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SYNTHETIC
PHONICS PROGRAMME DOUBLES NORMAL RATE OF PROGRESS |
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Hampshire Education Authority
have confirmed the research findings, first reported in 2003
by the Department of Education and Skills, in the document ‘Targeting
Support: Choosing And Implementing Interventions For Children
With Significant Literacy Difficulties’ (Ref: DfES
0201/2003), that the THRASS (Teaching Handwriting Reading And
Spelling Skills) phonics programme is able to "at least
double the normal rate of progress" made by primary
school children that have reading and spelling difficulties.
On Wednesday, ITV programme ‘Meridian Tonight’,
obtained an interview with Dr Roger Norgate, Consultant
Educational Psychologist, Hampshire LEA. He confirmed that
evidence, taken from eight schools in Hampshire, showed that
the children’s average reading scores more than doubled
during the 8 months of the study and some children’s reading
ages improved by over 3 years (a ratio gain of over 4, that
is, over four months progress per month). Although the details
of the findings have not yet been made public, the
confirmation is likely to be of considerable interest to Ruth
Kelly, Minister of Education, because THRASS is one of the
programmes to be investigated in the Rose Review. The purpose
of the review, according to a letter written in the Times
Educational Supplement by Barry Sheerman, MP for Huddersfield,
and chairman of the House of Commons Education Select
Committee, is to "look objectively at the evidence about
what works best" (Time to Settle the Great Phonics Row,
TES, 3 June).
In an interview for the same television programme, Alan
Davies, educational psychologist and pioneer of THRASS, said,
"THRASS is used in thousands of schools worldwide. Just
this week, I learned that the Botswana Government are to fund
the implementation of THRASS in 20 rural schools in Serowe, In
a few weeks time, I am meeting with the Minister of Education
for South Africa, to discuss the impact of THRASS in South
African schools and universities. THRASS is highly regarded in
some of the most prestigious government and independent
schools in the world but it is also highly regarded in
township schools in Johannesburg and schools for deaf Zulu
children in Durban. I hope that this increases the chances of
my programme being fully considered by my own Government. The
Select Committee’s job was to consult with those who
criticise the poor standard of phonics teaching in schools,
THRASS is not even mentioned and there is not one reference to
my well-known criticism that the majority of teachers in
England are not able to identify the 44 sounds of English and
their 120 main spelling choices."
The results are also likely to be of concern to Debbie
Hepplewhite, Reading Reform Foundation, advocate of synthetic
phonics first approaches, because of her stated view that
"THRASS is not a pure synthetic phonics approach".
With THRASS, parents help their children read words by
blending sounds (synthesis) but they also look at the patterns
in words (analysis). See www.thrass.co.uk/nm.htm
###
Further
information
UK:
Mike Meade, Media Director, THRASS UK 01829 741413 Mob: 07970
151 738 mikemeade@thrass.co.uk
INTERNATIONAL:
Chris Griffiths, International Development, THRASS UK +30 266
203 1207 chrisgriffiths@thrass.co.uk
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