There’s an elephant in the room ….. but, can he read? Iowa Reading Association June 2015 Kate...

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Transcript of There’s an elephant in the room ….. but, can he read? Iowa Reading Association June 2015 Kate...

There’s an elephant in the room ….. but, can he read?

Iowa Reading AssociationJune 2015

Kate Hornung & Cindy Waters

Kate & Cindy’s background

• Kate: Iowa Falls, Pineview Elementary

• Kindergarten instructor, 27 years• PreK-3 endorsement

• Cindy: Upper Iowa University

• Teacher Educator• Background in FCS, Child Development• 37 years in public & higher ed

What Elephant?! Consider……

• Public schools believe that children should learn to read in kindergarten.

• Teachers comply.

• However, is it right?

• Is it truly necessary that children read at age 5?

• Are we pressuring children to read when they are not developmentally ready?

Concerns

• Parents Stress of doing all the “right” things Doing little/nothing: “school’s responsibility”

• Teachers Students with huge skill range Are there unrealistic expectations? Developmentally inappropriate?

• Administrators Test scores!!

• Elephant No one likes this; everyone talks about it, but not

one is taking a stand & so… status quo

Grounds for concern

• Outdated views of literacy development and/or learning theories

• Demands that children try to read

• Early reading tests to be prepared by third-grade.

• The push to read when kids are too immature

• The principal and assistance team (erroneously) determine kids need of programming or retention when they are clearly just not ready

• Labeling kids as struggling can cause permanent emotional and academic damage 

Consequences

• Teaching reading at an early age can lead to poor reading habits

• Alienates children from the enjoyment of reading.

• Reading becomes a chore & can embitter kids on not only reading, but school and learning in general

• No evidence to support the widespread belief that children must read in prekindergarten or kindergarten to become strong readers and achieve academic success

Right or wrong?

• Many can learn to read in kindergarten or earlier

• However…..plenty who aren’t ready

• Each child can and should learn to read on his/her own terms and pace

• As educators, we may support and encourage, but should not force reading

Climate of learning

• Many educators agree with the philosophy of less testing

• Yet, the prevailing school attitude (often set by legislators and administrators) is read soon and test

• Instead, provide more encouragement to promote reading

• Let the child set his/her own learning journey

Then …… & now

1988• Teach letters &

sounds

• Numbers 1-10

• Address, phone number

• Tie shoes

2015• Letters & sounds (if

needed)

• Segmenting/blending

• Nonsense words

• Sight words

• Reading!

Developmentally Appropriate Practice

• Preschool children can Enjoy listening to & discussing storybooks Understand that print carries a message Engage in reading & writing attempts Identify labels & signs in their environment Participate in rhyming games Identify some letters & make some sound

matches Use known letters to represent meaningful

language (NAEYC, 1998)

Recommended Teaching Practices

• Preschool Model reading behaviors Foster children’s interest in & enjoyment of

reading Print-rich environments Draw attention to specific letters & words Daily read aloud to individuals or small groups Discussion on what is read Strategies & experiences to develop phonemic

awareness, i.e., songs, fingerplays, games, poems, & stories, including rhyme & alliteration

Play that incorporates literacy tools Firsthand experiences that expand vocabulary

(NAEYC, 1998)

Developmentally Appropriate Practice

• Kindergartners can Enjoy being read to & retell simple narratives or

simple informational texts Use descriptive language to explain & explore Recognize letters & letter-sound matches Show familiarity with rhyming & beginning

sounds Understand left-to-right and top-to-bottom

orientation & familiar concepts of print Match spoken words with written ones Begin to write letters of the alphabet & some

high-frequency words (NAEYC, 1988)

Recommended Teaching Practices

• Kindergarten Daily read aloud Independent reading Systematic code instruction Meaningful reading & writing activities Opportunity to write many kinds of text Experiences to use nonconventional forms of

writing, moving to conventional forms Opportunities to work in small groups for

collaboration Engaging & challenging curriculum to expand

knowledge of world & vocabulary Differentiated instruction if child fails to make

expected progress or when literacy skills are advanced (NAEYC, 1998)

Common Core/Iowa Core • Standards 1-9 are DAP, involving retelling,

recognition, & vocabulary

• Standard 10: Actively engage in group reading activities with purpose and understanding. Pushes young children & leads to poor results Develop coping mechanisms; not helpful later Some say this is misinterpretation of what standards require

(Iowa Dept. of Ed, 2015)

• Core standards describe range of skills

• Much of concern is about implementation Nothing precludes safe, warm, nurturing, play-based

classrooms (Pondisco, 2015)

• Difficult to teach standards in DAP when worried about standardized tests

Academic v Play based: Reading• Developmental progression of sensory-motor

skills needed before age 7

• Many K teachers have thrown out kitchens, blocks, napping rugs & dollhouses!

• Left v. right brain activity Left: analytical

• 7-9 years• Phonics• Stresses child’s mind & body

Right: intuitive, looks at whole• Child must guess w/o sounding out• Difficulty switching to left brain(Johnson, 2003)

• Play environment develops executive function

The educators who established early

childhood as a time for guided learning all

emphasized the dangers of introducing the world of symbols

too early in life. (Elkind,2001)

Is early reading necessary?

• Key question is it optimal to teach early reading?

• Introduced too early; learn more quickly & with less stress at 6 (Russell, 2015)

• Explicit & programmatic teaching; text reading & decoding—not recommended

• Early reading=early language skills

• Evidence doesn’t fully support the need (Suggate, 2013)

Reading Readiness

• Enthusiasm for reading diminishes if pressured

• Need to engage in wanting to read (Russell, 2015)

• Teaching reading & writing at 5 can dent interest in books

• Kiddos see themselves as inept (Katz, in Curtis, 2007)

• Have children’s brains evolved to a higher level? (AAP, in Bailey, 2014)

• Greatest barrier is standards & testing (Kohn, 2013)

AR

• 4 aspects: access to books– supported by research time for recreational reading– supported by research Tests rewards only affects short-term behavior

• Inconsistent evidence; gains were not present or small

• No lasting effect on comprehension, reading frequency, or enthusiasm

• Incentives do not promote additional reading

• May have long term harmful effects (Krashen, 2003).

Your 2 cents worth?

• How are you responding?

• Agree/disagree?

• What have you done? Could or will do?

• How do we bring this to the table as a serious discussion issue with admins, parents?

What promotes this “elephant”?• Teachers/schools

• Limited by mandates

• FAST testing

• Readiness for next grade

• Parental & societal pressure

• Ss who are sent, but not ready for school

• Ss with no literacy experience or preK

• Parents who are “too busy” to collaborate

Is there a solution? What to do?!• No simple solution, maybe not even a viable

one, but the conversation needs to arise

• Data/documentation

• Intentionality about literacy & language

• Don’t bombard or overwhelm kiddos

• Awareness– do parents, people in general really realize the problem & why it is a problem?

• Parents must band together; speak to administrators to find a happy medium

Be courageous

• Have we, as teachers, lost the capacity to be outraged at outrageous things?

• Question traditional practices/criteria

• Take responsibility

• Share power

• Be active & assertive (Kohn, 2013)

• Advocate for yourself, your classroom, your kids!

Questions?

What are YOU going to do about this Elephant in the room?!

Thank you for attending & your input

ReferencesBailey, N. (2014). Setting children up to hate reading. Nancy Bailey’s Education Website. Retrieved from http://nancybailey.com/2014/02/02/setting- children-up-to-hate-reading/Curtis, P. (2007). Under-sevens ‘too young to learn to read.’ The Guardian. Retrieved

from http://theguardian.com/uk/2007/nov/22/earlyyearseducation.schoolsElkind, D. (2001). Young Einsteins. Education Matters. Retrieved from www.edmatters.orgJohnson, S. (2003). Teaching academics in preschool & kindergarten. You and Your

Child’s Health. Retrieved from www.youandyourchildshealth/articles/Kohn, A. (2013). Encouraging educator courage. Education Week. Retrieved from

http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2013/09/18/04kohn.h33.html?tkn=OZXF TFySwn1LbKrashen, S. (2003). The experimental evidence supporting the use of Accelerated

Reader. Journal of Children’s Literature, 29, 16-30. http://www.google.com/url?sa= t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CB4QFjAA&url= http%3A%2F%2Fwww.sdkrashen.com%2Fcontent%2Farticles%2Fdoes _accelerated_reader_work.pdf&ei=ECp3VYm4NozWoATH24GAAg

&usg=AFQjCNFRyLIc2JztZTqyHnZI7GFAmeM0MwNational Association for the Education of Young Children.(1998).

Young Children, 53, 30–46. Retrieved from https://www.naeyc.org/positionstatements/learning_readwrite

References, cont.

•Pondisco, R. (2015). Is Common Core too hard for kindergarten? Thomas B. Fordham Institute. Retrieved from http://edexcellence.net/articles/is-common-core-too-hard-for-kindergarten•Russell, F. (2014). Children must learn to love reading, not just learn to read. The

Guardian. Retrieved from http://www.theguardian.com/education/2014/sep/

12/children-must-learn-to-love-reading•Schwartz, K. (2015). Does Common Core ask too much of kindergarten readers? KQED News. Retrieved from http://ww2.kqed.org/

mindshift/2015/04/27/does-common-core-ask-too-much-of-kindergarten-readers/

•Suggate, S. (2013). Does early reading instruction help reading in the long-term? A review of empirical evidence. Research on Steiner Education, 4,123-

131. Retrieved from www.rosejourn.com

Contact information

Ms. Kate HornungPineview Elementary 1510 Washington Ave. Iowa Falls, IA 50126khornung@ifacadets.net

Dr. Cindy WatersUpper Iowa University605 WashingtonFayette, IA 52142watersc@uiu.edu