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READING RIGHTS
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Alan Davies, educational psychologist and author of
TEACHING THRASS
In My View, Nursery World
22 December 2005,
Vol. 105 No. 4000, ISSN 0029 6422, p31
This month, education secretary Ruth Kelly stated on Sky
News, ‘We should have a systematic approach to teaching
synthetic phonics, that should be taught first and foremost
to all children, certainly by the age of five and then, yes,
other strategies should come in after that to help and
support those readers for whom a variety of methods is
appropriate.’
I strongly disagree. It is madness to believe that you
should start the literacy process by first focusing on only
the letters of the alphabet. The best thing parents can do
to help their young child to become literate is to put them
on their knee and turn over the pages of a favourite book to
anticipate the story and the pictures. It is wrong to
believe that synthetic phonics is the ‘best route to
becoming skilled readers’, as stated in Jim Rose’s Review.
Ruth Kelly has probably made the biggest faux pas by an
education secretary in British educational history. I
believe that the Government got it totally right when they
wrote in 1998, ‘All teachers know that pupils become
successful readers by learning to use a range of strategies
to get at the meaning of a text.’
I am the pioneer of the phonics programme THRASS (Teaching
Handwriting Reading And Spelling Skills), which is used in
many nurseries and schools worldwide. Speaking and listening
skills are the fundamental building blocks of all literacy
programmes. The richer the language experiences of young
children, the greater their chances are of learning to read,
write and spell easily. Activities involving naming,
describing, categorising and discussing pictures are
essential speaking and listening skills.
Back in 1992, Nursery World quoted me as saying, ‘The
British education system has got it wrong with the teaching
of reading’. It still has.
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