April 16, 1999
The Honorable Charles W. Turnbull
Commissioner Ruby Simmonds, D.A.
Dear Governor Turnbull and
Commissioner Simmonds,
Would you give me the opportunity to
meet with you to talk about how we can make the Virgin Islands
public school reading (and writing) program the model for the United
States? We can rise up from the doldrums and show “the rest of
them” how to do it right. I know we can. The Turnbull
administration can turn around the fortunes of the Virgin Islands by
instituting phonics-based reading in our public schools.
Governor, you know who I
am. I’m still counting on you to write that history of the Virgin
Islands. No doubt it will be a richer read now that you’ll be able
to include first-hand chapters on leading the Virgin Islands. Let’s
give it a happy ending.
For the benefit of
Commissioner Simmonds, I want to tell you who I am and why I’d like
to talk with you. Although my official name is Edward Haskins
Jacobs, I am commonly known as Ned Jacobs, or, more formally, as
Attorney Ned Jacobs. For the past nineteen years I have lived and
practiced law in St. Croix. Attorney Douglas Brady and I practice
law together as Jacobs and Brady, and our office building is across
East Street from the Department of Education headquarters in
Christiansted.
Our office, 7 Church
Street, has housed Jacobs and Brady since Hurricane Hugo, but now it
has an additional tenant - the Phonics Institute, and I’m its
director. I created the Phonics Institute to promote the phonics
habit. I want to help you promote the phonics habit among our
public school students.
Why do I now wear this new hat as the
director of the Phonics Institute? Why am I focusing on teaching
kids how to read? I’ll tell you why.
Many moons ago - back in
the late ’80s and before, I knew nothing about how you get kids to
read. Sure, my wife and I read to our kids plenty and tried to
encourage their intellects to blossom, but my profession was
lawyering and I never gave schooling much of a thought. Our elder
child, our daughter, went to Montessori programs in pre-kindergarten
and kindergarten, and delighted me with her dogged determination to,
and her delight in, figuring out each written word in her reading by
pronouncing it out using the letter sounds. Really, I never even
thought much about what she was doing, because what she was doing
seemed perfectly natural and normal. Reading was fun. We had a
great time together.
Then came first grade in
’90-’91. Little-by-little my daughter started throwing in guesses
at unfamiliar words. She no longer saw it as her job to get each
word exactly right by figuring out the sounds of all the letters.
She seemed to think that being sloppy and just hacking her way
through the reading was o.k. I watched her backslide from the good
habit of taking responsibility for figuring out every word just
right, into the bad habit of guessing at words. Sometimes the
guessing had nothing to do with the letters themselves. I remember
one time when she read “camp” for “tent” in a story about camping.
Figuring out letter sounds no longer had the prominence it used to.
Knowing what she was capable of, I was baffled by her turning away
from an intelligent approach to her reading. Reading was no longer
the playtime it used to be. Instead, it fell into a guessing game
marked by many a wrong guess, leading to frustration and failure.
She knew in her heart of hearts that she had lost it. She was no
longer the confident burgeoning expert she used to be. And her
comprehension suffered. After all, if you really want to be able to
understand what you read, you have to be able to “speak the written
word” - that is, convert the written word into the speech it
represents, word-for-word, right on target.
At the parent-teacher
conference in the spring of first grade, my wife and I, concerned
about our daughter’s reading, asked the teacher how she went about
teaching it. The teacher said the class did not use “basal
readers.” This was the first time I had ever heard the term. She
said she used a “whole language” approach, but I had no idea what
she meant. She mentioned writing journals, children-made books and
the like. She said she tried to create an atmosphere of excitement
about reading, but strangely she said nothing about how you get kids
to read out written words accurately. I said (something like) “Of
course you teach them rules, like ‘I before e,
except after c, or when it sounds like a
as in neighbor and weigh.’” She replied that no, she didn’t, because
there were too many exceptions, and that went for most direct
instruction in letter sound rules. I told her I was really
concerned about our daughter’s habit of guessing at unfamiliar
words. I told her I couldn’t believe how lazy our daughter was
getting in her reading, especially because she knew how to figure
words out, and she was a naturally intelligent and industrious girl,
not a lazy girl. I just couldn’t understand it.
The teacher then
said that I should not be concerned about her guessing, that it was
normal in beginning reading to do a lot of guessing and that her
stumbling, hacking reading style was perfectly o.k. Going further,
the teacher unabashedly revealed that she actively encouraged
guessing as a “reading strategy.” Suddenly I was struck with the
realization that this teacher sitting in front of me was the cause
of my daughter’s abandonment of great reading habits and her
development of horribly bad reading habits. I was shocked to the
core of my being. I couldn’t believe it. I was dumbfounded. It
was frightening to realize that my daughter’s teacher was a bad
influence on her. Before then I assumed that the teacher knew
exactly what she was doing. Never in a million years would I have
associated her with my daughter’s guessing. What a rude awakening!
Let me break away from my
story for a moment. Despite much bad press, we know that many of
our Virgin Islands public school students are capable readers and
writers. But many more have lots of trouble reading and writing
well. Do students in our schools use guessing as a reading
strategy? Has it become for many of them an entrenched habit, and
not just in first grade, but in third, sixth, ninth, and eleventh
grades? Do our teachers put up with it - even encourage it? Are
our schools the cause of bad reading habits in our students? If
so, we’re not alone. Guessing is regarded as a reading strategy in
most reading programs in the States.
Guessing, hacking,
stumbling through reading can be nipped in the bud early on, or if
it has become a habit, can be rooted out, but you’ve got to know how
to do it. It’s through phonics-based reading
instruction that (1) strongly encourages the children to figure out
the “sound values” of all the letters in all the words on the page -
and (and this is important) that (2) equally strongly
discourages as a reading strategy guessing and whole word
memorization without grasping all the letter sounds. A good
phonics-based program does not ignore other elements of a good
reading program, such as instruction in grammar, vocabulary
building, and developing good thinking skills.
Unlike my daughter’s first grade
teacher, a “phonics-first” teacher explicitly, extensively, and
systematically teaches letter sound rules and gets the children to
write words using those rules already learned. The phonics-first
primary grade teacher limits early reading assignments primarily to
words the children know how to figure out because they have been
taught the applicable letter sound rules (the rules of phonics).
That way the children learn they can read with precision, as
“reading experts,” without guessing. Of course you can read to the
children all kinds of texts, but their reading assignments are best
designed if early on the vocabulary is controlled to give them
practice in sounding out words, not in guessing.
All teachers in primary grades read
stories to the children. This is good. But how do you get children
to learn to read stories on their own? In a phonics-based reading
program you give the children heavy doses of the basic and most used
rules explaining letter “sound values,”and then give them words and
stories they can read using those rules. Opposed to this is the
system where you encourage the children to learn to recite each
story while looking at the pages, and little-by-little, through
hacking and guessing, thereby “learn the names” of the words on the
page. Is this second method used in our schools? This second
method encourages guessing as a habit in reading. And it tells the
children that they aren’t expected to read with precision. This
failure of the teacher to expect and require precision is a crucial
difference between the phonics-first classroom and one that isn’t
phonics-first. In the typical whole language classroom, the phonics
rules needed for precise reading are not progressively and
systematically taught. Instead the phonics rules tend to be
de-emphasized as one of several “reading strategies,” and limited to
occasional pointers. Guessing and rote whole word memorization are
respected parts of the program. Guessing isn’t seen for the
devastatingly bad habit it then becomes for many of the children.
There is plenty of talk
these days that the key is to get children excited about
reading. Much effort is spent in our schools to do exactly that, in
order to encourage “lifelong learners.” But think about it - do you
get excited about doing things you aren’t any good at? Isn’t the
real key the development of the skills - and the habits - needed to
become really good readers? If you are an excellent reader, you’re
much more likely to be excited about reading than if you don’t have
command of it and have to stumble through it.
Back to my story: Once I
realized there were widely divergent ways of teaching reading, to
me, the choice was clear. I didn’t want my child to be encouraged
to guess at anything in her reading. Instead, I wanted her to be
taught the phonics rules right from the start, and to be taught to
always use the rules to figure out every word exactly.
My wrenched gut led me to
my mother, who sent me Rudolph Flesch’s Why Johnny Can’t Read
and Why Johnny Still Can’t Read, and a couple of other
books. The scales fell from my eyes. I started an intense,
continuous, years-long study of reading and teaching to read, as I
taught my own children to read by phonics, and helped out with a few
others along the way. I decided to attend UVI and in May 1998 I
obtained a master’s degree in education with emphasis in
administration and supervision. I am now a licensed educational
consultant in the Virgin Islands. My daughter is doing great, thank
God, but I’ll tell you, a bad habit can be a tough nut to crack,
believe you me. If we get together, I would like one of our topics
to be the benefits of using habit development analysis in
formulating effective school reading programs.
____________________
That’s what I want to do - assist in
developing effective phonics-based school reading programs in Virgin
Islands public schools - at the elementary, junior high, and senior
high levels. Neither Literature Works nor the earlier Our
World of Reading are phonics-based reading
programs. Guessing strategies and whole-word memorization without
understanding all letter-sound correspondences are respected there,
not rejected. Thus far in this letter I have written directly only
about teaching beginning reading, but phonics has an important role to
play in all levels of reading - beginning, intermediate, and
advanced. Special phonics-based reading programs can be devised for
each level of schooling. Accompanying this letter is the Phonics
Institute “Every Teacher a Reading Teacher” reading program proposal,
which can be applied at any grade level, especially above primary
through senior high school (although it was initially devised for John
H. Woodson Junior High School). You should also receive together with
this letter the March 31, 1997 Phonics Institute proposal to the
Virgin Islands Education Commission. I believe these proposals
demonstrate that I have done my homework and I know what I am talking
about, but we can explore that further together when we meet, if we
do.
My game plan for the Virgin
Islands is flexible. It will depend upon you and your desires. My
goal is to have to the Virgin Islands Department of Education engage
the Phonics Institute, as an educational consultant, to develop,
institute, supervise, and assess voluntary phonics-based
reading programs in the Virgin Islands public school system. The
usual procedure is to start with pilot programs, of course. I am
looking for “converts, not conscripts.” The key is to identify those
principals and teachers who want to learn how to teach using a
phonics-first system, train them on how to do it, support them in the
process of implementing phonics-first classrooms, monitor their
progress, and assess the program.
I would like to spend the
rest of this school year visiting schools, meeting with administrators
and teachers, attending classes, devising programs, and beginning
teacher awareness-raising and training. I would hope for fuller
implementation of voluntary phonics-first reading programs next school
year.
Cordially,
Edward Haskins Jacobs
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