be in no state to learn a goddamn thing.
 
Let's be clear, the "system" isn't failing children here, parents are. If a kid is completely illiterate by the time they walk into their first day of school, the parents have fucked up. A teacher dividing their attention between thirty screeching demons is not going to be able to lay the foundations for education in those children, that is the parents' job. At the very minimum, the parents need to have gotten across that the kid needs to sit the fuck down, shut the fuck up, listen, and think. If the kid's spent the first five years of their life with no supervision aside from the family pitbull and youtube, they're going to be in no state to learn a goddamn thing.
Sure, but you are never going to be able to force people to parent properly, as long as the kid is getting close to enough calories and isn’t receiving hospital-level physical abuse there really isn’t any way to make people parent differently. When the teachers are made to pick up the pieces with methods that don’t even work, your society just gets more fucked.
 
Perhaps if the schools have had actual teached that teach kids and not "progressive" activists and child groomers that shit wouldn't have happened? #AmericaFirst right?
 
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Read James N cook about a zombie outbreak.

No easy hope is the first book. Z-lib use to be up but I see the FBI siezed the site.

Lots of gun pRon for those are that into that. Good story though.
 
Similar. I'm fairly sure I probably wasn't two (I'm now picturing you like the baby version of Megamind) but it was pre-school when I was reading. And I loved books. They were my primary form of (non-social) entertainment.

I need to get back to that... :(
Hyperlexia is a symptom of autism … lol. Yeah I do t read as much as I’d like to. Modern life is not conducive to sitting and reading all afternoon.
My mother taught me to by moving her finger along the words as she read to me, my dad's side of the family has dyslexia run in it and she wanted to be sure I could do it right. She also taught me phonics so I could sound out new words as I encounter them. My Kindergarten and 1st grade teachers didn't actually believe I could read and I remember being very angry that the 1st grade teacher wouldn't let me check out a 6th grade level book about gorillas from the library. I mostly read on work breaks these days, but sometimes a book will grab me. Tough to keep it fueled though, in the last six months I've read Glen Cook's Black Company and Garret, PI series, and Jim Butcher's Dresden Files and most of his fantasy series. Plus some others sandwiched in there.

College sadly burned me out on non-fiction for a long time, who knew a history degree would require so much unenjoyable reading.
 
I'm certain the bad literacy amongst nogs is somewhat tied into the fact that broken families as they were ground zero for modern-day feminism. It adds up. Mom or pop too busy at work and too busy to care for their kids so of course literacy would be left by the wayside for booze. But to admit that would be rayciss.
 
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