Discussing sound literacy instruction, supporting teachers and defending public education
For further reading
▼
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Oh, Happy Day! Research Shows It's Not the Schools
Please, everyone who cares about children and education, read this article by Sean F. Reardon from today's New York Times. For those of us who have been saying that there has not been a decline in schools and schooling over the past 40 years, this is good news indeed. It appears that it is about income and how that income is spent and, oh, by the way, the quality of child care and early education that young children get.
Now, everyone who has been bashing schools and teachers for the last decade, everyone who has advocated for stealing money from the public schools through vouchers and charter schools, please redirect your energies where they will do the most good - quality child care and outstanding early childhood education.
Here is the link to the article: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/27/no-rich-child-left-behind/?ref=opinion
Friday, April 26, 2013
Defending Reader Response from the Common Core
The Common Core's "deep
reading" approach to literacy and language arts is desperately needed, and
will give students… the tools to be prepared for college, career, and
life--tools they currently lack. I know because I see these unprepared students
in my college classroom.
Prior, Karen Swallow. Why I Support the Common Corps Reading Standards. The Atlantic, April 24, 2013
Prior, Karen Swallow. Why I Support the Common Corps Reading Standards. The Atlantic, April 24, 2013
Sounds great doesn’t it. The writers of the Common Core
Reading Standards have provided us with the panacea. These standards will “give”
our students the skills they need. Surely we want our students to be deep
readers, i.e., to read beyond the surface level, to be able to deeply
understand what the author is trying to convey through a thoroughgoing and
thoughtful analysis. But to think that stating these goals in a document like
the CCCS is going to make it happen is, to quote Janet Emig on a different
topic, “to engage in magical thinking.”
Swallow is critical of the “reader response” approach to
reading comprehension, as a soft approach that does not ask the students to go
beyond a personal connection to the text and ends with surface understandings
and miscomprehension of text. Anyone with even a cursory knowledge of Louise Rosenblatt’s
reader response theory would know that reader response is merely a first step
toward a deeper understanding of text. Teachers use reader response to get
students engaged in the reading so that deeper discussion of the text has a
basis in student connections to the text.
No doubt many teachers do not take students much beyond this initial
understanding, but that is a flaw in instruction and not in theory. If the
standards hold teachers more accountable for following up on reader response,
so much the better, but let us not throw out a powerful teaching tool because
we think the Common Core demands it.
In fact this is just the point. The Common Core is mute on
how to achieve the “deep reading” it requires. It is left to the teachers to
determine how this will happen. The Common Core will not “give” the student
anything – good teaching will. And good teaching includes having students make
personal connections to the text as a basis for deeper understanding.