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K-12: Sight-Words vs. Vocabulary Words
Canada Free Press ^ | Jan 4, 2018 | Bruce Deitrick Price

Posted on 01/11/2018 2:31:46 PM PST by BruceDeitrickPrice

Many people use the phrases “sight-word” and “vocabulary word” interchangeably, when they are quite different. This confusion, I believe, serves a sinister purpose for our Education Establishment.

A sight-word is a one-dimensional object. You know it visually, that’s all. When you see the graphic design, you are supposed to respond in an automatic or conditioned way. You say the sound represented by the design. The Education Establishment pretends this is “reading” but it’s not.

On the other hand, a vocabulary word is a multi-dimensional object. Most importantly, you know it phonetically. You say the sounds represented by the letters. This is real reading although the Education Establishment would like to pretend otherwise.

When Whole Word was first introduced circa 1931, the phrase sight-word had a very precise, very limited definition. Remember that children did not learn the alphabet or the sounds. Spelling or sounding out a sight-word was out of the question. Students might know many hundreds of sight-words and not be able to spell any of them, or sound them out.

As noted, a vocabulary word has many dimensions. You interact with a vocabulary word in several ways. You can spell it. You can sound it out. You know its syllables. You know its meaning. You might know the origins of the word. You might know synonyms. In short, you really know a vocabulary word. (QED: when a sight-word can be sounded out, it instantly becomes a vocabulary word.)

Vocabulary words are wonderful and every child should memorize as many vocabulary words as possible. Traditional education has always included booklets with lists of vocabulary words for children to learn. We need to return to this practice and double down on it.

On the other hand, no child needs to know even one sight-word. They are a waste of time and, and beyond that, actually destructive. They clutter up the brain with things you don’t need to memorize, and prevent the acquisition of a phonetic reflex. It’s precisely this wrong, wasteful, and inefficient approach to reading that the Education Establishment seems determined to perpetuate. So, probably by intent, they have got parents and teachers using these words in a sloppy way. Naïve parents repeatedly hear the phrase “sight-word” and think this thing must be acceptable. It’s not.

Our Education Establishment is so goofy and twisted but finally so obvious. They agitate against memorizing the multiplication tables, place names, dates, historical facts, or the details of vocabulary words, things that are very valuable. At the same time, the Education Establishment advocates for the brute memorization of sight-words, three to five per week. A pathetic and destructive accomplishment. Let’s spell this out: useful memorization of academic material is declared bad, which is a lie. Pointless memorization of sight-words is said to be good, another lie. On that perversion is built today’s very inefficient school system.

The nasty little scam of American K-12 is the tendency to conflate sight-word and vocabulary word so that everybody will be confused. The goal seems to be to sneak in as many pure sight-words as possible. As young students move along that road, they lose the ability to become fluent phonetic readers. Their wiring is messed up. This confusion has the separate impact of making discussions of reading issues nearly impossible.

For average people, the upper limit on memorizing sight-words is 100 up to 500. That’s not a way to learn to read. But our Education Establishment pretended that it was. They still pretend it’s a good way to start. But 100 sight-words is almost an insurmountable goal for most first graders. In the same time that a child can learn phonics and be able to read almost any English words, you can keep the child busy learning almost nothing. What choice would you make if you had any conscience at all?

Starting in 1931, all of American elementary education depended on the memorization of sight-words, which is why our elementary school children were always in such bad shape. The Education Establishment needed an alibi and that tended to be “dyslexia,” probably a fancy word for kids not being read because they were made to memorize sight-words.

The best reform strategy now is to eliminate every sight-word. They are spoilers, preventing true literacy.

Nora Chahbazi, phonics expert, notes that: “Students move from sounding out words to automatically knowing the words, which can appear as if they have visually memorized it… When they haven’t. This explanation is beneficial to share with the multitudes of educators who believe that sounding out words hinders fluency, which is inaccurate and actually backwards. Typically, one to four repetitions at sounding out words results in committing the word to memory.”

The Education Establishment has got teachers and parents using “sight-word” and “vocabulary word” as if they are synonyms. In this way ourSchool officials provide cover for making children memorize what they don’t need to memorize, a sight-word. We have a lot of confusion now in elementary schools, which hurts everybody except the following: publishers of books with controlled, i.e., limited, vocabularies; administrators who create and supervise unnecessary levels of remedial instruction; and ideologues who don't believe in universal literacy.

Yes, it’s a serious business with threats on all sides. Sight-words are the beginning of many problems. Avoid them.

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Bruce Deitrick Price has been writing about education for 25 years. He is the founder of Improve-Education.org. His sixth book is “SAVING K-12 —What Happened To Our Public Schools? How Do We Fix Them?”

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TOPICS: Books/Literature; Conspiracy; Education; Science
KEYWORDS: dyslexia; literacy; phonics; reading
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To: concentric circles
knowing words at a glance is a valuable skill. First one learns the sounds letters make, then one learns to put the sounds together to read words. Then one learns to recognize frequently used words on sight so that one is no longer putting sounds together to read the words but is immediately recognizing such high frequency words. This is an important part of reading fluency.
IMHO that is exactly right. A good reader sight reads, and only resorts to phonics when faced with an unusual - or even completely unknown - word. But that does not gainsay the fact that phonics is the edge of the wedge that gets sight words into the brain in the first place.

Spell It Out: The Curious, Enthralling, and Extraordinary Story of English Spelling describes the fact that written English was synthesized out of the Roman 24-letter alphabet, with “j" and “w” added. The monks who did it were doing their best to make spellings phonetic. But as linguist John McWhorter argues in Words on the Move: Why English Won't - and Can't - Sit Still (Like, Literally) was inevitable, they never really had a chance. So, English is not uniformly phonetic. But then, Chinese and Japanese use ideographs, and that is, AFAIK, the big bomb of sight-reading. And I guess the Chinese successfully teach Chinese literacy . . .


21 posted on 01/11/2018 5:47:35 PM PST by conservatism_IS_compassion (Presses can be 'associated,' or presses can be independent. Demand independent presses.)
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To: colorado tanker

Costco has had Bob Books at a reasonable price.


22 posted on 01/11/2018 5:47:37 PM PST by aberaussie
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To: JudyinCanada

Congratulations on making a business out of helping people.


23 posted on 01/11/2018 6:51:00 PM PST by BruceDeitrickPrice (education reform)
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To: GJones2

One thing that most smart teachers agree on, avoid the exceptions and the difficult words for a few years, maybe five or 10 years.

Later, when you’re doing 50 things correctly, you can handle the oddball situations one by one. I think most people absorb a great deal of weirdness, linguistically speaking, without knowing it is weird. For example we do this routinely with foreign words and unusual names. People are entitled to spell their names any way they want. It’s our job to accept it, learn it, and don’t make a big deal of it.

I notice a hostile tendency by our Education Establishment to fuss over the weird words, so they can reach the conclusion that English is a nutty language and not phonetic.


24 posted on 01/11/2018 7:02:44 PM PST by BruceDeitrickPrice (education reform)
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To: BruceDeitrickPrice

Are you being sarcastic? I hope not.

In the process of trying to change the way reading was taught, I ran a group for concerned parents, which included doing several talk radio shows. This resulted in many parents calling me and asking if I would teach their children to read, spell and write. I agreed to try and all of the kids became proficient readers and spellers. Their attitudes changed completely and their parents were thrilled.

During this time I also volunteered in the neighbourhood school, even though by this time my two were in a private high school. I tutored every morning in the school, free of charge. I worked with small groups, and helped about 24 children over the course of a year. I feel I was quite generous with my time, but, yes, I did charge parents to tutor their children and they were happy to receive the help.


25 posted on 01/11/2018 7:06:58 PM PST by JudyinCanada
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To: Slyfox
I have been researching how children were taught how to read in medieval England.

I'm very interested. Could you share some references?

26 posted on 01/11/2018 8:22:30 PM PST by AZLiberty ("If we believe in absurdities, we commit atrocities." -- Voltaire)
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To: fishtank
When I was learning Russian, I noticed that I was instinctively using a phonics method to learn the words.

You learned English that way. The Roman alphabet, and all the languages that use some variant of it, are phonetic in nature. The same is true of Greek and Cyrillic.

27 posted on 01/11/2018 8:28:04 PM PST by NorthMountain (... the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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To: AZLiberty

The best reference would be:

“Medieval Schools” by Nicholas Orme


28 posted on 01/11/2018 8:49:25 PM PST by Slyfox (Not my circus, not my monkeys)
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To: aberaussie

Good to know!


29 posted on 01/11/2018 10:38:42 PM PST by colorado tanker
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To: Slyfox

Thank you. I have ordered it. Thanks to the many monks at Amazon, busily copying manuscripts with quill pens, it arrives Sunday.


30 posted on 01/11/2018 11:39:20 PM PST by AZLiberty ("If we believe in absurdities, we commit atrocities." -- Voltaire)
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To: NorthMountain

Yep. That’s because “sight reading’ creates shothill reading abilities, instead of how a phonetic method creates literacy.


31 posted on 01/12/2018 4:21:57 AM PST by fishtank (The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
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To: AZLiberty

You are welcome. Let me know how you like it.


32 posted on 01/12/2018 10:40:18 AM PST by Slyfox (Not my circus, not my monkeys)
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To: JudyinCanada

No, I was very serious. Everybody should do the same thing. The US is a big mess. Ideally, every educated person would be in the tutoring business, basically, helping everyone else to catch up.


33 posted on 01/12/2018 2:04:00 PM PST by BruceDeitrickPrice (education reform)
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To: BruceDeitrickPrice

My apologies to you. I wasn’t sure, but I’m sorry that I misunderstood.


34 posted on 01/12/2018 2:22:46 PM PST by JudyinCanada
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To: Slyfox

I was interested to learn that learning to read hasn’t changed much over the centuries (except for the stupid introduction of the look-say, whole-word approach). Kids first learned the alphabet and the typical sounds of the letters. Independently they memorized Paternoster and some other prayers. They were given prayer books with the alphabet and printed versions of the prayers. With little guidance, I imagine, they could gradually associate the sequence of letters in each printed word with the memorized sounds.

Also interesting: most kids learned to read first in Latin, because the prayers were in Latin. This makes the introduction to reading easier, because Latin is a more nearly phonetic language, without multiple ways of spelling the same sound or multiple different sounds from the same sequence of letters.


35 posted on 01/15/2018 10:24:44 AM PST by AZLiberty ("If we believe in absurdities, we commit atrocities." -- Voltaire)
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