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America, You've Been Punked
Right side news ^ | September 13, 2013 | Bruce Deitrick Price

Posted on 09/26/2013 1:23:55 PM PDT by BruceDeitrickPrice

The Reading Wars were always chaotic and confusing. Here’s the gist:

----On the one side, you had earnest, sincere people warning the country about the dangers of non-phonetic approaches (these were called Look-say, Whole Word, sight-words, and other jargon). The warning was always the same. Nobody can learn to read that way. It’s a hoax. Don’t do it! You’re being punked.

On the other side, you had patronizing professors of education saying the exact opposite. Phonics is old-fashioned. Dull and dreary. We’ve got the fun new way to learn to read. Kids think of words as graphic designs and memorize them. Easy. No problem.

Dr. Celia Stengler, one such professor, panned a phonics text this way: “One wonders whether the authors have ever had the thrill of seeing a group of children learn to read by the use of modern methods. The zest with which these children approach reading and the zeal with which they read will almost certainly be lost if we turn the clock back [to phonics].” Thrill, zest, zeal-–that’s what the professors promised in order to have their way with us.

“Modern methods” in this case means memorizing hieroglyphics just as the early Egyptians did. Easy? No problem? It’s a huge problem. Try to memorize even a hundred hieroglyphics and see how easy it is.

The condescending professors smugly claim that ordinary kids can memorize tens of thousands of graphic designs or even thousands of them. In fact, some children can’t memorize a few hundred. Many years later, the best you can say about millions of children is that they are semi-literate. The entire claim is a joke. America, you were punked.

So how could the professors pull off this charade? There were lots of faux-experts, thousands apparently. They were well organized. All the big names were making buckets of money selling useless books to children. Probably the main thing is that they were a cult and knew exactly what they wanted, namely, to pursue John Dewey’s dream of turning the US into a socialist country.

Some permissive souls give the Deweyites the alibi of incompetence. But the scam has gone on for more than 75 years. Generations of students have come and gone. But somehow the brilliant high-level PhD’s cannot deduce that their theories are false. One suspects they had figured it out from the beginning, which brings us back to our central tragedy: America, you were punked.

Starting around 1930 the professors forced Whole Word into classrooms. When Rudolf Flesch wrote his famous book in 1955 explaining Why Johnny Can’t Read, the professors counterattacked by forming the International Reading Association (IRA). Its whole purpose was to ridicule phonics and persuade Americans that they should use a reading method that did not work. America, stand still and be punked.

Frank Smith, a brilliant man and IRA hero, wrote a book called Reading Without Nonsense (1973) which was entirely devoted to convincing people they could read with nonsense. In his book he said a most remarkable thing: ordinary humans can easily memorize 50,000 sight-words. Completely absurd but they made it stick. Punk you very much.

Ken Goodman, the other brilliant man in this game, alleged that there are four "cueing systems" for reading: graphophonemic; semantic: syntactic: pragmatic. A theoretical edifice always in the process of toppling. But ed schools taught it; young teachers believed in it; students were victims of it. This edifice should perhaps have been called “punking systems.”

As Dr. Samuel Blumenfeld has mordantly noted in The Victims of Dick and Jane, “The International Reading Association...is perhaps the only organization of such size in which a form of educational malpractice has been enshrined as the highest pedagogical good and its practitioners awarded prizes for their achievements....The vast majority of American children are trapped within a system that is turning their brains into macaroni."

This theme–-the utter disaster of using sight-words to learn to read-–has been emphasized over and over by phonics advocates. Siegfried Engelmann stated in 1992: "The system panders and plays games because it is thoroughly incompetent at the top....At present, there are strong advocacy groups for the spotted owl, the killer whale, the Alaska fur seal, and hundreds of other ‘endangered species.' Paradoxically, millions of our kids are endangered. They will fail in school. They will suffer a very real form of child abuse. Yet these kids have far less real advocacy than the spotted owl does." (War Against the Schools' Academic Child Abuse, 1992)

Blumenfeld and Engelmann are singing the same song: America, you’ve been thoroughly punked

But these few smart sincere critics were no match for the organized horde of the International Reading Association and this country’s Education Establishment. These commissars wanted you to believe that ordinary children could memorize sight-words with automaticity. That’s a technical term for instant recall and pronunciation. Reading speed is fast--three or four words a second. Almost nobody can name sight-words at that pace. But these alleged experts pushed this fantasy with total ferocity; and they still do.

Here is a wonderfully stark summation of the current situation by reading guru Don Potter: “The situation across the nation is dramatically worse that anyone can possibly imagine. When I ask the teachers why they teach sight-words, they inevitably tell me because their students are going to be assessed on them. They are totally unaware that sight-words are positively harmful. They consider sight-words part of a good reading program that includes some phonics, not realizing that sight-words create a reflex that interferes with phonics instruction. Sight-words are an obstacle to reading, not an aid.”

America, you’ve been punked. You’re still being punked.

(For more on the Reading Wars, see "42: Reading Resources."/Improve-Education.org)

.


TOPICS: Conspiracy; Education; History; Reference
KEYWORDS: dumbingdown; k12education; phonics; reading
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To: BruceDeitrickPrice

“Probably the main thing is that they were a cult ....”

Read Feynmann’s commencement speech at Cal Tech.
Cargo Cult Science. He discussed the fakery and dishonesty that he observed in education.

http://www.lhup.edu/~DSIMANEK/cargocul.htm

It’s a good read.


21 posted on 09/26/2013 2:04:24 PM PDT by paint_your_wagon
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To: Sherman Logan

Large numbers of function illiterates, that is.

A thorough grounding in phonics produces great readers, excellent spellers and good writers in far greater numbers, even at the low end of the bell curve or when parents are indifferent.

Illiterates yutes become feral yutes because they have no way to access civilization except through their peers.


22 posted on 09/26/2013 2:07:06 PM PDT by Valpal1 (If the police can t solve a problem with brute force, they ll find a way to fix it with brute force)
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To: BruceDeitrickPrice

They tried to pull this crap on my child in the late eighties, we noticed something about her reading as we had begun phonics before grammar school and her grades started to plummet, we told them phonics or we’d pull her from school. They caved and the whole program was scraped the following year!


23 posted on 09/26/2013 2:08:12 PM PDT by qman (The communist usurper must go!)
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To: ZirconEncrustedTweezers

Since apparently nobody ever took us through “phonics,” I suspect we learned to read by “sight.”

My kindergarten teacher was so offended by my being able to read, in actuality better than she did, that she called my mom in to complain. Apparently it was against the rules or something to not learn via the designated system. Mom thought it was hilarious.


24 posted on 09/26/2013 2:09:06 PM PDT by Sherman Logan (Mark Steyn: "In the Middle East, the enemy of our enemy is also our enemy.")
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To: Valpal1

Agreed. But teaching (or learning) phonics requires discipline and drill, which I believe are not high on the priority list of the groups you reference.

So if “see-say” were outlawed tomorrow, I don’t know that it would of itself make much difference.


25 posted on 09/26/2013 2:11:18 PM PDT by Sherman Logan (Mark Steyn: "In the Middle East, the enemy of our enemy is also our enemy.")
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To: Parmy
If you want your child to read, and read well, before he/she starts school here is what needs to be done.

Read to your child every night before bedtime. There are books available that have stories for every day of the year.

If you do that, I guarantee that your child will be reading to you before he/she starts school.

Agree 100%!!!

26 posted on 09/26/2013 2:14:22 PM PDT by piytar (The predator-class is furious that their prey are shooting back.)
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To: Elsiejay

My mom (the brand new English teacher) waited until I was 2 before teaching me phonics approach..........compulsive to this day.


27 posted on 09/26/2013 2:17:10 PM PDT by S.O.S121.500 (Case back hoe for sale or trade for diesel wood chipper....Enforce the Bill of Rights. It's the Law!)
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To: Sherman Logan

Well I don’t know which phonics you are using, but it requires much less drill than any sight method since there are 70 phonograms and 30 spelling rules. Pretty much anyone can memorize 100 facts better and faster than thousands of words by sight.

You don’t need expensive textbooks or workbooks either. People forget that millions are spent in every school district on these, which is another prime motivator in persisting with whole word methods. It’s always about the moolah.


28 posted on 09/26/2013 2:18:36 PM PDT by Valpal1 (If the police can t solve a problem with brute force, they ll find a way to fix it with brute force)
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To: BruceDeitrickPrice

Look-say, Whole-Word, and whatever other name they give it is a giant step up to converting the writing system to Hieroglyphics which promotes politically beneficial Illiteracy. Eventually it is hoped that the profession of Scribe will be resurrected for the Priests of the New Utopia so that information is more easily filtered and controlled.


29 posted on 09/26/2013 2:24:29 PM PDT by arthurus (Read Hazlitt's Economics In One Lesson ONLINEhttp://steshaw.org/economics-in-one-lesson/)
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To: Sherman Logan
My kindergarten teacher was so offended by my being able to read, in actuality better than she did, that she called my mom in to complain. Apparently it was against the rules or something to not learn via the designated system. Mom thought it was hilarious.

I remember getting in trouble in kindergarten for doing the worksheets too quickly. They would have instructions like "circle the cat in each picture" that were meant for the teacher to read to the students. I had circled all my cats before the teacher was done explaining what should be done.

Schools really can't handle the intelligent kids. If I was in school today, I guess I would be pumped full for ritalin to keep me from reading ahead.

30 posted on 09/26/2013 2:24:44 PM PDT by KarlInOhio (Everyone get online for Obamacare on 10/1. Overload the system and crash it hard!)
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To: BruceDeitrickPrice
Shades of John Taylor Gatto. Look him up for a good read on education.

I also love how the good readers in public schools are told to slow down (one chapter a week, just like everyone else) and given the drivel to read so they can stay at the level of their peers and how teachers smarmily talk about how the kid in question, might be reading an 'advanced' book but how there's no way they are understanding it.
31 posted on 09/26/2013 2:25:25 PM PDT by AD from SpringBay (http://jonah2eight.blogspot.com/)
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To: Valpal1
Before the invention of the publik skool, millions of children were taught to read in the home using nothing more than the family bible. By Laura Ingalls Wilder's day, they were using the standard slate and chalk for schoolwork, and some highly effective (but inexpensive) basic primers.

It was a system that worked not because of the texts, but because the method was effective and the people involved were motivated.

32 posted on 09/26/2013 2:27:03 PM PDT by Oberon (Big Brutha Be Watchin'.)
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To: ZirconEncrustedTweezers

I also knew how to read when I went into the 1st grade. I was 9 years and about 9 months, at that time you didn’t have to be 6 to start school. I learned to read by asking my mother how to pronounce words I would see in the news papers. I knew what the meant when I heard her say the words, such as the, wind, sky, etc. After a time I could read the paper by myself with out her help(except for really large words). She didn’t think it was remarkable. I believe I could read just before age 5. I was going to the library and checking out books(I really got into science fiction)by the age of 5. Jane and Dick bored the heck out of me. See, see, see. See Jane run. See Dick throw the ball, see spot catch the ball. Didn’t win me any awards with the teacher by bad mouthing the book!


33 posted on 09/26/2013 2:38:02 PM PDT by calex59
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To: BruceDeitrickPrice

No, America punked itself. In 2008 and 2012. And now they are on the verge of getting what they voted for.


34 posted on 09/26/2013 2:40:14 PM PDT by sport
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To: Monterrosa-24

I tutor kids. Last year I had a little girl, first-grader, who told me, “I am not the smartest kid in my class.” Broke my heart!! Why? Because she was not reading fluently yet! She had to memorize lists of sight words the entire year - rows and rows of words! By sight! It was guaranteed to kill any delight that kid would ever have in reading.

I am a strong believer in phonics, and I taught her to sound out the words, much as we could. Granted, English is not very phonetic, compared to Spanish, for instance. But still, letters have sounds, and giving kids the tools to sound out words opens the entire world of reading to them. Why oh why do they make them memorize pages and pages of sight words?

She rose to the challenge and got every word right on the end-of-year ALL sight-words test, by the way. And I spent a lot of time helping her to see the joy of reading. But what a waste of time.


35 posted on 09/26/2013 2:41:36 PM PDT by bboop (does not suffer fools gladly)
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To: Arm_Bears

Exactly. Make them only literate enough to fill out a food stamp application.


36 posted on 09/26/2013 2:42:41 PM PDT by Blood of Tyrants (From time to time the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots.)
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To: calex59
Jane and Dick bored the heck out of me. See, see, see. See Jane run. See Dick throw the ball, see spot catch the ball.

The reason why the book had such a limited number of words, is because it was designed for the "look/say" or "whole word" method of reading instruction. The method is appropriate for pictographic languages like Chinese, but not phonetical languages like English.

The method was known to be counterproductive in teaching children to read English, but that is why John Dewey promoted it. He wanted to diminish children's ability to read, and interest in reading.

Dewey wanted to prevent individual learning. Rather, he wanted children to work together, guessing at the meaning of words. Dewey was a socialist who signed the first Humanist Manifesto.

Dick and Jane.

37 posted on 09/26/2013 2:47:06 PM PDT by St_Thomas_Aquinas ( Isaiah 22:22, Matthew 16:19, Revelation 3:7)
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To: qman

RE: “we told them phonics or we’d pull her from school.”

A wonderful story, and exactly what everyone should do.


38 posted on 09/26/2013 3:03:07 PM PDT by BruceDeitrickPrice (education reform)
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To: ZirconEncrustedTweezers; All

Crap!Correction to my #33 post. I was FIVE years and 9 months, not 9 years, when I started 1st grade.


39 posted on 09/26/2013 3:22:56 PM PDT by calex59
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To: Sherman Logan
The other second graders were reading Dick and Jane. I was reading Lord of the Rings.

I have three sons like you, and three sons who had to be taught to read with phonics at age 5-6. The instant-readers don't miss out on learning to read in public school, but they miss out on everything they could have learned with their ability, because they're held back to the level of the "other" kids in their grade, who didn't learn to read because they weren't taught.

So far, three daughters have had to be taught to read. The 4th isn't 2 yet, so I don't know how she'll turn out.

40 posted on 09/26/2013 3:44:33 PM PDT by Tax-chick (" Decency requires that they be voted out of office as an act of urgent political hygiene." Steyn)
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