Reading panel turns the page


April 6, 2001

BY ROSALIND ROSSI EDUCATION REPORTER



Over and over, for three hours Wednesday, a panel of experts assembled for
the first-ever big-city Reading Roundtable made one point abundantly clear:
Teaching reading is not easy.

Experts in Washington, D.C., found it took first- and second-grade teachers
a whole semester to really understand phonemes--the sounds that letters
make--and how to teach them. Same thing with vocabulary, said Washington
researcher Louisa Cook Moats.

Mayor Daley and Chicago Board of Education officials turned into students
Wednesday, taking notes as Moats and a panel of 10 other experts from
throughout the country discussed the critical skill of reading. Their
assignment stemmed from Daley's concern that despite nearly six years of
reform under his helm, two-thirds of city students are not reading at grade
level.

"We all agree that is unacceptable," Daley said. "None of you would be
satisfied if your own children were below grade level."

After the Roundtable, Daley made three proposals: establishing a Reading
Advisory Council to follow up on Roundtable ideas; placing a reading program
on the city's cable TV channel to help kids and also help parents help their
kids, and opening a Reading Roundtable site within the city's Web
site--www.cityofchicago.org--to share and garner public input on productive
reading ideas.

What makes successful readers is well-known, experts said. It includes
phonemic awareness, vocabulary skills, fluency and exposure to a wide
variety of print. But the challenge of teaching those skills is
underestimated. The one course in teaching reading that is currently
demanded just isn't enough, they said.

Reading is "a much more complex process than people thought," said national
researcher G. Reid Lyon. Lyon faulted "concretized" colleges of education,
and said districts need to offer additional training.

Teachers are crying out for the help, Moats said. In one Washington, D.C.,
program, she said, teachers told experts, "Please don't give us any more
choices. Tell us what to do. Give us validated programs that work."

Perhaps the day's biggest applause went to panelist Sharon Frost, a teacher
at Norwood Park Elementary, when she said that only "the best-trained
teachers," with master's degrees in reading instruction, should teach
kindergarten and first grade. Even elementary school principals should have
reading training, she said.

Chicago consultant Jean Osborn cited a teacher from Shanghai, China, who
spends three to four times longer preparing her reading lessons than
teaching them. U.S. teachers need more preparation time, Osborn said.

"If teachers in China can do this, I don't know why we can't," she said.

Some advocated setting specific targets, such as Edward J. Kame'enui, a
University of Oregon professor. He said children should be able to read 60
words correctly per minute in first grade, 90 in second and 110 in third.

Testing also was a hot topic. Dixon Principal Joan Crisler described it as a
"necessary evil" but said tests can put "the responsibility on the
individual who is least empowered to do anything about it. When the child is
not at grade level, we say, `What's wrong with the child?' We need to look
at the process of what's taught and how it's taught."

"The tests that gain the most attention are probably the least important
assessment," said Kame'enui, referring to year-end, standardized tests. More
critical are regular, diagnostic tests that help detect and address
weaknesses.

Schools CEO Paul Vallas said the discussion validated his plan to limit the
curriculum models that 200 struggling schools can use. But Vallas said "a
dollar sign" was associated with many suggestions, including reduced class
size and more teacher training and preparation time.

"If there was any recurring theme, it was professional development, and if
anyone got beat up, it was the colleges of education," Vallas said. "Clearly
they are not delivering. . . . We're going to have to pick up the ball."


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