If you look at the research by Marie Carbo, there are reading styles.  
Analytic learners tend to get phonics and learn to read easily using it. It  
makes 
sense to them. Global learners who need the big picture first have more  
difficulty with phonics. I think we have to be careful taking an 'all or  
nothing' 
position. Every child's brain is different and will learn differently.  I think 
we owe it to our students to find out how they learn and have methods in  our 
toolbox that will meet their needs. Every time the phonics pendulum swings,  
we lose kids. It isn't all or nothing...we need to look at the students we 
teach  and find the balance.
Jennifer
Maryland
In a message dated 9/23/2007 10:37:31 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

I cannot  discount the role of phonics in the process of learning to read,
but I can  certainly discount much of the methodology adopted to teach it.   I
think that teachers who encourage much writing in the early grades and  are
able to effectively support emergent writers in moving from stretching  words
and hold those sounds to using spelling patterns and analogy do much  to
build phonetic understanding in their students.  When this is  combined  with
word work that draw children from letter-by-letter  analysis to using chunks
and analogies to figure out those tricky words, I  don't know that much more
is needed.  I am not sure I see a reason to  use  some of the of the
terminology (long vs. short vowels, for  example), but if children are aware
of patterns such as /ead/, with the  knowing that sometimes it sounds like
/eed/ and sometimes like /ed/, they  can quickly combine this knowledge with
meaning and semantics to quickly  make informed judgment calls as they read
and increasingly refined  approximations when spelling unknown words. This is
very different from  those plaid phonics books, IMO, and I am thinking most
upper grade teachers  should be quite glad of teachers that establish this
knowledge  base.

Lori


 



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