Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Reading is more than sounding out words and decoding. That's why we use the whole language approach to teaching it


Author:Katina Zammit

(MENAFN- The Conversation) When I was younger I decided to learn Greek. I learnt the letter-sound correspondences and could say the words – the sounds, that is. But although I could and still can decode these words, I can't actually read Greek because I don't know what the words mean.

Being able to make the connection between the letters, their combinations and the sounds that make up the words wasn't all I needed to be able to read. It was an easy way to learn but it didn't provide me with the whole picture.

As we read, and understand what we are reading, we don't just use our knowledge of the letter-sound correspondences, which you may know as phonics or phonemic awareness, we also use other cues. These include our knowledge of the topic, the meaning of words in the context of the topic, and the flow and sequence of the words in a sentence.

Good readers use afull repertoire of skills , each dependent on the other. And a whole language approach to teaching reading is about arming new readers with this repertoire.


What is the whole language approach?

A whole language approach to teaching reading was introduced into primary schools inthe late 1970s . There have been many developments in this area since, so the approach has been adapted and today looks quite different from 40 years ago.

To begin with, let's dispel some myths about a whole language approach to teaching reading. It is not learning to read individual words by sight. Nor is it learning a list of vocabulary only.

A whole language approach to teaching reading is not opposed to teaching the correspondence of a letter or letters to sounds to help sound out unfamiliar words. Nor is it opposed to learning how to blend sounds together to decode a word by using the first letter/s of a word, the end of the word and the letter/s in the middle.



Read more:
Reading progress is falling between year 5 and 7, especially for advantaged students: 5 charts

But just knowingsounds is not the same as knowing how to read . In 2000, the US National Reading Panel's analysis ofscientific literatureon teaching children to read found systematic phonics instruction (teaching sounds and blending them together) should be integrated with other reading instruction to create a balanced reading program.

The panel determined that phonics instruction should not be a total reading program, nor should it be a dominant component.






It's all Greek to me if I don't know what the words mean.
from shutterstock.com

In 2011, the UK introduced amandatory phonics screening check , for year 1 students, to address the decline in literacy achievement in the middle years of school. Children were prepared for the test using a government-approved synthetic phonics program. But in 2019 around 25% ofyear 6 studentsfailed to reach the minimum requirements in reading.



Read more:
The Coalition's $10 million for Year 1 phonics checks would be wasted money

Australia'sown national inquiry into teaching literacynoted the same conclusions as the US national reading panel.

This view aligns with the whole language approach in the 21st century, which advocatesa balancedway of teaching reading in the early years. This includes:



  • explicit teaching of decoding skills(how to break up a word to work out how it is pronounced)

  • connecting the decoding of word/s to their meaning

  • learning to read frequently used words that can't be sounded out or broken up into different sounds (the, were)

  • learning the meaning of new words from the context they are in (looking at the words before and after and at what the sentence is about)

  • understanding what the text being read is about (literally and interpretively)

  • building a wide vocabulary

  • understanding how images and words work together

  • promoting a love of the English language and an interest in reading.


Let's not put kids off reading

The whole language approach provides children learning to read with more than one way to work out unfamiliar words. They can begin with decoding – breaking the word into its parts and trying to sound them out and then blend them together. Thismay or may notwork.

They can also look at where the word is in the sentence and consider what word most likely would come next based on what they have read so far. They can look beyond the word to see if the rest of the sentence can assist to decode the word and pronounce it.

We do not read texts one word at a time. We make best guesses as we read and learn to read. We learn from our errors. Sometimes these errors are not that significant – does it matter if I read Sydenham as 'SID-EN-HAM' or 'SID-N-AM'? Perhaps not.

Does it matterthat I can decode the word 'wind' but don't pronounce the two differently in 'the wind was too strong to wind the sail'? Yes, it probably does.

Teaching children to read or to see reading with a focus on phonics and phonemic awareness gives themthe illusion 'proper' reading is mere decoding and blending . In fact,it has been argued this canput children off readingwhen entering school. While some gain may occur in the first years, over timeachievement deterioratesfor children in high-performing and low-performing schools.



Read more:
Enjoyment of reading, not mechanics of reading, can improve literacy for boys

A whole language approach doesn't argue against the importance of phonemic awareness. But it acknowledges it is not all that should be included in reading instruction.

It is important toassess children's readingfrom the beginning of schooling and continually determine how they are progressing. Teachers can then select specific strategies to improve individual children's reading competence and increase their skills to build fluent and confident readers.

A whole language approach to teaching reading advocates for teaching phonics and phonemic awareness in the context of real texts – that use the richness of the English language – not artificial, highly constructed texts. However, it also acknowledges this is not sufficient. Being able to decode the written word is essential, but it isn't enough to set up a child to be a competent reader and to be successful during and after school.

Read the accompanying article on teaching to read using explicit phonics instructionhere .



MENAFN1111201901990000ID1099257501



The Conversation

Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Search