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Wikipedia

Reading

Reading is the process of taking in the sense or meaning of letters, symbols, etc., especially by sight or touch.[1][2][3][4]

For educators and researchers, reading is a multifaceted process involving such areas as word recognition, orthography (spelling), alphabetics, phonics, phonemic awareness, vocabulary, comprehension, fluency, and motivation.[5][6]

Other types of reading and writing, such as pictograms (e.g., a hazard symbol and an emoji), are not based on speech-based writing systems.[7] The common link is the interpretation of symbols to extract the meaning from the visual notations or tactile signals (as in the case of Braille).[8]

A reading muse
There is a growing body of evidence which illustrates the importance of reading for pleasure for both educational purposes as well as personal development.[9] Photo: Reading a newspaper in Catania, Sicily.

Overview

 
Volunteer reads to a girl at the Casa Hogar de las Niñas in Mexico City

Reading is typically an individual activity, done silently, although on occasion a person reads out loud for other listeners; or reads aloud for one's own use, for better comprehension. Before the reintroduction of separated text (spaces between words) in the late Middle Ages, the ability to read silently was considered rather remarkable.[10][11]

Major predictors of an individual's ability to read both alphabetic and non-alphabetic scripts are oral language skills,[12] phonological awareness, rapid automatized naming and verbal IQ.[13]

As a leisure activity, children and adults read because it is pleasant and interesting. In the US, about half of all adults read one or more books for pleasure each year.[14] About 5% read more than 50 books per year.[14] Americans read more if they: have more education, read fluently and easily, are female, live in cities, and have higher socioeconomic status.[14] Children become better readers when they know more about the world in general, and when they perceive reading as fun rather than another chore to be performed.[14]

Reading vs. literacy

Reading is an essential part of literacy, yet from a historical perspective literacy is about having the ability to both read and write.[15][16][17][18]

And, since the 1990s some organizations have defined literacy in a wide variety of ways that may go beyond the traditional ability to read and write. The following are some examples:

  • "the ability to read and write ... in all media (print or electronic), including digital literacy"[19]
  • "the ability to ... understand ... using printed and written materials associated with varying contexts"[20][21][22]
  • "the ability to read, write, speak and listen"[23]
  • "having the skills to be able to read, write and speak to understand and create meaning"[24]
  • "the ability to ... communicate using visual, audible, and digital materials"[25][26]
  • "the ability to use printed and written information to function in society, to achieve one's goals, and to develop one's knowledge and potential".[27] It includes three types of adult literacy: prose (e.g., a newspaper article), documents (e.g., a bus schedule), and quantitative literacy (e.g., using arithmetic operations a in product advertisement).[28][29]

In the academic field, some view literacy in a more philosophical manner and propose the concept of "multiliteracies". For example, they say, "this huge shift from traditional print-based literacy to 21st century multiliteracies reflects the impact of communication technologies and multimedia on the evolving nature of texts, as well as the skills and dispositions associated with the consumption, production, evaluation, and distribution of those texts (Borsheim, Meritt, & Reed, 2008, p. 87)".[30][31] According to cognitive neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg these "multiple literacies" have allowed educators to change the topic from reading and writing to "Literacy". He goes on to say that some educators, when faced with criticisms of how reading is taught, "didn't alter their practices, they changed the subject".[32]

Also, some organizations might include numeracy skills and technology skills separately but alongside of literacy skills.[33]

In addition, since the 1940s the term literacy is often used to mean having knowledge or skill in a particular field (e.g., computer literacy, ecological literacy, health literacy, media literacy, quantitative literacy (numeracy)[29] and visual literacy).[34][35][36][37]

Writing systems

In order to understand a text, it is usually necessary to understand the spoken language associated with that text. In this way, writing systems are distinguished from many other symbolic communication systems.[38] Once established, writing systems on the whole change more slowly than their spoken counterparts, and often preserve features and expressions which are no longer current in the spoken language. The great benefit of writing systems is their ability to maintain a persistent record of information expressed in a language, which can be retrieved independently of the initial act of formulation.[38]

Cognitive benefits

 
Senior reading a newspaper in Nepal

Reading for pleasure has been linked to increased cognitive progress in vocabulary and mathematics during adolescence. [39][40] Sustained high volume lifetime reading has been associated with high levels of academic attainment.[41]

Research suggests that reading can improve stress management,[42] memory,[42] focus,[43] writing skills,[43] and imagination.[44]

The cognitive benefits of reading continue into mid-life and the senior years.[45][46][47]

Research suggests that reading books and writing are among the brain-stimulating activities that can slow down cognitive decline in seniors.[48]

State of reading achievement

Reading has been the subject of considerable research and reporting for decades. Many organizations measure and report on reading achievement for children and adults (e.g., NAEP, PIRLS, PISA PIAAC, and EQAO).

Researchers have concluded that 95% of students can be taught to read by the end of first grade, yet in many countries 20% or more do not meet that expectation.[49]

According to the 2019 Nation's Report card, 34% of grade four students in the United States failed to perform at or above the Basic reading level. There was a significant difference by race and ethnicity (e.g., black students at 52% and white students at 23%). After the impact of the covid-19 pandemic the average basic reading score dropped by 3% in 2022.[50] See more about the breakdown by ethnicity in 2019 and 2022 here.

In Canada, the provinces of Ontario and Nova Scotia, respectively, reported that 26% and 30% of grade three students did not meet the provincial reading standards in 2019.[51][52][53] In Ontario, 53% of Grade 3 students with special education needs (students who have an Individual Education Plan), were not meeting the provincial standard.[54]

The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) publishes reading achievement for fourth graders in 50 countries.[55] The five countries with the highest overall reading average are the Russian Federation, Singapore, Hong Kong SAR, Ireland and Finland. Some others are: England 10th, United States 15th, Australia 21st, Canada 23rd, and New Zealand 33rd.[56][57][58]

The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) measures 15-year-old school pupils scholastic performance on mathematics, science, and reading.[59]

The reading levels of adults, ages 16–65, in 39 countries are reported by the Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC).[60] Between 2011 and 2018, PIAAC reports the percentage of adults reading at-or-below level one (the lowest of five levels). Some examples are Japan 4.9%, Finland 10.6%, Netherlands 11.7%, Australia 12.6%, Sweden 13.3%, Canada 16.4%, England (UK) 16.4%, and the United States 16.9%.[61]

According to the World Bank, 53% of all children in low-and-middle-income countries suffer from 'learning poverty'. In 2019, using data from the UNESCO Institute for Statistics, they published a report entitled Ending Learning Poverty: What will it take?.[62] Learning poverty is defined as being unable to read and understand a simple text by age 10.

Although they say that all foundational skills are important, include reading, numeracy, basic reasoning ability, socio-emotional skills, and others – they focus specifically on reading. Their reasoning is that reading proficiency is an easily understood metric of learning, reading is a student's gateway to learning in every other area, and reading proficiency can serve as a proxy for foundational learning in other subjects.

They suggest five pillars to reduce learning poverty: 1) learners are prepared and motivated to learn, 2) teachers at all levels are effective and valued, 3) classrooms are equipped for learning, 4) Schools are safe and inclusive spaces, and 5) education systems are well-managed.

Learning to read

 
Researchers have concluded that 95% of students can be taught to read by the end of first grade, yet in many countries 20% or more do not meet that expectation.[49]

Learning to read or reading skills acquisition is the acquisition and practice of the skills necessary to understand the meaning behind printed words. For a skilled reader, the act of reading feels simple, effortless, and automatic.[63] However, the process of learning to read is complex and builds on cognitive, linguistic, and social skills developed from a very early age. As one of the four core language skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing),[64][65] reading is vital to gaining a command of written language.

In the United States and elsewhere, it is widely believed that students who lack proficiency in reading by the end of grade three may face obstacles for the rest of their academic career.[66][67][68] For example, it is estimated that they would not be able to read half of the material they will encounter in grade four.[69]

In 2019, with respect to the reading skills of grade-four US public school students, only 45% of white students and 18% of black students performed at or above the proficient level of the Nations Report Card.[70] Also, in 2012, in the United Kingdom it has been reported that 15-year-old students are reading at the age of 12-year-old students.[71]

As a result, many governments put practices in place to ensure that students are reading at grade level by the end of grade three. An example of this is the Third Grade Reading Guarantee created by the State of Ohio in 2017. This is a program to identify students from kindergarten through grade three that are behind in reading, and provide support to make sure they are on track for reading success by the end of grade three.[72][73] This is also known as remedial education. Another example is the policy in England whereby any pupil who is struggling to decode words properly by year three must "urgently" receive help through a "rigorous and systematic phonics programme".[74]

In 2016, out of 50 countries, the United States achieved the 15th highest score in grade-four reading ability.[75] The ten countries with the highest overall reading average are the Russian Federation, Singapore, Hong Kong SAR, Ireland, Finland, Poland, Northern Ireland, Norway, Chinese Taipei and England (UK). Some others are: Australia (21st), Canada (23rd), New Zealand (33rd), France (34th), Saudi Arabia (44th), and South Africa (50th).

Spoken language: the foundation of reading

Spoken language is the foundation of learning to read (long before children see any letters) and children's knowledge of the phonological structure of language is a good predictor of early reading ability. Spoken language is dominant for most of childhood, however, reading ultimately catches up and surpasses speech.[76][77][78][79]

By their first birthday most children have learned all the sounds in their spoken language. However, it takes longer for them to learn the phonological form of words and to begin developing a spoken vocabulary.[12]

Children acquire a spoken language in a few years. Five-to-six-year-old English learners have vocabularies of 2,500 to 5,000 words, and add 5,000 words per year for the first several years of schooling. This rapid learning rate cannot be accounted for by the instruction they receive. Instead, children learn that the meaning of a new word can be inferred because it occurs in the same context as familiar words (e.g., lion is often seen with cowardly and king).[80] As British linguist John Rupert Firth says, "You shall know a word by the company it keeps".

The environment in which children live may also impact their ability to acquire reading skills. Children who are regularly exposed to chronic environmental noise pollution, such as highway traffic noise, have been known to show decreased ability to discriminate between phonemes (oral language sounds) as well as lower reading scores on standardized tests.[81]

Reading to children: necessary but not sufficient

 
Reading to children is not the same as teaching children to read, however it does help if the children's attention is directed to the words on the page as they are being read to.[82][83]

Children learn to speak naturally – by listening to other people speak. However, reading is not a natural process, and many children need to learn to read through a process that involves "systematic guidance and feedback".[84][85][86][87]

So, "reading to children is not the same as teaching children to read".[88] Nonetheless, reading to children is important because it socializes them to the activity of reading; it engages them; it expands their knowledge of spoken language; and it enriches their linguistic ability by hearing new and novel words and grammatical structures.

However, there is some evidence that "shared reading" with children does help to improve reading if the children's attention is directed to the words on the page as they are being read to.[82][83]

Stages to skilled reading

The path to skilled reading involves learning the alphabetic principle, phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension.[89]

British psychologist Uta Frith introduced a three stages model to acquire skilled reading. Stage one is the logographic or pictorial stage where students attempt to grasp words as objects, an artificial form of reading. Stage two is the phonological stage where students learn the relationship between the graphemes (letters) and the phonemes (sounds). Stage three is the orthographic stage where students read familiar words more quickly than unfamiliar words, and word length gradually ceases to play a role.[90]

Optimum age to learn to read

There is some debate as to the optimum age to teach children to read.

The Common Core State Standards Initiative (CCSS) in the United States has standards for foundational reading skills in kindergarten and grade one that include instruction in print concepts, phonological awareness, phonics, word recognition and fluency.[91] However, some critics of CCSS say that "To achieve reading standards usually calls for long hours of drill and worksheets – and reduces other vital areas of learning such as math, science, social studies, art, music and creative play".[92]

The PISA 2007 OECD data from 54 countries demonstrates "no association between school entry age ... and reading achievement at age 15".[93] Also, a German study of 50 kindergartens compared children who, at age 5, had spent a year either "academically focused", or "play-arts focused" and found that in time the two groups became inseparable in reading skill.[94] The authors conclude that the effects of early reading are like "watering a garden before a rainstorm; the earlier watering is rendered undetectable by the rainstorm, the watering wastes precious water, and the watering detracts the gardener from other important preparatory groundwork".[93]

Some scholars favor a developmentally appropriate practice (DPA) in which formal instruction on reading begins when children are about six or seven years old. And to support that theory some point out that children in Finland start school at age seven (Finland ranked 5th in the 2016 PIRLS international grade four reading achievement.)[95] In a discussion on academic kindergartens, professor of child development David Elkind has argued that, since "there is no solid research demonstrating that early academic training is superior to (or worse than) the more traditional, hands-on model of early education", educators should defer to developmental approaches that provide young children with ample time and opportunity to explore the natural world on their own terms.[96] Elkind emphasized the principle that "early education must start with the child, not with the subject matter to be taught".[96] In response, Grover J. Whitehurst, Director, Brown Center on Education Policy, (part of Brookings Institution)[97] said David Elkind is relying too much on philosophies of education rather than science and research. He continues to say education practices are "doomed to cycles of fad and fancy" until they become more based on evidence-based practice.[98]

On the subject of Finland's academic results, as some researchers point out, prior to starting school Finnish children must participate in one year of compulsory free pre-primary education and most are reading before they start school.[99][100] And, with respect to developmentally appropriate practice (DPA), in 2019 the National Association for the Education of Young Children, Washington, DC, released a draft position paper on DPA saying "The notion that young children are not ready for academic subject matter is a misunderstanding of developmentally appropriate practice; particularly in grades 1 through 3, almost all subject matter can be taught in ways that are meaningful and engaging for each child".[101] And, researchers at The Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential say it is a myth that early readers are bored or become trouble makers in school.[102]

Other researchers and educators favor limited amounts of literacy instruction at the age of four and five, in addition to non-academic, intellectually stimulating activities.[103]

Reviews of the academic literature by the Education Endowment Foundation in the UK have found that starting literacy teaching in preschool has "been consistently found to have a positive effect on early learning outcomes"[104] and that "beginning early years education at a younger age appears to have a high positive impact on learning outcomes".[105] This supports current standard practice in the UK which includes developing children's phonemic awareness in preschool and teaching reading from age four.

A study in Chicago reports that an early education program for children from low-income families is estimated to generate $4 to $11 of economic benefits over a child's lifetime for every dollar spent initially on the program, according to a cost-benefit analysis funded by the National Institutes of Health. The program is staffed by certified teachers and offers "instruction in reading and math, small group activities and educational field trips for children ages 3 through 9".[106][107]

There does not appear to be any definitive research about the "magic window" to begin reading instruction.[100] However, there is also no definitive research to suggest that starting early causes any harm. Researcher Timothy Shanahan, suggests, "Start teaching reading from the time you have kids available to teach, and pay attention to how they respond to this instruction – both in terms of how well they are learning what you are teaching, and how happy and invested they seem to be. If you haven't started yet, don't feel guilty, just get going".[100]

Reading instruction by grade level

Some education researchers suggest the teaching of the various reading components by specific grade levels.[108] The following is one example from Carol Tolman, Ed.D. and Louisa Moats, Ed.D. that corresponds in many respects with the United States Common Core State Standards Initiative:[91]

Reading instruction component Tolman & Moats US Common Core
Phonological awareness K–1 K–1
Basic phonics K–1 K–1
Vocabulary K–6+ K–6+
Comprehension K–6+ K–6+
Written expression 1–6+ K–6+
Fluency 1–3 1–5
Advanced phonics/decoding 2–6+ 2–5

Reading development

According to some researchers, learners (children and adults) progress through several stages while first learning to read in English, and then refining their reading skills. One of the recognized experts in this area is Harvard professor Jeanne Sternlicht Chall. In 1983 she published a book entitled Stages of Reading Development that proposed six stages.[109][110]

Subsequently, in 2008 Maryanne Wolf, UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, published a book entitled Proust and the Squid in which she describes her view of the following five stages of reading development.[111][112] It is normal that children will move through these stages at different rates; however, typical ages for children in the United States are shown below.

Emerging pre-reader: 6 months to 6 years old

 
Reading time at a primary school in rural Lao PDR, Southeast Asia. In 2017, approximately 70% of five-year-old children are not enrolled in Early Childhood Education programmes, with those in hard-to-reach areas and from poor families being the most excluded.[113] The daily reading period shown here uses books provided by Big Brother Mouse, a not-for-profit that promotes reading in Lao schools and villages.[114]

The emerging pre-reader stage, also known as reading readiness, usually lasts for the first five years of a child's life.[115] Children typically speak their first few words before their first birthday.[116] Educators and parents help learners to develop their skills in listening, speaking, reading and writing.[117]

Reading to children helps them to develop their vocabulary, a love of reading, and phonemic awareness, i.e. the ability to hear and manipulate the individual sounds (phonemes) of oral language. Children will often "read" stories they have memorized. However, in the late 1990s United States' researchers found that the traditional way of reading to children made little difference in their later ability to read because children spend relatively little time actually looking at the text. Yet, in a shared reading program with four-year-old children, teachers found that directing children's attention to the letters and words (e.g. verbally or pointing to the words) made a significant difference in early reading, spelling and comprehension.[118][83][119][120]

Novice reader: 6 to 7 years old

Novice readers continue to develop their phonemic awareness, and come to realise that the letters (graphemes) connect to the sounds (phonemes) of the language; known as decoding, phonics, and the alphabetic principle.[121] They may also memorize the most common letter patterns and some of the high-frequency words that do not necessarily follow basic phonological rules (e.g. have and who). However, it is a mistake to assume a reader understands the meaning of a text merely because they can decode it. Vocabulary and oral language comprehension are also important parts of text comprehension as described in the Simple view of reading, Scarborough's reading rope, and The active view of reading model. Reading and speech are codependent: reading promotes vocabulary development and a richer vocabulary facilitates skilled reading.[122]

Decoding reader: 7 to 9 years old

The transition from the novice reader stage to the decoding stage is marked by a reduction of painful pronunciations and in its place the sounds of a smoother, more confident reader.[123] In this phase the reader adds at least 3,000 words to what they can decode. For example, in the English language, readers now learn the variations of the vowel-based rimes (e.g. sat, mat, cat)[124] and vowel pairs (also digraph) (e.g. rain, play, boat)[125]

As readers move forward, they learn the make up of morphemes (i.e. stems, roots, prefixes and suffixes). They learn the common morphemes such as "s" and "ed" and see them as "sight chunks". "The faster a child can see that beheaded is be + head + ed", the faster they will become a more fluent reader.

In the beginning of this stage a child will often be devoting so much mental capacity to the process of decoding that they will have no understanding of the words being read. It is nevertheless an important stage, allowing the child to achieve their ultimate goal of becoming fluent and automatic.

It is in the decoding phase that the child will get to what the story is really about, and to learn to re-read a passage when necessary so as to truly understand it.

Fluent, comprehending reader: 9 to 15 years old

The goal of this stage is to "go below the surface of the text", and in the process the reader will build their knowledge of spelling substantially.[126]

Teachers and parents may be tricked by fluent-sounding reading into thinking that a child understands everything that they are reading. As the content of what they are able to read becomes more demanding, good readers will develop knowledge of figurative language and irony which helps them to discover new meanings in the text.

Children improve their comprehension when they use a variety of tools such as connecting prior knowledge, predicting outcomes, drawing inferences, and monitoring gaps in their understanding. One of the most powerful moments is when fluent comprehending readers learn to enter into the lives of imagined heroes and heroines.

When teaching comprehension, the educational psychologist, G. Michael Pressley, says a strong case can be made for instruction in decoding, vocabulary, word knowledge, active comprehension strategies, and self-monitoring.[127]

At the end of this stage, many processes are starting to become automatic, allowing the reader to focus on meaning. With the decoding process almost automatic by this point, the brain learns to integrate more metaphorical, inferential, analogical, background and experiential knowledge. This stage in learning to read will often last until early adulthood.[128]

Expert reader: 16 years and older

At the expert stage it will usually only take a reader one-half second to read almost any word.[129] The degree to which expert reading will change over the course of an adult's life depends on what they read and how much they read.

Science of reading

 
Writing is only about 5,500 years old, unlike human speech which is thought to be from 50,000 years to 2 million years old.[130] So, unlike speech, the brain did not evolve to read naturally. As a result, the brain adapts to the challenge of reading. The process of reading involves most of the brain, especially an interconnection between visual areas and language areas; but also neural systems related to action, emotion, decision making and memory.[131][132]

There is no single definition of the science of reading (SOR).[133] Foundational skills such as phonics, decoding, and phonemic awareness are considered to be important parts of the science of reading, but they are not the only ingredients. SOR includes any research and evidence about how humans learn to read, and how reading should be taught. This includes areas such as oral reading fluency, vocabulary, morphology, reading comprehension, text, spelling and pronunciation, thinking strategies, oral language proficiency, working memory training, and written language performance (e.g., cohesion, sentence combining/reducing).[134]

In addition, some educators feel that SOR should include digital literacy; background knowledge; content-rich instruction; infrastructural pillars (curriculum, reimagined teacher preparation, and leadership); adaptive teaching (recognizing the student's individual, culture and linguistic strengths); bi-literacy development; equity, social justice and supporting underserved populations (e.g., students from low-income backgrounds).[133]

Some researchers suggest there is a need for more studies on the relationship between theory and practice. They say "we know more about the science of reading than about the science of teaching based on the science of reading", and "there are many layers between basic science findings and teacher implementation that must be traversed".[133]

In cognitive science there is likely no area that has been more successful than the study of reading. Yet, in many countries reading levels are considered low. In the United States, the 2019 Nations Report Card reported that 34% of grade-four public school students performed at or above the NAEP proficient level (solid academic performance) and 65% performed at or above the basic level (partial mastery of the proficient level skills).[135] As reported in the PIRLS study, the United States ranked 15th out of 50 countries, for reading comprehension levels of fourth-graders.[56][57] In addition, according to the 2011–2018 PIAAC study, out of 39 countries the United States ranked 19th for literacy levels of adults 16 to 65; and 16.9% of adults in the United States read at or below level one (out of five levels).[136][61]

Many researchers are concerned that low reading levels are due to the manner in which reading is taught. They point to three areas: a) contemporary reading science has had very little impact on educational practice mainly because of a "two-cultures problem separating science and education", b) current teaching practices rest on outdated assumptions that make learning to read harder than it needs to be, and c) connecting evidence-based practice to educational practice would be beneficial but is extremely difficult to achieve because many teachers are not properly trained in the science of reading.[137][138][139][49]

Simple view of reading

 

The simple view of reading is a scientific theory about reading comprehension.[140] According to the theory, in order to comprehend what they are reading students need both decoding skills and oral language (listening) comprehension ability. Neither is enough on their own. In other words, they need the ability to recognize and process (e.g., sound out) the text, and the ability to understand the language in which the text is written (i.e., vocabulary, grammar and background knowledge). Students are not reading if they can decode words but do not understand their meaning. Similarly, students are not reading if they cannot decode words that they would ordinarily recognize and understand if they heard them spoken out loud.[141][142][143]

It is expressed in this equation: Decoding × Oral Language Comprehension = Reading Comprehension.[144]

As shown in the graphic, the Simple View of Reading proposes four broad categories of developing readers: typical readers; poor readers (general reading disability); dyslexics;[145] and hyperlexics.[146][147]

Scarborough's reading rope

Hollis Scarborough, the creator of the Reading Rope and senior scientist at Haskins Laboratories, is a leading researcher of early language development and its connection to later literacy.[148]

Scarborough published the Reading Rope infographic in 2001 using strands of rope to illustrate the many ingredients that are involved in becoming a skilled reader. The upper strands represent language-comprehension and reinforce one another. The lower strands represent word-recognition and work together as the reader becomes accurate, fluent, and automatic through practice. The upper and lower strands all weave together to produce a skilled reader.[149]

Language-comprehension (Upper strands)
Background knowledge (facts, concepts, etc.)
Vocabulary (breadth, precision, links, etc.)
Language structures (syntax, semantics, etc.)
Verbal reasoning (inference, metaphor, etc.)
Literacy knowledge (print concepts, genres, etc.)
Word-recognition (Lower strands)
Phonological awareness (syllable, phonemes, etc.)
Decoding (alphabetic principle, spelling-sound correspondence)
Sight recognition (of familiar words)

More recent research by Laurie E. Cutting and Hollis S. Scarborough has highlighted the importance of executive function processes (e.g. working memory, planning, organization, self-monitoring, and similar abilities) to reading comprehension.[150][151] Easy texts do not require much executive functions, however more difficult text require more "focus on the ideas". Reading comprehension strategies, such as summarizing, may help.

The active view of reading model

The active view of reading (AVR) model (May 7, 2021), offers an alternative to the Simple view of reading (SVR), and a proposed update to Scarborough's reading rope (SRR). It reflects key insights from scientific research on reading that is not captured in the SVR and SRR. Although the AVR model has not been tested as a whole in research, "each element within the model has been tested in instructional research demonstrating positive, causal influences on reading comprehension".[152]

The model lists contributors to reading (and potential causes of reading difficulty) – within, across, and beyond word recognition and language comprehension; including the elements of self-regulation. This feature of the model reflects the research documenting that not all profiles of reading difficulty are explained by low word recognition and/or low language comprehension. A second feature of the model is that it shows how word recognition and language comprehension overlap, and identifies processes that "bridge" these constructs.

The following chart shows the ingredients in the authors' infographic. In addition, the authors point out that reading is also impacted by text, task and sociocultural context.

Active Self Regulation
Motivation and engagement
Executive function skills
Strategy use (related to word recognition, comprehension, vocabulary, etc.)
Word recognition (WR)
Phonological awareness (syllables, phonemes, etc.)
Alphabetic principle
Phonics knowledge
Decoding skills
Recognition of words at sight
Bridging processes (the overlapping of WR and LC)
Print concepts
Reading fluency
Vocabulary knowledge
Morphological awareness (the structure of words and parts of words such as stems, root words, prefixes, and suffixes)
Graphophonological-semantic cognitive flexibility (letter-sound-meaning flexibility)
Language comprehension (LC)
Cultural and other content knowledge
Reading-specific background knowledge (genre, text, etc.)
Verbal reasoning (inference, metaphor, etc.)
Language structure (syntax, semantic, etc.)
Theory of mind (the ability to attribute mental states to ourselves and others)[153]

How the brain reads

Several researchers and neuroscientists have attempted to explain how the brain reads. They have written articles and books, and created websites and YouTube videos to help the average consumer.[154][155][156][157]

Neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene says that a few simple truths should be accepted by all, namely: a) all children have similar brains, are well tuned to systematic grapheme-phoneme correspondences, "and have everything to gain from phonics – the only method that will give them the freedom to read any text", b) classroom size is largely irrelevant if the proper teaching methods are used, c) it is essential to have standardized screening tests for dyslexia, followed by appropriate specialized training, and d) while decoding is essential, vocabulary enrichment is equally important.[158]

A study conducted at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) in 2022 indicates that "greater left-brain asymmetry can predict both better and average performance on a foundational level of reading ability, depending on whether analysis is conducted over the whole brain or in specific regions".[159][160] There have been correlations between specific brain regions in the left hemisphere of the cerebral cortex during different reading activities.[161]

Although it is not included in most meta-analytical studies, the sensorimotor cortex of the brain is the most active region of the brain during reading. This is often disregarded because it is associated solely with movement;[162] however, a 2014 fMRI study involving adults and children participants, where bodily movement was restricted, demonstrated strong evidence revealing that this region may be correlated with automatic word processing and decoding.[163] The results of this study found this portion of the brain to be highly active in persons who were learning/struggling to read (children, those diagnosed with dyslexia, and those new to the English language) and less active in fluent adult readers.[163]

The occipital and parietal lobes, or more specifically fusiform gyrus, include the brain's visual word form area (VWFA).[164] The VWFA is believed to be responsible for the brain's ability to read visually.[164] This area of the brain tends to be activated when words are presented orthographically, as found in a study in 2002 where participants were presented with word and non-word stimuli.[165] During presentation of word stimuli, this portion of the brain was extremely active; however, during presentation of stimuli that did not involve graphemes the brain was less active. Participants with dyslexia remained outliers, with this area of the brain being consistently under active in both scenarios.[165]

The two major regions of the brain associated with phonological skills are the temporal-parietal region and the Perisylvian Region.[166] In an fMRI study conducted in 2001, participants were presented with written words, verbal frequency words, and verbal pseudo-words.[167] The dorsal (upper) portion of the temporal-parietal region was the most active during the pseudo-words and the ventral (lower) portion was more active during frequency words, with the exception of subjects diagnosed with dyslexia, who showed no impairment to their ventral region but under-activation in the dorsal portion.[167]

The Perisylvian Region, which is the portion of the brain believed to connect Broca's and Wernicke's area,[168] is another region that is highly active during phonological activities where participants are asked to verbalize known and unknown words.[169] Damage to this portion of this brain directly affects a person's ability to speak cohesively and with sense; furthermore, this portion of the brain activity remains consistent for both dyslexic and non-dyslexic readers.[170][169][171]

The inferior frontal region is a much more complex region of the brain, and its association with reading is not necessarily linear, for it is active in several reading related activities.[172] Several studies have recorded it's activity in association with comprehension and processing skills, as well as spelling and working memory [173] Although the exact role of this portion of the brain is still debatable, several studies indicate that this area of the brain tends to be more active in readers who have been diagnosed with dyslexia and less active when treatment is successfully undergone.[174]

In addition to regions on the cortex, which is considered gray matter on fMRI's, there are several white matter fasciculus that are also active during different reading activities.[175] These three regions are what connects the three respected cortex regions as the brain reads, thus it is responsible for the brains cross-model integration involved in reading.[176] Three connective fasciculus that are prominently active during reading are the following: the left arcuate faciculus, the left inferior longitudinal faciculus, and the superior longitudinal fasciculus.[177] All three areas are found to be weaker in readers diagnosed with dyslexia.[175][176][177]]

The cerebellum, which is not a part of the cerebral cortex, is also believed to play an important role in reading.[178] When the cerebellum is impaired, victims struggle with many executive functioning and organizational skills both inside and outside of their reading ability.[178] In a synthetic fMRI study, specific activities that displayed significant cerebellum involvement included automatization, word accuracy, and reading speed.[179]

Eye movement and silent reading rate

Reading is an intensive process in which the eye quickly moves to assimilate the text – seeing just accurately enough to interpret groups of symbols.[180] It is necessary to understand visual perception and eye movement in reading to understand the reading process.

When reading, the eye moves continuously along a line of text, but makes short rapid movements (saccades) intermingled with short stops (fixations). There is considerable variability in fixations (the point at which a saccade jumps to) and saccades between readers, and even for the same person reading a single passage of text. When reading, the eye has a perceptual span of about 20 slots. In the best-case scenario and reading English, when the eye is fixated on a letter, four to five letters to the right and three to four letters to the left can be clearly identified. Beyond that, only the general shape of some letters can be identified.[181]

Research published in 2019 concluded that the silent reading rate of adults in English for non-fiction is in the range of 175 to 300 words per minute (wpm); and for fiction the range is 200 to 320 words per minute.[182][183]

 
Eye fixation point[184]

Dual-route hypothesis to reading aloud

In the early 1970s the dual-route hypothesis to reading aloud was proposed, according to which there are two separate mental mechanisms involved in reading aloud, with output from both contributing to the pronunciation of written words.[185][186][187] One mechanism is the lexical route whereby skilled readers can recognize a word as part of their sight vocabulary. The other is the nonlexical or sublexical route, in which the reader "sounds out" (decodes) written words.[187][188]

The production effect

There is robust evidence that saying a word out loud makes it more memorable than simply reading it silently or hearing someone else say it. This memory benefit of "hearing oneself" is referred to as the production effect.[189] The results of studies imply that oral production is beneficial because it entails two distinctive components: speaking (a motor act) and hearing oneself (the self-referential auditory input).

Evidence-based reading instruction

Evidence-based reading instruction refers to practices having research evidence showing their success in improving reading achievement.[190][191][192][193][194] It is related to evidence-based education.

Several organizations report on research about reading instruction, for example:

  • Best Evidence Encyclopedia (BEE) is a free website created by the Johns Hopkins University School of Education's Center for Data-Driven Reform in Education and is funded by the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education.[195] In 2021, BEE released a review of research on 51 different programs for struggling readers in elementary schools.[196] Many of the programs used phonics-based teaching and/or one or more other approaches. The conclusions of this report are shown at the section entitled Effectiveness of programs.
  • Evidence for ESSA[197] began in 2017 and is produced by the Center for Research and Reform in Education (CRRE)[198] at Johns Hopkins University School of Education, Baltimore, MD.[199] It offers free up-to-date information on current PK–12 programs in reading, math, social-emotional learning, and attendance that meet the standards of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) (the United States K–12 public education policy signed by President Obama in 2015).[200]
  • ProvenTutoring.org[201] is a non-profit organization, a separate subsidiary of the non-profit Success for All. It is a resource for school systems and educators interested in research-proven tutoring programs. It lists programs that deliver tutoring programs that are proven effective in rigorous research as defined in the 2015 Every Student Succeeds Act. The Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University provides the technical support to inform program selection.[202][203]
  • What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) of Washington, DC,[204] was established in 2002 and evaluates numerous educational programs in twelve categories by the quality and quantity of the evidence and the effectiveness. It is operated by the federal National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE), part of the Institute of Education Sciences (IES)[204] Individual studies are available that have been reviewed by WWC and categorized according to the evidence tiers of the United States Every student succeeds act (ESSA).[205]
Intervention reports are provided for programs according to twelve topics (e.g. literacy, mathematics, science, behavior, etc.).[206]
  • The British Educational Research Association (BERA)[207] claims to be the home of educational research in the United Kingdom.[208][209]
  • Florida Center for Reading Research is a research center at Florida State University that explores all aspects of reading research. Its Resource Database allows you to search for information based on a variety of criteria.[210]
  • Institute of Education Sciences (IES), Washington, DC,[211] is the statistics, research, and evaluation arm of the U.S. Department of Education. It funds independent education research, evaluation and statistics. It published a Synthesis of its Research on Early Intervention and Early Childhood Education in 2013.[212] Its publications and products can be searched by author, subject, etc.[213]
  • National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER)[214] is a non-profit research and development organization based in Berkshire, England. It produces independent research and reports about issues across the education system, such as Using Evidence in the Classroom: What Works and Why.[215]
  • Office for Standards in Education (Ofsted), in England, conducts research on schools, early education, social care, further education and skills.[216]
  • The Ministry of Education, Ontario, Canada offers a site entitled What Works? Research Into Practice. It is a collection of research summaries of promising teaching practice written by experts at Ontario universities.[217]
  • RAND Corporation, with offices throughout the world, funds research on early childhood, K–12, and higher education.[218]
  • ResearchED,[219] a U.K. based non-profit since 2013 has organized education conferences around the world (e.g. Africa, Australia, Asia, Canada, the E.U., the Middle East, New Zealand, the U.K. and the U.S.) featuring researchers and educators in order to "promote collaboration between research-users and research-creators". It has been described as a "grass-roots teacher-led project that aims to make teachers research-literate and pseudo-science proof".[220]

Reading from paper vs. screens

A systematic review and meta‐analysis was conducted on the advantages of reading from paper vs. screens. It found no difference in reading times, however, reading from paper has a small advantage in reading performance and metacognition.[221]

Apart from that, depending on the circumstances, some people prefer one medium over the other and each appears to have its own unique advantages.[222]

Teacher training in science of reading

Some teachers, even after obtaining a master's degree in education, think they lack the necessary knowledge and skills to teach all students how to read.[223] A 2019 survey of K-2 and special education teachers found that only 11 percent said they felt "completely prepared" to teach early reading after finishing their preservice programs. And, a 2021 study found that most U.S. states do not measure teachers' knowledge of the 'science of reading'.[224] In addition, according to one study, as few as 2% of school districts use reading programs that follow the science of reading.[225][226] Mark Seidenberg, a neuroscientist, states that, with few exceptions, teachers are not taught to teach reading and "don't know what they don't know".[227]

A survey in the United States reported that 70% of teachers believe in a balanced literacy approach to teaching reading – however balanced literacy "is not systematic, explicit instruction".[223] Teacher, researcher and author, Louisa Moats,[228] in a video about teachers and science of reading, says that sometime, when teachers talk about their "philosophy" of teaching reading, she responds by saying, "But your 'philosophy' doesn't work".[229] She says this is evidenced by the fact that so many children are struggling with reading.[230] On another occasion, when asked what is the most frequent question teachers ask her, she replied, "over and over" they ask "why didn't anyone teach me this before?".[231] In an Education Week Research Center survey of more than 530 professors of reading instruction, only 22 percent said their philosophy of teaching early reading centered on explicit, systematic phonics with comprehension as a separate focus.[223]

As of July 28, 2022, after Mississippi became the only state to improve reading results between 2017-2019,[232] 30 U.S. states have since passed laws or implemented new policies related to evidence-based reading instruction.[233] These requirements relate to six areas: teacher preparation; teacher certification or license renewal; professional development or coaching; assessment; material; and instruction or intervention. However, the adoption of these new requirements are by no means uniform. For example, only five states have requirements in all six areas, and three have requirements in only one area. Also, only fourteen states have requirements related to teacher certification or license renewal, whereas 25 have requirements for professional development or coaching. Furthermore, eight states do not allow or require 3rd-grade retention for students who are behind in reading. Experts say it is uncertain whether these new initiatives will lead to real improvements in children's reading results because old practices prove hard to shake.[234][235]

Arkansas required every elementary and special education teacher to be proficient in the scientific research on reading by 2021; causing Amy Murdoch, an associate professor and the director of the reading science program at Mount St. Joseph University in Cincinnati to say "We still have a long way to go – but I do see some hope".[223][236][237]

In 2021, the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development of New Brunswick appears to be the first in Canada to revise its K-2 reading curriculum based on "research-based instructional practice". For example, it replaced the various cueing systems with "mastery in the consolidated alphabetic to skilled reader phase".[238][239] Although one document on the site, dated 1998, contains references to such practices as using "cueing systems" which is at odds with the department's current shift to using evidence-based practices.[240] The Minister of Education in Ontario, Canada followed by stating plans to revise the elementary language curriculum and the Grade 9 English course with "scientific, evidence-based approaches that emphasize direct, explicit and systematic instruction and removing references to unscientific discovery and inquiry-based learning, including the three-cueing system, by 2023."[241]

Some non-profit organizations, such as the Center for Development and Learning (Louisiana) and the Reading League (New York State), offer training programs for teachers to learn about the science of reading.[242][243][244][245] ResearchED, a U.K. based non-profit since 2013 has organized education conferences around the world featuring researchers and educators in order to promote collaboration between research-users and research-creators.[219]

Timothy Shanahan acknowledges that comprehensive research does not always exist for specific aspects of reading instruction. However, "the lack of evidence doesn't mean something doesn't work, only that we don't know". He suggests that teachers make use of the research that is available in such places as Journal of Educational Psychology, Reading Research Quarterly, Reading & Writing Quarterly, Review of Educational Research, and Scientific Studies of Reading. If a practice lacks supporting evidence, it can be used with the understanding that it is based upon a claim, not science.[246]

Teaching reading

 
Reading to children has many benefits, however for most children it is not sufficient to teach them how to read. For that "all teaching should be initially focused on a single goal, the grasp of the alphabetic principle whereby each letter or grapheme represents a phoneme".[247]

Alphabetic languages

Educators have debated for years about which method is best to teach reading for the English language. There are three main methods, phonics, whole language and balanced literacy. There are also a variety of other areas and practices such as phonemic awareness, fluency, reading comprehension, sight words and sight vocabulary, the three-cueing system (the searchlights model in England), guided reading, shared reading, and leveled reading. Each practice is employed in different manners depending on the country and the specific school division.

In 2001, some researchers reached two conclusions: 1) "mastering the alphabetic principle is essential" and 2) "instructional techniques (namely, phonics) that teach this principle directly are more effective than those that do not". However, while they make it clear they have some fundamental disagreements with some of the claims made by whole-language advocates, some principles of whole language have value such as the need to ensure that students are enthusiastic about books and eager to learn to read.[63]

Phonics and related areas

 
A Course of Study in Phonics, San Francisco, U.S., 1912[248]

Phonics emphasizes the alphabetic principle – the idea that letters (graphemes) represent the sounds of speech (phonemes).[249] It is taught in a variety of ways; some are systematic and others are unsystematic. Unsystematic phonics teaches phonics on a "when needed" basis and in no particular sequence. Systematic phonics uses a planned, sequential introduction of a set of phonic elements along with explicit teaching and practice of those elements. The National Reading Panel (NRP) concluded that systematic phonics instruction is more effective than unsystematic phonics or non-phonics instruction.

Phonics approaches include analogy phonics, analytic phonics, embedded phonics with mini-lessons, phonics through spelling, and synthetic phonics.[250][251][252][63][253]

According to a 2018 review of research related to English speaking poor readers, phonics training is effective for improving literacy-related skills, particularly the fluent reading of words and non-words, and the accurate reading of irregular words.[254]

In addition, phonics produces higher achievement for all beginning readers, and the greatest improvement is experienced by students who are at risk of failing to learn to read. While some children are able to infer these rules on their own, some need explicit instruction on phonics rules. Some phonics instruction has marked benefits such as expansion of a student's vocabulary. Overall, children who are directly taught phonics are better at reading, spelling and comprehension.[255]

A challenge in teaching phonics is that in some languages, such as English, complex letter-sound correspondences can cause confusion for beginning readers. For this reason, it is recommended that teachers of English-reading begin by introducing the "most frequent sounds" and the "common spellings", and save the less frequent sounds and complex spellings for later. (e.g. the sounds /s/ and /t/ before /v/ and /w/; and the spellings cake before eight and cat before duck).[63][256][257]

Phonics is gaining world-wide acceptance.

Combining phonics with other literacy instruction

Phonics is taught in many different ways and it is often taught together with some of the following: oral language skills,[258][259] concepts about print,[260] phonological awareness, phonemic awareness, phonology, oral reading fluency, vocabulary, syllables, reading comprehension, spelling, word study,[261][262][263] cooperative learning, multisensory learning, and guided reading. And, phonics is often featured in discussions about science of reading,[264][265] and evidence-based practices.

The National Reading Panel (U.S. 2000) is clear that "systematic phonics instruction should be integrated with other reading instruction to create a balanced reading program".[266] It suggests that phonics be taught together with phonemic awareness, oral fluency, vocabulary and comprehension. Timothy Shanahan (educator), a member of that panel, recommends that primary students receive 60–90 minutes per day of explicit, systematic, literacy instruction time; and that it be divided equally between a) words and word parts (e.g. letters, sounds, decoding and phonemic awareness), b) oral reading fluency, c) reading comprehension, and d) writing.[267] Furthermore, he states that "the phonemic awareness skills found to give the greatest reading advantage to kindergarten and first-grade children are segmenting and blending".[268]

The Ontario Association of Deans of Education (Canada) published research Monograph # 37 entitled Supporting early language and literacy with suggestions for parents and teachers in helping children prior to grade one. It covers the areas of letter names and letter-sound correspondence (phonics), as well as conversation, play-based learning, print, phonological awareness, shared reading, and vocabulary.[269]

Effectiveness of programs

Some researchers report that teaching reading without teaching phonics is harmful to large numbers of students; yet not all phonics teaching programs produce effective results. The reason is that the effectiveness of a program depends on using the right curriculum together with the appropriate approach to instruction techniques, classroom management, grouping, and other factors.[270] Louisa Moats, a teacher, psychologist and researcher, has long advocated for reading instruction that is direct, explicit and systematic, covering phoneme awareness, decoding, comprehension, literature appreciation, and daily exposure to a variety of texts.[271] She maintains that "reading failure can be prevented in all but a small percentage of children with serious learning disorders. It is possible to teach most students how to read if we start early and follow the significant body of research showing which practices are most effective".[272]

Interest in evidence-based education appears to be growing.[219] In 2021, Best evidence encyclopedia (BEE) released a review of research on 51 different programs for struggling readers in elementary schools.[196] Many of the programs used phonics-based teaching and/or one or more of the following: cooperative learning, technology-supported adaptive instruction (see Educational technology), metacognitive skills, phonemic awareness, word reading, fluency, vocabulary, multisensory learning, spelling, guided reading, reading comprehension, word analysis, structured curriculum, and balanced literacy (non-phonetic approach).

The BEE review concludes that a) outcomes were positive for one-to-one tutoring, b) outcomes were positive, but not as large, for one-to-small group tutoring, c) there were no differences in outcomes between teachers and teaching assistants as tutors, d) technology-supported adaptive instruction did not have positive outcomes, e) whole-class approaches (mostly cooperative learning) and whole-school approaches incorporating tutoring obtained outcomes for struggling readers as large as those found for one- to-one tutoring, and benefitted many more students, and f) approaches mixing classroom and school improvements, with tutoring for the most at-risk students, have the greatest potential for the largest numbers of struggling readers.[196]

Robert Slavin, of BEE, goes so far as to suggest that states should "hire thousands of tutors" to support students scoring far below grade level – particularly in elementary school reading. Research, he says, shows "only tutoring, both one-to-one and one-to-small group, in reading and mathematics, had an effect size larger than +0.10 ... averages are around +0.30", and "well-trained teaching assistants using structured tutoring materials or software can obtain outcomes as good as those obtained by certified teachers as tutors".[273][274]

What works clearinghouse allows you to see the effectiveness of specific programs. For example, as of 2020 they have data on 231 literacy programs. If you filter them by grade 1 only, all class types, all school types, all delivery methods, all program types, and all outcomes you receive 22 programs. You can then view the program details and, if you wish, compare one with another.[275]

Evidence for ESSA[197] (Center for Research and Reform in Education)[198] offers free up-to-date information on current PK–12 programs in reading, writing, math, science, and others that meet the standards of the Every Student Succeeds Act (U.S.).[276]

ProvenTutoring.org[201] a non-profit organization, is a resource for educators interested in research-proven tutoring programs. The programs it lists are proven effective in rigorous research as defined in the 2015 Every Student Succeeds Act. The Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University provides the technical support to inform program selection.[198]

Systematic phonics
 
The National Reading Panel concluded that systematic phonics instruction is more effective than unsystematic phonics or non-phonics instruction.[277]

Systematic phonics is not one specific method of teaching phonics; it is a term used to describe phonics approaches that are taught explicitly and in a structured, systematic manner. They are systematic because the letters and the sounds they relate to are taught in a specific sequence, as opposed to incidentally or on a "when needed" basis.[278]

The National Reading Panel (NRP) concluded that systematic phonics instruction is more effective than unsystematic phonics or non-phonics instruction. The NRP also found that systematic phonics instruction is effective (with varying degrees) when delivered through one-to-one tutoring, small groups, and teaching classes of students; and is effective from kindergarten onward, the earlier the better. It helps significantly with word-reading skills and reading comprehension for kindergartners and 1st graders as well as for older struggling readers and reading disabled students. Benefits to spelling were positive for kindergartners and 1st graders but not for older students.[279]

Systematic phonics is sometimes mischaracterized as "skill and drill" with little attention to meaning. However, researchers point out that this impression is false. Teachers can use engaging games or materials to teach letter-sound connections, and it can also be incorporated with the reading of meaningful text.[280]

Phonics can be taught systematically in a variety of ways, such as: analogy phonics, analytic phonics, phonics through spelling, and synthetic phonics. However, their effectiveness vary considerably because the methods differ in such areas as the range of letter-sound coverage, the structure of the lesson plans, and the time devoted to specific instructions.[281]

Systematic phonics has gained increased acceptance in different parts of the world since the completion of three major studies into teaching reading; one in the US in 2000,[282][283] another in Australia in 2005,[284] and the other in the UK in 2006.[285]

In 2009, the UK Department of Education published a curriculum review that added support for systematic phonics. In fact, systematic phonics in the UK is known as Synthetic phonics.[286]

Beginning as early as 2014, several states in the United States have changed their curriculum to include systematic phonics instruction in elementary school.[287][288][289][290]

In 2018, the State Government of Victoria, Australia, published a website containing a comprehensive Literacy Teaching Toolkit including Effective Reading Instruction, Phonics, and Sample Phonics Lessons.[291]

Analytic phonics and analogy phonics

Analytic phonics does not involve pronouncing individual sounds (phonemes) in isolation and blending the sounds, as is done in synthetic phonics. Rather, it is taught at the word level and students learn to analyze letter-sound relationships once the word is identified. For example, students analyze letter-sound correspondences such as the ou spelling of // in shrouds. Also, students might be asked to practice saying words with similar sounds such as ball, bat and bite. Furthermore, students are taught consonant blends (separate, adjacent consonants) as units, such as break or shrouds.[292][293]

Analogy phonics is a particular type of analytic phonics in which the teacher has students analyze phonic elements according to the speech sounds (phonograms) in the word. For example, a type of phonogram (known in linguistics as a rime) is composed of the vowel and the consonant sounds that follow it (e.g. in the words cat, mat and sat, the rime is "at".) Teachers using the analogy method may have students memorize a bank of phonograms, such as -at or -am, or use word families (e.g. can, ran, man, or may, play, say).[294][292]

There have been studies on the effectiveness of instruction using analytic phonics vs. synthetic phonics. Johnston et al. (2012) conducted experimental research studies that tested the effectiveness of phonics learning instruction among 10-year-old boys and girls.[295] They used comparative data from the Clackmannanshire Report and chose 393 participants to compare synthetic phonics instruction and analytic phonics instruction.[296][295] The boys taught by the synthetic phonics method had better word reading than the girls in their classes, and their spelling and reading comprehension was as good. On the other hand, with analytic phonics teaching, although the boys performed as well as the girls in word reading, they had inferior spelling and reading comprehension. Overall, the group taught by synthetic phonics had better word reading, spelling, and reading comprehension. And, synthetic phonics did not lead to any impairment in the reading of irregular words.[295]

Embedded phonics with mini-lessons

Embedded phonics, also known as incidental phonics, is the type of phonics instruction used in whole language programs. It is not systematic phonics.[297] Although phonics skills are de-emphasised in whole language programs, some teachers include phonics "mini-lessons" when students struggle with words while reading from a book. Short lessons are included based on phonics elements the students are having trouble with, or on a new or difficult phonics pattern that appears in a class reading assignment. The focus on meaning is generally maintained, but the mini-lesson provides some time for focus on individual sounds and the letters that represent them. Embedded phonics is different from other methods because instruction is always in the context of literature rather than in separate lessons about distinct sounds and letters; and skills are taught when an opportunity arises, not systematically.[298][299]

Phonics through spelling

For some teachers this is a method of teaching spelling by using the sounds (phonemes).[300] However, it can also be a method of teaching reading by focusing on the sounds and their spelling (i.e. phonemes and syllables). It is taught systematically with guided lessons conducted in a direct and explicit manner including appropriate feedback. Sometimes mnemonic cards containing individual sounds are used to allow the student to practice saying the sounds that are related to a letter or letters (e.g. a, e, i, o, u). Accuracy comes first, followed by speed. The sounds may be grouped by categories such as vowels that sound short (e.g. c-a-t and s-i-t). When the student is comfortable recognizing and saying the sounds, the following steps might be followed: a) the tutor says a target word and the student repeats it out loud, b) the student writes down each individual sound (letter) until the word is completely spelled, saying each sound as it is written, and c) the student says the entire word out loud. An alternate method would be to have the student use mnemonic cards to sound-out (spell) the target word.

Typically, the instruction starts with sounds that have only one letter and simple CVC words such as sat and pin. Then it progresses to longer words, and sounds with more than one letter (e.g. hear and day), and perhaps even syllables (e.g. wa-ter). Sometimes the student practices by saying (or sounding-out) cards that contain entire words.[301]

Synthetic phonics

Synthetic phonics, also known as blended phonics, is a systematic phonics method employed to teach students to read by sounding out the letters then blending the sounds to form the word. This method involves learning how letters or letter groups represent individual sounds, and that those sounds are blended to form a word. For example, shrouds would be read by pronouncing the sounds for each spelling, sh, r, ou, d, s (IPA /ʃ, r, , d, z/), then blending those sounds orally to produce a spoken word, sh – r – ou – d – s = shrouds (IPA /ʃrdz/). The goal of a synthetic phonics instructional program is that students identify the sound-symbol correspondences and blend their phonemes automatically. Since 2005, synthetic phonics has become the accepted method of teaching reading (by phonics instruction) in England, Scotland and Australia.[302][303][304][305]

The 2005 Rose Report from the UK concluded that systematic synthetic phonics was the most effective method for teaching reading. It also suggests the "best teaching" included a brisk pace, engaging children's interest with multi-sensory activities and stimulating resources, praise for effort and achievement; and above all, the full backing of the headteacher.[306]

It also has considerable support in some States in the U.S.[283] and some support from expert panels in Canada.[307]

In the US, a pilot program using the Core Knowledge Early Literacy program that used this type of phonics approach showed significantly higher results in K–3 reading compared with comparison schools.[308] In addition, several States such as California, Ohio, New York and Arkansas, are promoting the principles of synthetic phonics (see synthetic phonics in the United States).

Resources for teaching phonics are available here

Related areas
 
Laotian girls sit outside their school, reading books they received at a rural school book party.
Phonemic awareness

Phonemic awareness is the process by which the phonemes (sounds of oral language) are heard, interpreted, understood and manipulated – unrelated to their grapheme (written language). It is a sub-set of Phonological awareness that includes the manipulation of rhymes, syllables, and onsets and rimes, and is most prevalent in alphabetic systems.[309] The specific part of speech depends on the writing system employed. The National Reading Panel (NPR) concluded that phonemic awareness improves a learner's ability to learn to read. When teaching phonemic awareness, the NRP found that better results were obtained with focused and explicit instruction of one or two elements, over five or more hours, in small groups, and using the corresponding graphemes (letters).[310] See also Speech perception. As mentioned earlier, some researchers feel that the most effective way of teaching phonemic awareness is through segmenting and blending, a key part of synthetic phonics.[268]

Vocabulary

A critical aspect of reading comprehension is vocabulary development.[311] When a reader encounters an unfamiliar word in print and decodes it to derive its spoken pronunciation, the reader understands the word if it is in the reader's spoken vocabulary. Otherwise, the reader must derive the meaning of the word using another strategy, such as context. If the development of the child's vocabulary is impeded by things such as ear infections that inhibit the child from hearing new words consistently then the development of reading will also be impaired.[312]

Sight vocabulary vs. sight words

Sight words (i.e. high-frequency or common words), sometimes called the "look-say" method or whole-word method, are not a part of the phonics method.[313] They are usually associated with whole language and balanced literacy where students are expected to memorize common words such as those on the Dolch word list and the Fry word list (e.g. a, be, call, do, eat, fall, gave, etc.).[314][315] The supposition (in whole language and balanced literacy) is that students will learn to read more easily if they memorize the most common words they will encounter, especially words that are not easily decoded (i.e. exceptions).

On the other hand, using sight words as a method of teaching reading in English is seen as being at odds with the alphabetic principle and treating English as though it was a logographic language (e.g. Chinese or Japanese).[316]

In addition, according to research, whole-word memorisation is "labor-intensive", requiring on average about 35 trials per word.[317] Also, phonics advocates say that most words are decodable, so comparatively few words have to be memorized. And because a child will over time encounter many low-frequency words, "the phonological recoding mechanism is a very powerful, indeed essential, mechanism throughout reading development".[63] Furthermore, researchers suggest that teachers who withhold phonics instruction to make it easier on children "are having the opposite effect" by making it harder for children to gain basic word-recognition skills. They suggest that learners should focus on understanding the principles of phonics so they can recognize the phonemic overlaps among words (e.g. have, had, has, having, haven't, etc.), making it easier to decode them all.[318][319][320]

Sight vocabulary is a part of the phonics method. It describes words that are stored in long-term memory and read automatically. Skilled fully-alphabetic readers learn to store words in long-term memory without memorization (i.e. a mental dictionary), making reading and comprehension easier. "Once you know the sound-based way to decode, your mind learns what words look like, even if you're not especially trying to do so".[321] The process, called orthographic mapping, involves decoding, crosschecking, mental marking and rereading. It takes significantly less time than memorization. This process works for fully-alphabetic readers when reading simple decodable words from left to right through the word. Irregular words pose more of a challenge, yet research in 2018 concluded that "fully-alphabetic students" learn irregular words more easily when they use a process called hierarchical decoding. In this process, students, rather than decode from left to right, are taught to focus attention on the irregular elements such as a vowel-digraph and a silent-e; for example, break (b – r – ea – k), height (h – eigh – t), touch (t – ou – ch), and make (m – a – ke). Consequentially, they suggest that teachers and tutors should focus on "teaching decoding with more advanced vowel patterns before expecting young readers to tackle irregular words".[317][322]

Fluency

Fluency is ability to read orally with speed, accuracy, and vocal expression. The ability to read fluently is one of several critical factors necessary for reading comprehension. If a reader is not fluent, it may be difficult to remember what has been read and to relate the ideas expressed in the text to their background knowledge. This accuracy and automaticity of reading serves as a bridge between decoding and comprehension.[323]

Reading comprehension

The NRP describes reading comprehension as a complex cognitive process in which a reader intentionally and interactively engages with the text. The science of reading says that reading comprehension is heavily dependent on word recognition (i.e., phonological awareness, decoding, etc.) and oral language comprehension (i.e., background knowledge, vocabulary, etc.).[324] Phonological awareness and rapid naming predict reading comprehension in second grade but oral language skills account for an additional 13.8% of the variance.[325] It has also been found that sustained content literacy intervention instruction that gradually build thematic connections may help young children transfer their knowledge to related topics, leading to improved comprehension.[326]

Reading and spelling

Evidence supports the strong synergy between reading (decoding) and spelling (encoding), especially for children in kindergarten or grade one and elementary school students at risk for literacy difficulties.[327][328]

Using embedded picture, mnemonic alphabet cards when teaching phonics

Research supports the use of embedded, picture mnemonic (memory support) alphabet cards when teaching letters and sounds, but not words.[329][330][331]

Whole language

 
Although widely used, whole-word methods are not supported by science.[332][63]

Whole language has the reputation of being a meaning-based method of teaching reading that emphasizes literature and text comprehension. It discourages any significant use of phonics, if at all.[333] Instead, it trains students to focus on words, sentences and paragraphs as a whole rather than letters and sounds. Students are taught to use context and pictures to "guess" words they do not recognize, or even just skip them and read on. It aims to make reading fun, yet many students struggle to figure out the specific rules of the language on their own, which causes the student's decoding and spelling to suffer.

The following are some features of the whole language philosophy:

  • Children are expected to learn to read and write as they learned to talk, that is gradually, without a great deal of direct instruction. (However, researchers and neuroscientists say that learning to read, unlike learning to talk, is not a natural process and many learners require explicit instruction. They point out that millions of adults can speak their language just fine, yet they cannot read their language.)[334][335][63]
  • Learning is emphasized more than teaching. It is assumed that the students will learn to read and write, and the teacher facilitates that growth.
  • Students read and write every day in a variety of situations.
  • Reading, writing, and spoken language are not considered separate components of the curriculum or merely ends in themselves; rather they permeate everything the students are doing.
  • There is no division between first learning to read and later reading to learn.[336][337]

As of 2020, whole language is widely used in the US and Canada (often as balanced literacy), however, in some US States and many other countries, such as Australia and the United Kingdom, it has lost favor or been abandoned because it is not supported by evidence.[338][339][340] Some notable researchers have clearly stated their disapproval of whole language and whole-word teaching. In his 2009 book, Reading in the brain, cognitive neuroscientist, Stanislas Dehaene, said "cognitive psychology directly refutes any notion of teaching via a 'global' or 'whole language' method". He goes on to talk about "the myth of whole-word reading", saying it has been refuted by recent experiments. "We do not recognize a printed word through a holistic grasping of its contours, because our brain breaks it down into letters and graphemes".[332] In addition, cognitive neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg, in his 2017 book Language at the speed of light, refers to whole language as a "theoretical zombie" because it persists in spite of a lack of supporting evidence.[341][342][338]

Balanced literacy

Balanced literacy is not well defined, however it is intended as a method that combines elements of both phonics and whole language.[343] According to a survey in 2010, 68% of elementary school teachers in the United States profess to use balanced literacy.[344] However, only 52% of teachers in the United States include phonics in their definition of balanced literacy.

The National Reading Panel concluded that phonics must be integrated with instruction in phonemic awareness, vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension. And, some studies indicate that "the addition of language activities and tutoring to phonics produced larger effects than any of these components in isolation". They suggest that this may be a constructive way to view balanced reading instruction.[345]

However, balanced literacy has received criticism from researchers and others suggesting that, in many instances, it is merely whole language by another name.[346][347][348][349][350]

According to phonics advocate and cognitive neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg, balanced literacy allows educators to diffuse the reading wars while not making specific recommendations for change.[255] He goes on to say that, in his opinion, the high number of struggling readers in the United States is the result of the manner in which teachers are taught to teach reading.[351][95][352][353] He also says that struggling readers should not be encouraged to skip a challenging word, nor rely on pictures or semantic and syntactic cues to "guess at" a challenging word. Instead, they should use evidence-based decoding methods such as systematic phonics.[354][355][356]

Structured Literacy

Structured literacy has many of the elements of systematic phonics and few of the elements of balanced literacy.[357] It is defined as explicit, systematic teaching that focuses on phonological awareness, word recognition, phonics and decoding, spelling, and syntax at the sentence and paragraph levels. It is considered to be beneficial for all early literacy learners, especially those with dyslexia.[358][359][360]

According to the International Dyslexia Association, structured literacy contains the elements of phonology and phonemic awareness, sound-symbol association (the alphabetic principle and phonics), syllables, morphology, syntax, and semantics. The elements are taught using methods that are systematic, cumulative, explicit, multisensory, and use diagnostic assessment.[361]

Three cueing system (Searchlights model)

The three-cueing system (the searchlights model in England) is a theory that has been circulating since the 1980s. Its roots are in the theories proposed in 1960s by Ken Goodman and Marie Clay that eventually became whole language, reading recovery and guided reading (e.g., Fountas and Pinnell early reading programs).[362] As of 2010, 75% of teachers in the United States teach the three-cueing system.[344] It proposes that children who are stuck on a word should use various "cues" to figure it out and determine (guess) its meaning. The "meaning cues" are semantic ("does it make sense in the context?"), syntactic (is it a noun, verb, etc.?) and graphophonic (what are the letter-sound relationships?). It is also known as MSV (Meaning, Sentence structure/syntax and Visual information such as the letters in the words).

According to some, three-cueing is not the most effective way for beginning readers to learn how to decode printed text.[363] While a cueing system does help students to "make better guesses", it does not help when the words become more sophisticated; and it reduces the amount of practice time available to learn essential decoding skills. They also say that students should first decode the word, "then they can use context to figure out the meaning of any word they don't understand".

Consequently, researchers such as cognitive neuroscientists Mark Seidenberg and professor Timothy Shanahan do not support the theory. They say the three-cueing system's value in reading instruction "is a magnificent work of the imagination", and it developed not because teachers lack integrity, commitment, motivation, sincerity, or intelligence, but because they "were poorly trained and advised" about the science of reading.[364][365][366] In England, the simple view of reading and synthetic phonics are intended to replace "the searchlights multi-cueing model".[367][368] On the other hand, some researchers suggest that "context" can be useful, not to guess a word, but to confirm a word after it has been phonetically decoded.[133]

Three Ps (3Ps) – Pause Prompt Praise

The three Ps approach is used by teachers, tutors and parents to guide oral reading practice with a struggling reader.[369] For some, it is merely a variation of the above-mentioned three-cueing system.

However, for others it is very different.[370] For example: when a student encounters a word they do not know or get it wrong, the three steps are: 1) pause to see if they can fix it themselves, even letting them read on a little, 2) prompt them with strategies to find the correct pronunciation, and 3) praise them directly and genuinely. In the prompt step, the tutor does not suggest the student skip the word or guess the word based on the pictures or the first sound. Instead, they encourage student to use their decoding training to sound out the word, and use the context (meaning) to confirm they have found the correct word.

Guided reading, reading workshop, shared reading, leveled reading, silent reading (and self-teaching)

Guided reading is small group reading instruction that is intended to allow for the differences in students' reading abilities.[371] While they are reading, students are encouraged to use strategies from the three-cueing system, the searchlights model, or MSV.

It is no longer supported by the Primary National Strategy in England as Synthetic phonics is the officially recognized method for teaching reading.[372][373]

In the United States, Guided Reading is part of the Reading Workshop model of reading instruction.[374]

The reading workshop model provides students with a collection of books, allows them the choice of what to read, limits students' reading to texts that can be easily read by them, provides teaching through mini-lessons, and monitors and supports reading comprehension development through one-on-one teacher-student conferences. Some reports state that it is 'unlikely to lead to literacy success' for all students, particularly those lacking foundational skills.[375][376]

Shared (oral) reading is an activity whereby the teacher and students read from a shared text that is determined to be at the students' reading level.

Leveled reading involves students reading from "leveled books" at an appropriate reading level. A student that struggles with a word is encouraged to use a cueing system (e.g. three-cueing, searchlights model or MSV) to guess its meaning. There are many systems that purport to gauge the students' reading levels using scales incorporating numbers, letters, colors and lexile readability scores.[377]

Silent reading (and self-teaching) is a common practice in elementary schools. A 2007 study in the United States found that, on average only 37% of class time was spent on active reading instruction or practice, and the most frequent activity was students reading silently. Based on the limited available studies on silent reading, the NRP concluded that independent silent reading did not prove an effective practice when used as the only type of reading instruction to develop fluency and other reading skills – particularly with students who have not yet developed critical alphabetic and word reading skills.[378]

Other studies indicate that, unlike silent reading, "oral reading increases phonological effects".

According to some, the classroom method called DEAR (Drop everything and read) is not the best use of classroom time for students who are not yet fluent.[379] However, according to the self-teaching hypothesis, when fluent readers practice decoding words while reading silently, they learn what whole words look like (spelling), leading to improved fluency and comprehension.[380][381]

The suggestion is: "if some students are fluent readers, they could read silently while the teacher works with the struggling readers".

Logographic languages

 
Hieroglyph, one of the earliest forms of writing

Languages such as Chinese and Japanese are normally written (fully or partly) in logograms (hanzi and kanji, respectively), which represent a whole word or morpheme with a single character. There are a large number of characters, and the sound that each makes must be learned directly or from other characters which contain "hints" in them. For example, in Japanese, the On-reading of the kanji 民 is min and the related kanji 眠 shares the same On-reading, min: the right-hand part shows the character's pronunciation. However this is not true for all characters. Kun readings, on the other hand, have to be learned and memorized as there is no way to tell from each character.

Ruby characters are used in textbooks to help children learn the sounds that each logogram makes. These are written in a smaller size, using an alphabetic or syllabic script. For example, hiragana is typically used in Japanese, and the pinyin romanization into Latin alphabet characters is used in Chinese.


or
かん

The examples above each spell the word kanji, which is made up of two kanji characters: 漢 (kan, written in hiragana as かん), and 字 (ji, written in hiragana as じ).

Textbooks are sometimes edited as a cohesive set across grades so that children will not encounter characters they are not yet expected to have learned.

The Reading Wars: phonics vs. whole language

A debate has been going on for decades about the merits of phonics vs. whole language. It is sometimes referred to as the Reading Wars.[382][383]

Phonics was a popular way to learn reading in the 19th century. William Holmes McGuffey (1800–1873), an American educator, author, and Presbyterian minister who had a lifelong interest in teaching children, compiled the first four of the McGuffey Readers in 1836.[384]

 
McGuffey's Primer 1836

Then, in 1841 Horace Mann, the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education, advocated for a whole-word method of teaching reading to replace phonics. Others, such as Rudolf Flesch, advocated for a return to phonics in his book Why Johnny Can't Read (1955). The whole-word method received support from Kenneth J. Goodman who wrote an article in 1967 entitled Reading: A psycholinguistic guessing game.[385] Although not supported by scientific studies, the theory became very influential as the whole language method.[386][342] Since the 1970s some whole language supporters such as Frank Smith (psycholinguist), are unyielding in arguing that phonics should be taught little, if at all.[387]

Yet, other researchers say instruction in phonics and phonemic awareness are "critically important" and "essential" to develop early reading skills.[354][388][63] In 2000, the National Reading Panel (U.S.) identified five ingredients of effective reading instruction, of which phonics is one; the other four are phonemic awareness, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension.[89] Reports from other countries, such as the Australian report on Teaching reading (2005)[284] and the U.K. Independent review of the teaching of early reading (Rose Report 2006) have also supported the use of phonics.

Some notable researchers such as Stanislas Dehaene and Mark Seidenberg have clearly stated their disapproval of whole language.[389][390]

Furthermore, a 2017 study in the UK that compared teaching with phonics vs. teaching whole written words concluded that phonics is more effective, saying "our findings suggest that interventions aiming to improve the accuracy of reading aloud and/or comprehension in the early stages of learning should focus on the systematicities present in print-to-sound relationships, rather than attempting to teach direct access to the meanings of whole written words".[391]

More recently, some educators have advocated for the theory of balanced literacy purported to combine phonics and whole language yet not necessarily in a consistent or systematic manner. It may include elements such as word study and phonics mini-lessons, differentiated learning, cueing, leveled reading, shared reading, guided reading, independent reading and sight words.[392][393][394][395] According to a survey in 2010, 68% of K–2 teachers in the United States practice balanced literacy; however, only 52% of teachers included phonics in their definition of balanced literacy. In addition, 75% of teachers teach the three-cueing system (i.e., meaning/structure/visual or semantic/syntactic/graphophonic) that has its roots in whole language.[344][396]

In addition, some phonics supporters assert that balanced literacy is merely whole language by another name.[397] And critics of whole language and sceptics of balanced literacy, such as neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg, state that struggling readers should not be encouraged to skip words they find puzzling or rely on semantic and syntactic cues to guess words.[354][348][398]

Over time a growing number of countries and states have put greater emphasis on phonics and other evidence-based practices (see Phonics practices by country or region).

Requirements for proficient reading

According to the report by the US National Reading Panel (NRP) in 2000,[89][399] the elements required for proficient reading of alphabetic languages are phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency,[323] vocabulary,[311] and text comprehension. In non-Latin languages, proficient reading does not necessarily require phonemic awareness, but rather an awareness of the individual parts of speech, which may also include the whole word (as in Chinese characters) or syllables (as in Japanese) as well as others depending on the writing system being employed.

The Rose Report, from the Department for Education in England makes it clear that, in their view, systematic phonics, specifically synthetic phonics, is the best way to ensure that children learn to read; such that it is now the law.[285][400][401][402] In 2005 the government of Australia published a report stating "The evidence is clear ... that direct systematic instruction in phonics during the early years of schooling is an essential foundation for teaching children to read".[403] Phonics has been gaining acceptance in many other countries as can be seen from this page Practices by country or region.

Other important elements are: rapid automatized naming (RAN),[404][405] a general understanding of the orthography of the language, and practice.

  • Rapid automatized naming, the ability to say quickly the names of letters, objects and colors, predicts an individual's ability to read. This might be linked to the importance of quick retrieval of phonological representations from long-term memory in reading and the importance of object-naming circuits in the left cerebral hemisphere that are recruited to underpin a learner's word-recognition abilities.[404][405]
  • Orthography describes or defines the set of symbols used in a language, and the rules about how to write these symbols (i.e., the conventional spelling system of a language). Orthographic Development proceeds in increasing complexity as a person learns to read. Some of the first things to be learnt are the orthographic conventions such as the direction of reading and that there are differing typefaces and capitalization for each symbol. In general, this means that to read proficiently, the reader has to understand elements of a written language. In the United States, a limited amount of spelling is taught up to grade four, and beyond that "we gain orthographic expertise by reading"; so the amount and variety of texts that children read is important.[406]
  • Practice: Repeated exposure to print improves many aspects of learning to read and most importantly the knowledge of individual words. It increases the speed at which high frequency words are recognized which allows for increased fluency in reading. It also supports orthographic development, reading comprehension and vocabulary development. Research suggests there is value in reading words both in isolation and in context. Reading words in isolation promotes faster reading times and better memory for spellings; whereas, reading words in context improves semantic knowledge and comprehension.[407]

Reading difficulties

Difficulties in reading typically involve difficulty with one or more of the following: decoding, reading rate, reading fluency, or reading comprehension.

Decoding

Brain activity in young and older children can be used to predict future reading skill. Cross model mapping between the orthographic and phonologic areas in the brain are critical in reading. Thus, the amount of activation in the left dorsal inferior frontal gyrus while performing reading tasks can be used to predict later reading ability and advancement. Young children with higher phonological word characteristic processing have significantly better reading skills later on than older children who focus on whole-word orthographic representation.[408]

Difficulty with decoding is marked by having not acquired the phoneme-grapheme mapping concept. One specific disability characterized by poor decoding is dyslexia, defined as brain-based type of learning disability that specifically impairs a person's ability to read.[409] These individuals typically read at levels significantly lower than expected despite having normal intelligence. It can also be inherited in some families, and recent studies have identified a number of genes that may predispose an individual to developing dyslexia. Although the symptoms vary from person to person, common characteristics among people with dyslexia are difficulty with spelling, phonological processing (the manipulation of sounds), and/or rapid visual-verbal responding.[409] Adults can have either developmental dyslexia[410][411][412][413] or acquired dyslexia which occurs after a brain injury, stroke[414][415] or dementia.[416][417][411][412][414][415]

Reading rate

 
Average reading rate in words per minute (wpm) depending on age and measured with different tests in English, French and German

Individuals with reading rate difficulties tend to have accurate word recognition and normal comprehension abilities, but their reading speed is below grade level.[418] Strategies such as guided reading (guided, repeated oral-reading instruction), may help improve a reader's reading rate.[419]

Many studies show that increasing reading speed improves comprehension.[420] Reading speed requires a long time to reach adult levels. According to Carver (1990), children's reading speed increases throughout the school years. On average, from grade 2 to college, reading rate increases 14 standard-length words per minute each year (where one standard-length word is defined as six characters in text, including punctuation and spaces).[421]

Scientific studies have demonstrated that speed reading – defined here as capturing and decoding words faster than 900 wpm – is not feasible given the limits set by the anatomy of the eye.[422]

Reading fluency

Individuals with reading fluency difficulties fail to maintain a fluid, smooth pace when reading. Strategies used for overcoming reading rate difficulties are also useful in addressing reading fluency issues.[399]

Reading comprehension

Individuals with reading comprehension difficulties are commonly described as poor comprehenders.[423] They have normal decoding skills as well as a fluid rate of reading, but have difficulty comprehending text when reading. The simple view of reading holds that reading comprehension requires both decoding skills and oral language comprehension ability.[147]

Increasing vocabulary knowledge, listening skills and teaching basic comprehension techniques may help facilitate better reading comprehension. It is suggested that students receive brief, explicit instruction in reading comprehension strategies in the areas of vocabulary, noticing understanding, and connecting ideas.[424]

Scarborough's Reading Rope also outlines some of the essential ingredients of reading comprehension.

Radio Reading Service

In some countries, a radio reading service provides a service for blind people and others who chose to hear newspapers, books, and other printed material read aloud, typically by volunteers. An example is Australia's Radio Print Handicapped Network with stations in capital cities and some other areas.

Reading achievement: national and international reports

The following organizations measure and report on reading achievement in the United States and internationally:

NAEP

In the United States, the National Assessment of Educational Progress or NAEP ("The Nation's Report Card") is the national assessment of what students know and can do in various subjects. Four of these subjects – reading, writing, mathematics and science – are assessed most frequently and reported at the state and district level, usually for grades 4 and 8.[425]

In 2019, with respect to the reading skills of the nation's grade-four public school students, 35% performed at or above the NAEP Proficient level (solid academic performance) and 65% performed at or above the NAEP Basic level (partial mastery of the proficient level skills). It is believed that students who read below the basic level do not have sufficient support to complete their schoolwork.[426]

Reading scores for the individual States and Districts are available on the NAEP site. Between 2017 and 2019 Mississippi was the only State that had a grade-four reading score increase and 17 States had a score decrease.[427]

The covid-19 pandemic had a significant impact on reading results in the USA. In 2022 the average basic-level reading score was 3 points lower compared to 2019 (the previous assessment year) and roughly equivalent to the first reading assessment in 1992, 30 years previously. Students who are black, American Indian/Alaska Native, Hispanic, and Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander were disproportionately affected. (This was substantiated by other sources). [428] In 2022, no states had a reading score increase and 30 states had a score decrease.[429] The results by race / ethnicity were as follows:[70]

Race / Ethnicity 2019 - Proficient level 2022 - Proficient level 2019 - Basic level 2022 - Basic level
Asian 57% 58% 82% 83%
Asian/Pacific Islander 55% 56% 81% 81%
White 45% 42% 77% 73%
Two or more races 40% 38% 72% 68%
National Average 35% 33% 65% 63
Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander 25% 23% 58% 50%
Hispanic 23% 21% 55% 50%
American Indian/Alaska Native 19% 18% 50% 43%
Black 18% 17% 48% 44%

NAEP reading assessment results are reported as average scores on a 0–500 scale.[430] The Basic Level is 208 and the Proficient Level is 238.[431] The average reading score for grade-four public school students was 219.[432] Female students had an average score that was 7 points higher than male students. Students who were eligible for the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) had an average score that was 28 points lower than that for students who were not eligible.

PIAAC

The Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies (PIAAC) is an international study by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) of cognitive and workplace skills in 39 countries between 2011 and 2018.[60] The Survey measures adults' proficiency in key information-processing skills – literacy, numeracy and problem solving. The focus is on the working-age population between the ages of 16 and 65. For example, the study shows the ranking of 38 countries as to the literacy proficiency among adults. According to the 2019 OECD report, the five countries with the highest ranking are Japan, Finland, the Netherlands, Sweden and Australia; whereas Canada is 12th, England (UK) is 16th, and the United States is 19th.[136] It is also worth noting that the PIAAC table A2.1 (2013) shows the percentage of adults reading at-or-below level one (out of five levels). Some examples are Japan 4.9%, Finland 10.6%, Netherlands 11.7%, Australia 12.6%, Sweden 13.3%, Canada 16.4%, England 16.4%, and the United States 16.9%.[61]

PIRLS

The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) is an international study of reading (comprehension) achievement in fourth graders.[55] It is designed to measure children's reading literacy achievement, to provide a baseline for future studies of trends in achievement, and to gather information about children's home and school experiences in learning to read. The 2016 PIRLS report shows the 4th grade reading achievement by country in two categories (literary and informational). The ten countries with the highest overall reading average are the Russian Federation, Singapore, Hong Kong SAR, Ireland, Finland, Poland, Northern Ireland, Norway, Chinese Taipei and England (UK). Some others are: the United States 15th, Australia 21st, Canada 23rd, and New Zealand 33rd.[56][57][58]

PISA

The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) measures 15-year-old school pupils scholastic performance on mathematics, science, and reading.[59] In 2018, of the 79 participating countries/economies, on average, students in Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu and Zhejiang (China) and Singapore outperformed students from all other countries in reading, mathematics and science. 21 countries have reading scores above the OECD average scores and many of the scores are not statistically different.[433][434]

Critics, however, say PISA is fundamentally flawed in its underlying view of education, its implementation, and its interpretation and impact on education globally.[435] In 2014, more than 100 academics from around the world called for a moratorium on PISA.[436][437]

EQAO

The Education Quality and Accountability Office, EQAO, is an agency of the government of Ontario, Canada that reports on the publicly funded school system.[438] In 2022, it reported that 77% of grade three students in Ontario met the provincial standard in reading in 2018-2019. This decreased to 73% in 2021-2022.

53% of Grade three students with special needs met the standard in 2018-2019, and this reduced to 48% in 2021-2022. 72% of grade three students who are English language learners met the standard in 2018-2019, and this reduced to 67% in 2021-2022.[439]

History of reading

 
A Catholic monk reading in a monastery library

The history of reading dates back to the invention of writing during the 4th millennium BC. Although reading print text is now an important way for the general population to access information, this has not always been the case. With some exceptions, only a small percentage of the population in many countries was considered literate before the Industrial Revolution. Some of the pre-modern societies with generally high literacy rates included classical Athens and the Islamic Caliphate.[440]

Scholars assume that reading aloud (Latin clare legere) was the more common practice in antiquity, and that reading silently (legere tacite or legere sibi) was unusual.[441] In his Confessions, Saint Augustine remarks on Saint Ambrose's unusual habit of reading silently in the 4th century AD.[441][442]

During the Age of Enlightenment, elite individuals promoted passive reading, rather than creative interpretation. Some thinkers of that era believed that construction, or the creation of writing and producing a product, was a sign of initiative and active participation in society – and viewed consumption (reading) as simply taking in what constructors made.[443] Also during this era, writing was considered superior to reading in society. They considered readers of that time passive citizens, because they did not produce a product. Michel de Certeau argued that the elites of the Age of Enlightenment were responsible for this general belief. Michel de Certeau believed that reading required venturing into an author's land, but taking away what the reader wanted specifically. This view held that writing was a superior art to reading within the hierarchical constraints of the era.[443]

Before the mid 18th century, children's books in England usually had religious or instructional (school books, conduct books) themes, but by the mid to late 18th century books were designed to delight and novels would come into popularity. By the end of the 18th century literature made for children were flourishing, with perhaps as many as 50 books being printed every year in major cities.[444]

In 18th-century Europe, the then new practice of reading alone in bed was, for a time, considered dangerous and immoral. As reading became less a communal, oral practice, and more a private, silent one – and as sleeping increasingly moved from communal sleeping areas to individual bedrooms, some raised concern that reading in bed presented various dangers, such as fires caused by bedside candles. Some modern critics, however, speculate that these concerns were based on the fear that readers – especially women – could escape familial and communal obligations and transgress moral boundaries through the private fantasy worlds in books.[445] Also during the 18th century in England, reading novels was often criticized as a time-wasting pastime, when contrasted with the cultural seriousness carried by reading history, classical literature or poetry.[446]

Chapbooks were small, cheap forms of literature for children and adults that were sold on the streets, and covered a range of subjects such as ghost stories, crime, fantasy, politics and disaster updates. They provided simple reading matter and were commonplace across England from the 17th to the 19th century. They are known to have been passed down the generations. Their readership would have been largely among the poor, and among children of the middle class.[447]

Reading became even more pronounced in the 19th century with public notes, broadsides, catchpennies and printed songs becoming common street literature, it informed and entertained the public before newspapers became readily available. Advertisements and local news, such as offers of rewards for catching criminals or for the return of stolen goods, appeared on public notices and handbills, while cheaply printed sheets – broadsheets and ballads – covered political or criminal news such murders, trials, executions, disasters and rescues.[448]

Technological improvements during the industrial revolution in printing and paper production; and new distribution networks enabled by improved roads and rail helped push an increased demand for printed (reading) matter. Besides this, social and educational changes (such as wider schooling rates) along with increasing literacy rates, particularly among the middle and working classes, helped boost a new mass market for printed material.[449] The arrival of gas and electric lighting in private homes meant that reading after dark no longer had to take place by oil lamp or candlelight.[446]

In 19th century Russia, reading practices were highly varied, as people from a wide range of social statuses read Russian and foreign-language texts ranging from high literature to the peasant lubok.[450] Provincial readers such as Andrei Chikhachev give evidence of the omnivorous appetite for fiction and non-fiction alike among middling landowners.[451]

History of learning to read

The history of learning to read dates back to the invention of writing during the 4th millennium BC.[452]

With respect to the English language in the United States, the phonics principle of teaching reading was first presented by John Hart in 1570, who suggested the teaching of reading should focus on the relationship between what is now referred to as graphemes (letters) and phonemes (sounds).[453]

In the colonial times of the United States, reading material was not written specifically for children, so instruction material consisted primarily of the Bible and some patriotic essays. The most influential early textbook was The New England Primer, published in 1687. There was little consideration given to the best ways to teach reading or assess reading comprehension.[454][455]

Phonics was a popular way to learn reading in the 1800s. William Holmes McGuffey (1800–1873), an American educator, author, and Presbyterian minister who had a lifelong interest in teaching children, compiled the first four of the McGuffey Readers in 1836.[384]

The whole-word method was introduced into the English-speaking world by Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, the director of the American School for the Deaf.[456] It was designed to educate deaf people by placing a word alongside a picture.[457] In 1830, Gallaudet described his method of teaching children to recognize a total of 50 sight words written on cards.[458][459] Horace Mann, the Secretary of the Board of Education of Massachusetts, U.S., favored the method for everyone, and by 1837 the method was adopted by the Boston Primary School Committee.[460]

By 1844 the defects of the whole-word method became so apparent to Boston schoolmasters that they urged the Board to return to phonics.[461] In 1929, Samuel Orton, a neuropathologist in Iowa, concluded that the cause of children's reading problems was the new sight method of reading. His findings were published in the February 1929 issue of the Journal of Educational Psychology in the article "The Sight Reading Method of Teaching Reading as a Source of Reading Disability".[462]

The meaning-based curriculum came to dominate reading instruction by the second quarter of the 20th century. In the 1930s and 1940s, reading programs became very focused on comprehension and taught children to read whole words by sight. Phonics was taught as a last resort.[454]

Edward William Dolch developed his list of sight words in 1936 by studying the most frequently occurring words in children's books of that era. Children are encouraged to memorize the words with the idea that it will help them read more fluently. Many teachers continue to use this list, although some researchers consider the theory of sight word reading to be a "myth". Researchers and literacy organizations suggest it would be more effective if students learned the words using a phonics approach.[332][463][464]

In 1955, Rudolf Flesch published a book entitled Why Johnny Can't Read, a passionate argument in favor of teaching children to read using phonics, adding to the reading debate among educators, researchers, and parents.[465]

 
An American girl reading a newspaper (1969)

Government-funded research on reading instruction in the United States and elsewhere began in the 1960s. In the 1970s and 1980s, researchers began publishing studies with evidence on the effectiveness of different instructional approaches. During this time, researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) conducted studies that showed early reading acquisition depends on the understanding of the connection between sounds and letters (i.e. phonics). However, this appears to have had little effect on educational practices in public schools.[466][467]

In the 1970s, the whole language method was introduced. This method de-emphasizes the teaching of phonics out of context (e.g. reading books), and is intended to help readers "guess" the right word.[468] It teaches that guessing individual words should involve three systems (letter clues, meaning clues from context, and the syntactical structure of the sentence). It became the primary method of reading instruction in the 1980s and 1990s. However, it is falling out of favor. The neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg refers to it as a "theoretical zombie" because it persists in spite of a lack of supporting evidence.[390][340] It is still widely practiced in related methods such as sight words, the three-cueing system and balanced literacy.[469][466][470]

In the 1980s the three-cueing system (the searchlights model in England) emerged. According to a 2010 survey 75% of teachers in the United States teach the three-cueing system.[344] It teaches children to guess a word by using "meaning cues" (semantic, syntactic and graphophonic). While the system does help students to "make better guesses", it does not help when the words become more sophisticated; and it reduces the amount of practice time available to learn essential decoding skills. Consequently, present-day researchers such as cognitive neuroscientists Mark Seidenberg and professor Timothy Shanahan do not support the theory.[364][365][366] In England, synthetic phonics is intended to replace "the searchlights multi-cueing model".[367][368]

In the 1990s Balanced literacy arose. It is a theory of teaching reading and writing that is not clearly defined. It may include elements such as word study and phonics mini-lessons, differentiated learning, cueing, leveled reading, shared reading, guided reading, independent reading and sight words.[392][393][394][395] For some, balanced literacy strikes a balance between whole language and phonics. Others say balanced literacy in practice usually means the whole language approach to reading.[471] According to a survey in 2010, 68% of K–2 teachers in the United States practice balanced literacy. Furthermore, only 52% of teachers included phonics in their definition of balanced literacy.[344]

In 1996 the California Department of Education took an increased interest in using phonics in schools.[472] And in 1997 the department called for grade one teaching in concepts about print, phonemic awareness, decoding and word recognition, and vocabulary and concept development.[473]

By 1998 in the U.K. whole language instruction and the searchlights-model were still the norm, however there was some attention to teaching phonics in the early grades, as seen in the National Literacy Strategies.[474][475]

21st century

 
In 2000 the National Reading Panel in the U.S. identified five ingredients of effective reading instruction: phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension.

Beginning in 2000, several reading research reports were published:

In Australia the 2005 report, Teaching Reading, recommends teaching reading based on evidence and teaching systematic, explicit phonics within an integrated approach.[477][478] The executive summary says "systematic phonics instruction is critical if children are to be taught to read well, whether or not they experience reading difficulties".[403] As of October 5, 2018, The State Government of Victoria, Australia, publishes a website containing a comprehensive Literacy Teaching Toolkit including effective reading instruction, phonics, and sample phonics lessons.[479][480]

In Scotland a seven-year study (the Clackmannanshire Report) was published in 2005.[481] It compared analytic phonics with synthetic phonics and advantaged students with disadvantaged students. The report found that, using synthetic phonics children from lower socio-economic backgrounds performed at the same level as children from advantaged backgrounds in primary school (whereas with analytic phonics teaching, they did significantly less well.); and boys performed better than or as well as girls.[296] A five-year follow-up of the study concluded that the beneficial effects were long-lasting, in fact the reading gains increased.[482] Subsequently, Education Scotland concluded that explicit, systematic phonics programs, usually embedded in a rich literacy environment, give an additional four months progress over other programs such as whole language, and are particularly beneficial for young learners (aged 4–7). There is evidence, though less secure, that synthetic phonics programs may be more beneficial than analytic phonics programs; however it is most important to teach systematically.[483]

Until 2006, the English language syllabus of Singapore advocated "a balance between decoding and meaning-based instruction … phonics and whole language". However, a review in 2006 advocated for a "systematic" approach. Subsequently, the syllabus in 2010 had no mention of whole language and advocated for a balance between "systematic and explicit instruction" and "a rich language environment". It called for increased instruction in oral language skills together with phonemic awareness and the key decoding elements of synthetic phonics, analytic phonics and analogy phonics.[484]

In 2007 the Department of Education (DE) in Northern Ireland was required by law to teach children foundational skills in phonological awareness and the understanding that "words are made up of sounds and syllables and that sounds are represented by letters (phoneme/grapheme awareness)".[485] In 2010 the DE required that teachers receive support in using evidence-based practices to teach literacy and numeracy, including: a "systematic programme of high-quality phonics" that is explicit, structured, well-paced, interactive, engaging, and applied in a meaningful context.[486]

In 2008, the National Center for Family Literacy, with the National Institute for Literacy,[487] published a report entitled Developing Early Literacy. It is a synthesis of the scientific research on the development of early literacy skills in children ages zero to five as determined by the National Early Literacy Panel that was convened in 2002. Amongst other things, the report concluded that code-focused interventions on the early literacy and conventional literacy skills of young children yield a moderate to large effect on the predictors of later reading and writing, irrespective of socioeconomic status, ethnicity, or population density.[488]

In 2010 the Common Core State Standards Initiative was introduced in the United States. The English Language Arts Standards for Reading: Foundational Skills in Grades 1–5 include recommendations to teach print concepts, phonological awareness, phonics and word recognition, and fluency.[489]

In the United Kingdom a 2010 government white paper contained plans to train all primary school teachers in phonics.[490] The 2013 curriculum[491] has "statutory requirements" that, amongst other things, students in years one and two be capable in using systematic synthetic phonics in regards to word reading, reading comprehension, fluency, and writing. This includes having skills in "sound to graphemes", "decoding", and "blending".[401][402]

 
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)

In 2013, the National Commission for UNESCO launched the Leading for Literacy project to develop the literacy skills of grades 1 and 2 students. The project facilitates the training of primary school teachers in the use of a synthetic phonics program. From 2013 to 2015, the Trinidad and Tobago Ministry of Education appointed seven reading specialist to help primary and secondary school teachers improve their literacy instruction. From February 2014 to January 2016, literacy coaches were hired in selected primary schools to assist teachers of kindergarten, grades 1 and 2 with pedagogy and content of early literacy instruction. Primary schools have been provided with literacy resources for instruction, including phonemic awareness, word recognition, vocabulary manipulatives, phonics and comprehension.

In 2013 the State of Mississippi passed the Literacy-Based Promotion Act.[492][493] The Mississippi Department of Education provided resources for teachers in the areas of phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary, fluency, comprehension and reading strategies.[494][495][427]

The school curriculum in Ireland focuses on ensuring children are literate in both the English language and the Irish language. The 2014 teachers' Professional Development guide[496] covers the seven areas of attitude and motivation, fluency, comprehension, word identification, vocabulary, phonological awareness, phonics, and assessment. It recommends that phonics be taught in a systematic and structured way and is preceded by training in phonological awareness.

In 2014 the California Department of Education said children should know how to decode regularly spelled one-syllable words by mid-first grade, and be phonemically aware (especially able to segment and blend phonemes)".[497] In grades two and three children receive explicit instruction in advanced phonic-analysis and reading multi-syllabic and more complex words.[498]

In 2015 the New York State Public School system revised its English Language Arts learning standards, calling for teaching involving "reading or literacy experiences" as well as phonemic awareness from prekindergarten to grade 1 and phonics and word recognition for grades 1–4.[499] That same year, the Ohio Legislature set minimum standards requiring the use of phonics including guidelines for teaching phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension.[500][501][502]

In 2016 the What Works Clearinghouse[204] and the Institute of Education Sciences published an Educator's Practice Guide on Foundational Skills to Support Reading for Understanding in Kindergarten Through 3rd Grade.[503] It contains four recommendations to support reading: 1) teach students academic language skills, including the use of inferential and narrative language, and vocabulary knowledge, 2) develop awareness of the segments of sounds in speech and how they link to letters (phonemic awareness and phonics), 3) teach students to decode words, analyze word parts, and write and recognize words (phonics and synthetic phonics), and 4) ensure that each student reads connected text every day to support reading accuracy, fluency, and comprehension.[504][505]

In 2016 the Colorado Department of Education updated their Elementary Teacher Literacy Standards with standards for development in the areas of phonology, phonics and word recognition, fluent automatic reading, vocabulary, text comprehension, handwriting, spelling, and written expression.[506] At the same time, the Department of Education in Delaware, U.S., produced a plan to improve education results. It states that "students who aren't reading at grade level aren't able to comprehend up to half of the printed fourth-grade curriculum". Furthermore, it says a gap exists between what is known about how to teach reading and how teachers are able to teach reading. It goes on to say that teachers' preparation programs must include evidence-based practices, including the five essential components of reading instruction (phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension).[507]

The European Literacy Policy Network (ELINET) 2016[508] reports that Hungarian children in grades one and two receive explicit instruction in phonemic awareness and phonics "as the route to decode words". In grades three and four they continue to apply their knowledge of phonics, however the emphasis shifts to the more meaning-focused technical aspects of reading and writing (i.e., vocabulary, types of texts, reading strategies, spelling, punctuation and grammar).[509]

In 2017 the Ohio Department of Education adopted Reading Standards for Foundational Skills K–12 laying out a systematic approach to teaching phonological awareness in kindergarten and grade one, and grade-level phonics and word analysis skills in decoding words (including fluency and comprehension) in grades 1–5.[73]

In 2018 the Arkansas Department of Education published a report about their new initiative known as R.I.S.E., Reading Initiative for Student Excellence, that was the result of The Right to Read Act, passed in 2017.[236] The first goal of this initiative is to provide educators with the in-depth knowledge and skills of "the science of reading" and evidence-based instructional strategies.[510] This included a focus on research-based instruction on phonological awareness, phonics, vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension; specifically systematic and explicit instruction.[511][512]

As of 2018, the Ministry of Education in New Zealand has online information to help teachers to support their students in years 1–3 in relation to sounds, letters, and words. It states that phonics instruction "is not an end in itself" and it is not necessary to teach students "every combination of letters and sounds".[513]

In 2018, ScienceDirect published the results of a study of early literacy and numeracy outcomes in developing countries entitled Identifying the essential ingredients to literacy and numeracy improvement: Teacher professional development and coaching, student textbooks, and structured teachers' guides.[514] It concluded that "Including teachers' guides was by far the most cost-effective intervention".

 
Paris, France

There has been a strong debate in France on the teaching of phonics ("méthode syllabique") versus whole language ("méthode globale"). After the 1990s, supporters of the later started defending a so-called "mixed method" (also known as Balanced literacy) in which approaches from both methods are used. Influential researchers in psycho-pedagogy, cognitive sciences and neurosciences, such as Stanislas Dehaene[154] and Michel Fayol have put their heavy scientific weight on the side of phonics. In 2018 the ministry created a science educational council that openly supported phonics.[515] In April 2018, the minister issued a set of four guiding documents[516] for early teaching of reading and mathematics and a booklet[517] detailing phonics recommendations. Some have described his stance as "traditionalist",[518] but he openly declared that the so-called mixed approach is no serious choice.[519]

In 2019 the Minnesota Department of Education introduced standards requiring school districts to "develop a local literacy plan to ensure that all students have achieved early reading proficiency by no later than the end of third grade" in accordance with a Statute of the Minnesota Legislature requiring elementary teachers to be able to implement comprehensive, scientifically based reading and oral language instruction in the five reading areas of phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.[520][521]

Also in 2019, 26% of grade 4 students in Louisiana were reading at the proficiency level according to the Nation's Report Card, as compared to the National Average of 34%.[522] In March 2019 the Louisiana Department of Education revised their curriculum for K–12 English Language Arts including requirements for instruction in the alphabetic principle, phonological awareness, phonics and word recognition, fluency and comprehension.[523][524]

And again in 2019, 30% of grade 4 students in Texas were reading at the proficiency level according to the Nation's Report Card.[522][525][432] In June of that year the Texas Legislature passed a Bill requiring all kindergarten through grade-three teachers and principals to "begin a teacher literacy achievement academy before the 2022–2023 school year".[526] The required content of the academies' training includes the areas of The Science of Teaching Reading, Oral Language, Phonological Awareness, Decoding (i.e. Phonics), Fluency and Comprehension. The goal is to "increase teacher knowledge and implementation of evidence-based practices to positively impact student literacy achievement".[527]

In 2021, the State of Connecticut passed an act concerning the "right to read" that will take effect in 2023. It requires education standards that are evidenced-based and scientifically based and focused on competency in the five areas of reading: phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary development, and reading fluency, including oral skills and reading comprehension.[528] In the same year, the state of North Carolina passed a bill requiring that the teaching of reading be based on the science of reading.[529]

In Canada, on January 27, 2022, the Ontario Human Rights Commission (OHRC) released a report on its public inquiry into the right to read.[530] It followed the unanimous decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, on November 9, 2012, recognizing that learning to read is not a privilege, but a basic and essential human right.[531]

The OHRC's report deals with all students, not just those with learning disabilities.[532] The inquiry found that Ontario is not fulfilling its obligations to meet students' right to read. Specifically, foundational word-reading skills are not effectively targeted in Ontario's education system. With science-based approaches to reading instruction, early screening and intervention, we should see only about 5% of students reading below grade level. However, in 2018–2019, 26% of all Ontario Grade 3 students and 53% of Grade 3 students with special education needs (students who have an Individual Education Plan), were not meeting the provincial EQAO standard. The results improved only slightly for Grade 6 students, where 19% of all students and 47% of students with special education needs did not meet the provincial standard.

The Ontario curriculum encourages the use of the three-cueing system and balanced literacy, which are ineffective because they teach children to "guess" the meaning of a word rather than sound it out. What is required is a) evidence-based curriculum and instruction (including explicit and systematic instruction in phonemic awareness and phonics), b) evidence-based screening assessments, c) evidence-based reading interventions, d) accommodations that are not used as a substitute for teaching students to read, and e) professional assessments (yet, not required for interventions or accommodations).

The Minister of Education for Ontario responded to this report by saying the government is taking immediate action to improve student literacy and making longer-term reforms to modernize the way reading is taught and assessed in schools, with a focus on phonics. Their plan includes "revising the elementary Language curriculum and the Grade 9 English course with scientific, evidence-based approaches that emphasize direct, explicit and systematic instruction, and removing references to unscientific discovery and inquiry-based learning, including the three-cueing system, by 2023."[533]

On April 23, 2022, the Center for Research in Education and Social Policy at the University of Delaware presented the results of a study of the long-term effects of Reading Recovery. The conclusion was that the "long-term impact estimates were significant and negative". The study found that children who received Reading Recovery had scores on state reading tests in third and fourth grade that were below the test scores of similar children who did not receive Reading Recovery. It suggests three possible hypotheses for this outcome: 1) while Reading Recovery produces large impacts on early literacy measures, it does not give students the required skills for success in later grades; or, 2) the gains are lost because students do not receive sufficient intervention in later grades; or, 3) the impacts of the early intervention was washed out by subsequent experiences.[534][535]

Between 2013 and 2022, 30 States have passed laws or implemented new policies related to evidence-based reading instruction.[233]

For more information on reading educational developments, see Phonics practices by country or region.

Other terms

  • Subvocalization is the sense that a reader is combining silent reading with internal sounding of the words. Advocates of speed reading claim it can be a bad habit that slows reading and comprehension, but some researchers say this is a fallacy since there is no actual speaking involved. Instead, it may help skilled readers to read since they are utilizing the phonological code to understand words (e.g., the difference between PERmit and perMIT).[536][537][538]
  • Speed reading is the claim that you can increase reading speed without experiencing an unacceptable reduction in comprehension or retention. Methods include skimming or the chunking of words in a body of text to increase the rate of reading. However, cognitive neuroscientists such as Stanislas Dehaene and Mark Seidenberg say that claims of reading up to 1,000 words per minute 'must be viewed with skepticism' and that 'people are as likely to read thousands of words per minute as they are to run faster than the speed of light'".[332][539] It is estimated that the average reading speed for adults in English is from 175 to 320 words per minute.[182]
  • Proofreading is a kind of reading for the purpose of detecting typographical errors. It is not reading in the usual sense, as they may largely suspend comprehension while doing so.[540]
  • Rereading is reading a book more than once. "One cannot read a book: one can only reread it," Vladimir Nabokov once said.[541]
  • Structure-proposition-evaluation (SPE) method, popularized by Mortimer Adler in How to Read a Book, mainly for non-fiction treatise, in which one reads a writing in three passes: 1) for the structure of the work, 2) for the logical propositions made, and 3) for evaluation of the merits of the arguments and conclusions. This method involves suspending judgment of the work or its arguments until they are fully understood.[542]
  • Survey-question-read-recite-review (SQ3R) method, often taught in public schools, which involves reading so as to be able to teach what is read, and is appropriate for instructors preparing to teach material without referring to notes.[543]
  • Rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) reading involves presenting the words in a sentence one word at a time at the same location on the display screen, at a specified eccentricity; for studying the timing of vision.[544]
  • In-Depth Reading is a method that is used to gain deeper meaning and comprehension of a text, research detailed information for this assignment, and read very difficult sections of a text. Five strategies include the RAP strategy, the RIDA strategy, the Five S method, and SQ3R. This is also known as Exploratory reading, which allows multiple people narrower purpose, in order to understand the concepts or arguments of a text.[545][546]

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See also

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reading, town, england, berkshire, article, literacy, literacy, other, uses, disambiguation, process, taking, sense, meaning, letters, symbols, especially, sight, touch, educators, researchers, reading, multifaceted, process, involving, such, areas, word, reco. For the town in England see Reading Berkshire For the article on literacy see Literacy For other uses see Reading disambiguation Reading is the process of taking in the sense or meaning of letters symbols etc especially by sight or touch 1 2 3 4 For educators and researchers reading is a multifaceted process involving such areas as word recognition orthography spelling alphabetics phonics phonemic awareness vocabulary comprehension fluency and motivation 5 6 Other types of reading and writing such as pictograms e g a hazard symbol and an emoji are not based on speech based writing systems 7 The common link is the interpretation of symbols to extract the meaning from the visual notations or tactile signals as in the case of Braille 8 A reading muse There is a growing body of evidence which illustrates the importance of reading for pleasure for both educational purposes as well as personal development 9 Photo Reading a newspaper in Catania Sicily Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Reading vs literacy 1 2 Writing systems 1 3 Cognitive benefits 1 4 State of reading achievement 2 Learning to read 2 1 Spoken language the foundation of reading 2 2 Reading to children necessary but not sufficient 2 3 Stages to skilled reading 2 4 Optimum age to learn to read 2 5 Reading instruction by grade level 3 Reading development 3 1 Emerging pre reader 6 months to 6 years old 3 2 Novice reader 6 to 7 years old 3 3 Decoding reader 7 to 9 years old 3 4 Fluent comprehending reader 9 to 15 years old 3 5 Expert reader 16 years and older 4 Science of reading 4 1 Simple view of reading 4 2 Scarborough s reading rope 4 3 The active view of reading model 4 4 How the brain reads 4 5 Eye movement and silent reading rate 4 6 Dual route hypothesis to reading aloud 4 7 The production effect 4 8 Evidence based reading instruction 4 9 Reading from paper vs screens 4 10 Teacher training in science of reading 5 Teaching reading 5 1 Alphabetic languages 5 1 1 Phonics and related areas 5 1 1 1 Combining phonics with other literacy instruction 5 1 1 2 Effectiveness of programs 5 1 1 3 Systematic phonics 5 1 1 4 Analytic phonics and analogy phonics 5 1 1 5 Embedded phonics with mini lessons 5 1 1 6 Phonics through spelling 5 1 1 7 Synthetic phonics 5 1 1 8 Related areas 5 1 1 8 1 Phonemic awareness 5 1 1 8 2 Vocabulary 5 1 1 8 3 Sight vocabulary vs sight words 5 1 1 8 4 Fluency 5 1 1 8 5 Reading comprehension 5 1 1 8 6 Reading and spelling 5 1 1 8 7 Using embedded picture mnemonic alphabet cards when teaching phonics 5 1 2 Whole language 5 1 3 Balanced literacy 5 1 4 Structured Literacy 5 1 5 Three cueing system Searchlights model 5 1 6 Three Ps 3Ps Pause Prompt Praise 5 1 7 Guided reading reading workshop shared reading leveled reading silent reading and self teaching 5 2 Logographic languages 6 The Reading Wars phonics vs whole language 7 Requirements for proficient reading 8 Reading difficulties 8 1 Decoding 8 2 Reading rate 8 3 Reading fluency 8 4 Reading comprehension 8 5 Radio Reading Service 9 Reading achievement national and international reports 9 1 NAEP 9 2 PIAAC 9 3 PIRLS 9 4 PISA 9 5 EQAO 10 History of reading 11 History of learning to read 11 1 21st century 12 Other terms 13 Gallery 13 1 Paintings 13 2 Photographs 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksOverview Edit Volunteer reads to a girl at the Casa Hogar de las Ninas in Mexico City Reading is typically an individual activity done silently although on occasion a person reads out loud for other listeners or reads aloud for one s own use for better comprehension Before the reintroduction of separated text spaces between words in the late Middle Ages the ability to read silently was considered rather remarkable 10 11 Major predictors of an individual s ability to read both alphabetic and non alphabetic scripts are oral language skills 12 phonological awareness rapid automatized naming and verbal IQ 13 As a leisure activity children and adults read because it is pleasant and interesting In the US about half of all adults read one or more books for pleasure each year 14 About 5 read more than 50 books per year 14 Americans read more if they have more education read fluently and easily are female live in cities and have higher socioeconomic status 14 Children become better readers when they know more about the world in general and when they perceive reading as fun rather than another chore to be performed 14 Reading vs literacy Edit Reading is an essential part of literacy yet from a historical perspective literacy is about having the ability to both read and write 15 16 17 18 And since the 1990s some organizations have defined literacy in a wide variety of ways that may go beyond the traditional ability to read and write The following are some examples the ability to read and write in all media print or electronic including digital literacy 19 the ability to understand using printed and written materials associated with varying contexts 20 21 22 the ability to read write speak and listen 23 having the skills to be able to read write and speak to understand and create meaning 24 the ability to communicate using visual audible and digital materials 25 26 the ability to use printed and written information to function in society to achieve one s goals and to develop one s knowledge and potential 27 It includes three types of adult literacy prose e g a newspaper article documents e g a bus schedule and quantitative literacy e g using arithmetic operations a in product advertisement 28 29 In the academic field some view literacy in a more philosophical manner and propose the concept of multiliteracies For example they say this huge shift from traditional print based literacy to 21st century multiliteracies reflects the impact of communication technologies and multimedia on the evolving nature of texts as well as the skills and dispositions associated with the consumption production evaluation and distribution of those texts Borsheim Meritt amp Reed 2008 p 87 30 31 According to cognitive neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg these multiple literacies have allowed educators to change the topic from reading and writing to Literacy He goes on to say that some educators when faced with criticisms of how reading is taught didn t alter their practices they changed the subject 32 Also some organizations might include numeracy skills and technology skills separately but alongside of literacy skills 33 In addition since the 1940s the term literacy is often used to mean having knowledge or skill in a particular field e g computer literacy ecological literacy health literacy media literacy quantitative literacy numeracy 29 and visual literacy 34 35 36 37 Writing systems Edit Main article Writing system In order to understand a text it is usually necessary to understand the spoken language associated with that text In this way writing systems are distinguished from many other symbolic communication systems 38 Once established writing systems on the whole change more slowly than their spoken counterparts and often preserve features and expressions which are no longer current in the spoken language The great benefit of writing systems is their ability to maintain a persistent record of information expressed in a language which can be retrieved independently of the initial act of formulation 38 Cognitive benefits Edit Senior reading a newspaper in Nepal Reading for pleasure has been linked to increased cognitive progress in vocabulary and mathematics during adolescence 39 40 Sustained high volume lifetime reading has been associated with high levels of academic attainment 41 Research suggests that reading can improve stress management 42 memory 42 focus 43 writing skills 43 and imagination 44 The cognitive benefits of reading continue into mid life and the senior years 45 46 47 Research suggests that reading books and writing are among the brain stimulating activities that can slow down cognitive decline in seniors 48 State of reading achievement Edit See also Reading achievement national and international reports Reading has been the subject of considerable research and reporting for decades Many organizations measure and report on reading achievement for children and adults e g NAEP PIRLS PISA PIAAC and EQAO Researchers have concluded that 95 of students can be taught to read by the end of first grade yet in many countries 20 or more do not meet that expectation 49 According to the 2019 Nation s Report card 34 of grade four students in the United States failed to perform at or above the Basic reading level There was a significant difference by race and ethnicity e g black students at 52 and white students at 23 After the impact of the covid 19 pandemic the average basic reading score dropped by 3 in 2022 50 See more about the breakdown by ethnicity in 2019 and 2022 here In Canada the provinces of Ontario and Nova Scotia respectively reported that 26 and 30 of grade three students did not meet the provincial reading standards in 2019 51 52 53 In Ontario 53 of Grade 3 students with special education needs students who have an Individual Education Plan were not meeting the provincial standard 54 The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study PIRLS publishes reading achievement for fourth graders in 50 countries 55 The five countries with the highest overall reading average are the Russian Federation Singapore Hong Kong SAR Ireland and Finland Some others are England 10th United States 15th Australia 21st Canada 23rd and New Zealand 33rd 56 57 58 The Programme for International Student Assessment PISA measures 15 year old school pupils scholastic performance on mathematics science and reading 59 The reading levels of adults ages 16 65 in 39 countries are reported by the Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies PIAAC 60 Between 2011 and 2018 PIAAC reports the percentage of adults reading at or below level one the lowest of five levels Some examples are Japan 4 9 Finland 10 6 Netherlands 11 7 Australia 12 6 Sweden 13 3 Canada 16 4 England UK 16 4 and the United States 16 9 61 According to the World Bank 53 of all children in low and middle income countries suffer from learning poverty In 2019 using data from the UNESCO Institute for Statistics they published a report entitled Ending Learning Poverty What will it take 62 Learning poverty is defined as being unable to read and understand a simple text by age 10 Although they say that all foundational skills are important include reading numeracy basic reasoning ability socio emotional skills and others they focus specifically on reading Their reasoning is that reading proficiency is an easily understood metric of learning reading is a student s gateway to learning in every other area and reading proficiency can serve as a proxy for foundational learning in other subjects They suggest five pillars to reduce learning poverty 1 learners are prepared and motivated to learn 2 teachers at all levels are effective and valued 3 classrooms are equipped for learning 4 Schools are safe and inclusive spaces and 5 education systems are well managed Learning to read Edit Researchers have concluded that 95 of students can be taught to read by the end of first grade yet in many countries 20 or more do not meet that expectation 49 See also Reading Teaching reading Learning to read or reading skills acquisition is the acquisition and practice of the skills necessary to understand the meaning behind printed words For a skilled reader the act of reading feels simple effortless and automatic 63 However the process of learning to read is complex and builds on cognitive linguistic and social skills developed from a very early age As one of the four core language skills listening speaking reading and writing 64 65 reading is vital to gaining a command of written language In the United States and elsewhere it is widely believed that students who lack proficiency in reading by the end of grade three may face obstacles for the rest of their academic career 66 67 68 For example it is estimated that they would not be able to read half of the material they will encounter in grade four 69 In 2019 with respect to the reading skills of grade four US public school students only 45 of white students and 18 of black students performed at or above the proficient level of the Nations Report Card 70 Also in 2012 in the United Kingdom it has been reported that 15 year old students are reading at the age of 12 year old students 71 As a result many governments put practices in place to ensure that students are reading at grade level by the end of grade three An example of this is the Third Grade Reading Guarantee created by the State of Ohio in 2017 This is a program to identify students from kindergarten through grade three that are behind in reading and provide support to make sure they are on track for reading success by the end of grade three 72 73 This is also known as remedial education Another example is the policy in England whereby any pupil who is struggling to decode words properly by year three must urgently receive help through a rigorous and systematic phonics programme 74 In 2016 out of 50 countries the United States achieved the 15th highest score in grade four reading ability 75 The ten countries with the highest overall reading average are the Russian Federation Singapore Hong Kong SAR Ireland Finland Poland Northern Ireland Norway Chinese Taipei and England UK Some others are Australia 21st Canada 23rd New Zealand 33rd France 34th Saudi Arabia 44th and South Africa 50th Spoken language the foundation of reading Edit Spoken language is the foundation of learning to read long before children see any letters and children s knowledge of the phonological structure of language is a good predictor of early reading ability Spoken language is dominant for most of childhood however reading ultimately catches up and surpasses speech 76 77 78 79 By their first birthday most children have learned all the sounds in their spoken language However it takes longer for them to learn the phonological form of words and to begin developing a spoken vocabulary 12 Children acquire a spoken language in a few years Five to six year old English learners have vocabularies of 2 500 to 5 000 words and add 5 000 words per year for the first several years of schooling This rapid learning rate cannot be accounted for by the instruction they receive Instead children learn that the meaning of a new word can be inferred because it occurs in the same context as familiar words e g lion is often seen with cowardly and king 80 As British linguist John Rupert Firth says You shall know a word by the company it keeps The environment in which children live may also impact their ability to acquire reading skills Children who are regularly exposed to chronic environmental noise pollution such as highway traffic noise have been known to show decreased ability to discriminate between phonemes oral language sounds as well as lower reading scores on standardized tests 81 Reading to children necessary but not sufficient Edit Reading to children is not the same as teaching children to read however it does help if the children s attention is directed to the words on the page as they are being read to 82 83 Children learn to speak naturally by listening to other people speak However reading is not a natural process and many children need to learn to read through a process that involves systematic guidance and feedback 84 85 86 87 So reading to children is not the same as teaching children to read 88 Nonetheless reading to children is important because it socializes them to the activity of reading it engages them it expands their knowledge of spoken language and it enriches their linguistic ability by hearing new and novel words and grammatical structures However there is some evidence that shared reading with children does help to improve reading if the children s attention is directed to the words on the page as they are being read to 82 83 Stages to skilled reading Edit See also Reading Teaching reading The path to skilled reading involves learning the alphabetic principle phonemic awareness phonics fluency vocabulary and comprehension 89 British psychologist Uta Frith introduced a three stages model to acquire skilled reading Stage one is the logographic or pictorial stage where students attempt to grasp words as objects an artificial form of reading Stage two is the phonological stage where students learn the relationship between the graphemes letters and the phonemes sounds Stage three is the orthographic stage where students read familiar words more quickly than unfamiliar words and word length gradually ceases to play a role 90 Optimum age to learn to read Edit There is some debate as to the optimum age to teach children to read The Common Core State Standards Initiative CCSS in the United States has standards for foundational reading skills in kindergarten and grade one that include instruction in print concepts phonological awareness phonics word recognition and fluency 91 However some critics of CCSS say that To achieve reading standards usually calls for long hours of drill and worksheets and reduces other vital areas of learning such as math science social studies art music and creative play 92 The PISA 2007 OECD data from 54 countries demonstrates no association between school entry age and reading achievement at age 15 93 Also a German study of 50 kindergartens compared children who at age 5 had spent a year either academically focused or play arts focused and found that in time the two groups became inseparable in reading skill 94 The authors conclude that the effects of early reading are like watering a garden before a rainstorm the earlier watering is rendered undetectable by the rainstorm the watering wastes precious water and the watering detracts the gardener from other important preparatory groundwork 93 Some scholars favor a developmentally appropriate practice DPA in which formal instruction on reading begins when children are about six or seven years old And to support that theory some point out that children in Finland start school at age seven Finland ranked 5th in the 2016 PIRLS international grade four reading achievement 95 In a discussion on academic kindergartens professor of child development David Elkind has argued that since there is no solid research demonstrating that early academic training is superior to or worse than the more traditional hands on model of early education educators should defer to developmental approaches that provide young children with ample time and opportunity to explore the natural world on their own terms 96 Elkind emphasized the principle that early education must start with the child not with the subject matter to be taught 96 In response Grover J Whitehurst Director Brown Center on Education Policy part of Brookings Institution 97 said David Elkind is relying too much on philosophies of education rather than science and research He continues to say education practices are doomed to cycles of fad and fancy until they become more based on evidence based practice 98 On the subject of Finland s academic results as some researchers point out prior to starting school Finnish children must participate in one year of compulsory free pre primary education and most are reading before they start school 99 100 And with respect to developmentally appropriate practice DPA in 2019 the National Association for the Education of Young Children Washington DC released a draft position paper on DPA saying The notion that young children are not ready for academic subject matter is a misunderstanding of developmentally appropriate practice particularly in grades 1 through 3 almost all subject matter can be taught in ways that are meaningful and engaging for each child 101 And researchers at The Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential say it is a myth that early readers are bored or become trouble makers in school 102 Other researchers and educators favor limited amounts of literacy instruction at the age of four and five in addition to non academic intellectually stimulating activities 103 Reviews of the academic literature by the Education Endowment Foundation in the UK have found that starting literacy teaching in preschool has been consistently found to have a positive effect on early learning outcomes 104 and that beginning early years education at a younger age appears to have a high positive impact on learning outcomes 105 This supports current standard practice in the UK which includes developing children s phonemic awareness in preschool and teaching reading from age four A study in Chicago reports that an early education program for children from low income families is estimated to generate 4 to 11 of economic benefits over a child s lifetime for every dollar spent initially on the program according to a cost benefit analysis funded by the National Institutes of Health The program is staffed by certified teachers and offers instruction in reading and math small group activities and educational field trips for children ages 3 through 9 106 107 There does not appear to be any definitive research about the magic window to begin reading instruction 100 However there is also no definitive research to suggest that starting early causes any harm Researcher Timothy Shanahan suggests Start teaching reading from the time you have kids available to teach and pay attention to how they respond to this instruction both in terms of how well they are learning what you are teaching and how happy and invested they seem to be If you haven t started yet don t feel guilty just get going 100 Reading instruction by grade level Edit Some education researchers suggest the teaching of the various reading components by specific grade levels 108 The following is one example from Carol Tolman Ed D and Louisa Moats Ed D that corresponds in many respects with the United States Common Core State Standards Initiative 91 Reading instruction component Tolman amp Moats US Common CorePhonological awareness K 1 K 1Basic phonics K 1 K 1Vocabulary K 6 K 6 Comprehension K 6 K 6 Written expression 1 6 K 6 Fluency 1 3 1 5Advanced phonics decoding 2 6 2 5Reading development EditAccording to some researchers learners children and adults progress through several stages while first learning to read in English and then refining their reading skills One of the recognized experts in this area is Harvard professor Jeanne Sternlicht Chall In 1983 she published a book entitled Stages of Reading Development that proposed six stages 109 110 Subsequently in 2008 Maryanne Wolf UCLA Graduate School of Education and Information Studies published a book entitled Proust and the Squid in which she describes her view of the following five stages of reading development 111 112 It is normal that children will move through these stages at different rates however typical ages for children in the United States are shown below Emerging pre reader 6 months to 6 years old Edit Reading time at a primary school in rural Lao PDR Southeast Asia In 2017 approximately 70 of five year old children are not enrolled in Early Childhood Education programmes with those in hard to reach areas and from poor families being the most excluded 113 The daily reading period shown here uses books provided by Big Brother Mouse a not for profit that promotes reading in Lao schools and villages 114 The emerging pre reader stage also known as reading readiness usually lasts for the first five years of a child s life 115 Children typically speak their first few words before their first birthday 116 Educators and parents help learners to develop their skills in listening speaking reading and writing 117 Reading to children helps them to develop their vocabulary a love of reading and phonemic awareness i e the ability to hear and manipulate the individual sounds phonemes of oral language Children will often read stories they have memorized However in the late 1990s United States researchers found that the traditional way of reading to children made little difference in their later ability to read because children spend relatively little time actually looking at the text Yet in a shared reading program with four year old children teachers found that directing children s attention to the letters and words e g verbally or pointing to the words made a significant difference in early reading spelling and comprehension 118 83 119 120 Novice reader 6 to 7 years old Edit Novice readers continue to develop their phonemic awareness and come to realise that the letters graphemes connect to the sounds phonemes of the language known as decoding phonics and the alphabetic principle 121 They may also memorize the most common letter patterns and some of the high frequency words that do not necessarily follow basic phonological rules e g have and who However it is a mistake to assume a reader understands the meaning of a text merely because they can decode it Vocabulary and oral language comprehension are also important parts of text comprehension as described in the Simple view of reading Scarborough s reading rope and The active view of reading model Reading and speech are codependent reading promotes vocabulary development and a richer vocabulary facilitates skilled reading 122 Decoding reader 7 to 9 years old Edit The transition from the novice reader stage to the decoding stage is marked by a reduction of painful pronunciations and in its place the sounds of a smoother more confident reader 123 In this phase the reader adds at least 3 000 words to what they can decode For example in the English language readers now learn the variations of the vowel based rimes e g sat mat cat 124 and vowel pairs also digraph e g rain play boat 125 As readers move forward they learn the make up of morphemes i e stems roots prefixes and suffixes They learn the common morphemes such as s and ed and see them as sight chunks The faster a child can see that beheaded is be head ed the faster they will become a more fluent reader In the beginning of this stage a child will often be devoting so much mental capacity to the process of decoding that they will have no understanding of the words being read It is nevertheless an important stage allowing the child to achieve their ultimate goal of becoming fluent and automatic It is in the decoding phase that the child will get to what the story is really about and to learn to re read a passage when necessary so as to truly understand it Fluent comprehending reader 9 to 15 years old Edit The goal of this stage is to go below the surface of the text and in the process the reader will build their knowledge of spelling substantially 126 Teachers and parents may be tricked by fluent sounding reading into thinking that a child understands everything that they are reading As the content of what they are able to read becomes more demanding good readers will develop knowledge of figurative language and irony which helps them to discover new meanings in the text Children improve their comprehension when they use a variety of tools such as connecting prior knowledge predicting outcomes drawing inferences and monitoring gaps in their understanding One of the most powerful moments is when fluent comprehending readers learn to enter into the lives of imagined heroes and heroines When teaching comprehension the educational psychologist G Michael Pressley says a strong case can be made for instruction in decoding vocabulary word knowledge active comprehension strategies and self monitoring 127 At the end of this stage many processes are starting to become automatic allowing the reader to focus on meaning With the decoding process almost automatic by this point the brain learns to integrate more metaphorical inferential analogical background and experiential knowledge This stage in learning to read will often last until early adulthood 128 Expert reader 16 years and older Edit At the expert stage it will usually only take a reader one half second to read almost any word 129 The degree to which expert reading will change over the course of an adult s life depends on what they read and how much they read Science of reading EditSee also Evidence based education Writing is only about 5 500 years old unlike human speech which is thought to be from 50 000 years to 2 million years old 130 So unlike speech the brain did not evolve to read naturally As a result the brain adapts to the challenge of reading The process of reading involves most of the brain especially an interconnection between visual areas and language areas but also neural systems related to action emotion decision making and memory 131 132 There is no single definition of the science of reading SOR 133 Foundational skills such as phonics decoding and phonemic awareness are considered to be important parts of the science of reading but they are not the only ingredients SOR includes any research and evidence about how humans learn to read and how reading should be taught This includes areas such as oral reading fluency vocabulary morphology reading comprehension text spelling and pronunciation thinking strategies oral language proficiency working memory training and written language performance e g cohesion sentence combining reducing 134 In addition some educators feel that SOR should include digital literacy background knowledge content rich instruction infrastructural pillars curriculum reimagined teacher preparation and leadership adaptive teaching recognizing the student s individual culture and linguistic strengths bi literacy development equity social justice and supporting underserved populations e g students from low income backgrounds 133 Some researchers suggest there is a need for more studies on the relationship between theory and practice They say we know more about the science of reading than about the science of teaching based on the science of reading and there are many layers between basic science findings and teacher implementation that must be traversed 133 In cognitive science there is likely no area that has been more successful than the study of reading Yet in many countries reading levels are considered low In the United States the 2019 Nations Report Card reported that 34 of grade four public school students performed at or above the NAEP proficient level solid academic performance and 65 performed at or above the basic level partial mastery of the proficient level skills 135 As reported in the PIRLS study the United States ranked 15th out of 50 countries for reading comprehension levels of fourth graders 56 57 In addition according to the 2011 2018 PIAAC study out of 39 countries the United States ranked 19th for literacy levels of adults 16 to 65 and 16 9 of adults in the United States read at or below level one out of five levels 136 61 Many researchers are concerned that low reading levels are due to the manner in which reading is taught They point to three areas a contemporary reading science has had very little impact on educational practice mainly because of a two cultures problem separating science and education b current teaching practices rest on outdated assumptions that make learning to read harder than it needs to be and c connecting evidence based practice to educational practice would be beneficial but is extremely difficult to achieve because many teachers are not properly trained in the science of reading 137 138 139 49 Simple view of reading Edit Main article Simple view of reading The simple view of reading is a scientific theory about reading comprehension 140 According to the theory in order to comprehend what they are reading students need both decoding skills and oral language listening comprehension ability Neither is enough on their own In other words they need the ability to recognize and process e g sound out the text and the ability to understand the language in which the text is written i e vocabulary grammar and background knowledge Students are not reading if they can decode words but do not understand their meaning Similarly students are not reading if they cannot decode words that they would ordinarily recognize and understand if they heard them spoken out loud 141 142 143 It is expressed in this equation Decoding Oral Language Comprehension Reading Comprehension 144 As shown in the graphic the Simple View of Reading proposes four broad categories of developing readers typical readers poor readers general reading disability dyslexics 145 and hyperlexics 146 147 Scarborough s reading rope Edit Hollis Scarborough the creator of the Reading Rope and senior scientist at Haskins Laboratories is a leading researcher of early language development and its connection to later literacy 148 Scarborough published the Reading Rope infographic in 2001 using strands of rope to illustrate the many ingredients that are involved in becoming a skilled reader The upper strands represent language comprehension and reinforce one another The lower strands represent word recognition and work together as the reader becomes accurate fluent and automatic through practice The upper and lower strands all weave together to produce a skilled reader 149 Language comprehension Upper strands Background knowledge facts concepts etc Vocabulary breadth precision links etc Language structures syntax semantics etc Verbal reasoning inference metaphor etc Literacy knowledge print concepts genres etc Word recognition Lower strands Phonological awareness syllable phonemes etc Decoding alphabetic principle spelling sound correspondence Sight recognition of familiar words More recent research by Laurie E Cutting and Hollis S Scarborough has highlighted the importance of executive function processes e g working memory planning organization self monitoring and similar abilities to reading comprehension 150 151 Easy texts do not require much executive functions however more difficult text require more focus on the ideas Reading comprehension strategies such as summarizing may help The active view of reading model Edit The active view of reading AVR model May 7 2021 offers an alternative to the Simple view of reading SVR and a proposed update to Scarborough s reading rope SRR It reflects key insights from scientific research on reading that is not captured in the SVR and SRR Although the AVR model has not been tested as a whole in research each element within the model has been tested in instructional research demonstrating positive causal influences on reading comprehension 152 The model lists contributors to reading and potential causes of reading difficulty within across and beyond word recognition and language comprehension including the elements of self regulation This feature of the model reflects the research documenting that not all profiles of reading difficulty are explained by low word recognition and or low language comprehension A second feature of the model is that it shows how word recognition and language comprehension overlap and identifies processes that bridge these constructs The following chart shows the ingredients in the authors infographic In addition the authors point out that reading is also impacted by text task and sociocultural context Active Self RegulationMotivation and engagementExecutive function skillsStrategy use related to word recognition comprehension vocabulary etc Word recognition WR Phonological awareness syllables phonemes etc Alphabetic principlePhonics knowledgeDecoding skillsRecognition of words at sightBridging processes the overlapping of WR and LC Print conceptsReading fluencyVocabulary knowledgeMorphological awareness the structure of words and parts of words such as stems root words prefixes and suffixes Graphophonological semantic cognitive flexibility letter sound meaning flexibility Language comprehension LC Cultural and other content knowledgeReading specific background knowledge genre text etc Verbal reasoning inference metaphor etc Language structure syntax semantic etc Theory of mind the ability to attribute mental states to ourselves and others 153 How the brain reads Edit Several researchers and neuroscientists have attempted to explain how the brain reads They have written articles and books and created websites and YouTube videos to help the average consumer 154 155 156 157 Neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene says that a few simple truths should be accepted by all namely a all children have similar brains are well tuned to systematic grapheme phoneme correspondences and have everything to gain from phonics the only method that will give them the freedom to read any text b classroom size is largely irrelevant if the proper teaching methods are used c it is essential to have standardized screening tests for dyslexia followed by appropriate specialized training and d while decoding is essential vocabulary enrichment is equally important 158 A study conducted at the Medical University of South Carolina MUSC in 2022 indicates that greater left brain asymmetry can predict both better and average performance on a foundational level of reading ability depending on whether analysis is conducted over the whole brain or in specific regions 159 160 There have been correlations between specific brain regions in the left hemisphere of the cerebral cortex during different reading activities 161 Although it is not included in most meta analytical studies the sensorimotor cortex of the brain is the most active region of the brain during reading This is often disregarded because it is associated solely with movement 162 however a 2014 fMRI study involving adults and children participants where bodily movement was restricted demonstrated strong evidence revealing that this region may be correlated with automatic word processing and decoding 163 The results of this study found this portion of the brain to be highly active in persons who were learning struggling to read children those diagnosed with dyslexia and those new to the English language and less active in fluent adult readers 163 The occipital and parietal lobes or more specifically fusiform gyrus include the brain s visual word form area VWFA 164 The VWFA is believed to be responsible for the brain s ability to read visually 164 This area of the brain tends to be activated when words are presented orthographically as found in a study in 2002 where participants were presented with word and non word stimuli 165 During presentation of word stimuli this portion of the brain was extremely active however during presentation of stimuli that did not involve graphemes the brain was less active Participants with dyslexia remained outliers with this area of the brain being consistently under active in both scenarios 165 The two major regions of the brain associated with phonological skills are the temporal parietal region and the Perisylvian Region 166 In an fMRI study conducted in 2001 participants were presented with written words verbal frequency words and verbal pseudo words 167 The dorsal upper portion of the temporal parietal region was the most active during the pseudo words and the ventral lower portion was more active during frequency words with the exception of subjects diagnosed with dyslexia who showed no impairment to their ventral region but under activation in the dorsal portion 167 The Perisylvian Region which is the portion of the brain believed to connect Broca s and Wernicke s area 168 is another region that is highly active during phonological activities where participants are asked to verbalize known and unknown words 169 Damage to this portion of this brain directly affects a person s ability to speak cohesively and with sense furthermore this portion of the brain activity remains consistent for both dyslexic and non dyslexic readers 170 169 171 The inferior frontal region is a much more complex region of the brain and its association with reading is not necessarily linear for it is active in several reading related activities 172 Several studies have recorded it s activity in association with comprehension and processing skills as well as spelling and working memory 173 Although the exact role of this portion of the brain is still debatable several studies indicate that this area of the brain tends to be more active in readers who have been diagnosed with dyslexia and less active when treatment is successfully undergone 174 In addition to regions on the cortex which is considered gray matter on fMRI s there are several white matter fasciculus that are also active during different reading activities 175 These three regions are what connects the three respected cortex regions as the brain reads thus it is responsible for the brains cross model integration involved in reading 176 Three connective fasciculus that are prominently active during reading are the following the left arcuate faciculus the left inferior longitudinal faciculus and the superior longitudinal fasciculus 177 All three areas are found to be weaker in readers diagnosed with dyslexia 175 176 177 The cerebellum which is not a part of the cerebral cortex is also believed to play an important role in reading 178 When the cerebellum is impaired victims struggle with many executive functioning and organizational skills both inside and outside of their reading ability 178 In a synthetic fMRI study specific activities that displayed significant cerebellum involvement included automatization word accuracy and reading speed 179 Eye movement and silent reading rate Edit Main article Eye movement in reading Reading is an intensive process in which the eye quickly moves to assimilate the text seeing just accurately enough to interpret groups of symbols 180 It is necessary to understand visual perception and eye movement in reading to understand the reading process When reading the eye moves continuously along a line of text but makes short rapid movements saccades intermingled with short stops fixations There is considerable variability in fixations the point at which a saccade jumps to and saccades between readers and even for the same person reading a single passage of text When reading the eye has a perceptual span of about 20 slots In the best case scenario and reading English when the eye is fixated on a letter four to five letters to the right and three to four letters to the left can be clearly identified Beyond that only the general shape of some letters can be identified 181 Research published in 2019 concluded that the silent reading rate of adults in English for non fiction is in the range of 175 to 300 words per minute wpm and for fiction the range is 200 to 320 words per minute 182 183 Eye fixation point 184 Dual route hypothesis to reading aloud Edit Main article Dual route hypothesis to reading aloud In the early 1970s the dual route hypothesis to reading aloud was proposed according to which there are two separate mental mechanisms involved in reading aloud with output from both contributing to the pronunciation of written words 185 186 187 One mechanism is the lexical route whereby skilled readers can recognize a word as part of their sight vocabulary The other is the nonlexical or sublexical route in which the reader sounds out decodes written words 187 188 The production effect Edit There is robust evidence that saying a word out loud makes it more memorable than simply reading it silently or hearing someone else say it This memory benefit of hearing oneself is referred to as the production effect 189 The results of studies imply that oral production is beneficial because it entails two distinctive components speaking a motor act and hearing oneself the self referential auditory input Evidence based reading instruction Edit See also Evidence based education Evidence based reading instruction refers to practices having research evidence showing their success in improving reading achievement 190 191 192 193 194 It is related to evidence based education Several organizations report on research about reading instruction for example Best Evidence Encyclopedia BEE is a free website created by the Johns Hopkins University School of Education s Center for Data Driven Reform in Education and is funded by the Institute of Education Sciences U S Department of Education 195 In 2021 BEE released a review of research on 51 different programs for struggling readers in elementary schools 196 Many of the programs used phonics based teaching and or one or more other approaches The conclusions of this report are shown at the section entitled Effectiveness of programs Evidence for ESSA 197 began in 2017 and is produced by the Center for Research and Reform in Education CRRE 198 at Johns Hopkins University School of Education Baltimore MD 199 It offers free up to date information on current PK 12 programs in reading math social emotional learning and attendance that meet the standards of the Every Student Succeeds Act ESSA the United States K 12 public education policy signed by President Obama in 2015 200 ProvenTutoring org 201 is a non profit organization a separate subsidiary of the non profit Success for All It is a resource for school systems and educators interested in research proven tutoring programs It lists programs that deliver tutoring programs that are proven effective in rigorous research as defined in the 2015 Every Student Succeeds Act The Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University provides the technical support to inform program selection 202 203 What Works Clearinghouse WWC of Washington DC 204 was established in 2002 and evaluates numerous educational programs in twelve categories by the quality and quantity of the evidence and the effectiveness It is operated by the federal National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance NCEE part of the Institute of Education Sciences IES 204 Individual studies are available that have been reviewed by WWC and categorized according to the evidence tiers of the United States Every student succeeds act ESSA 205 Intervention reports are provided for programs according to twelve topics e g literacy mathematics science behavior etc 206 The British Educational Research Association BERA 207 claims to be the home of educational research in the United Kingdom 208 209 Florida Center for Reading Research is a research center at Florida State University that explores all aspects of reading research Its Resource Database allows you to search for information based on a variety of criteria 210 Institute of Education Sciences IES Washington DC 211 is the statistics research and evaluation arm of the U S Department of Education It funds independent education research evaluation and statistics It published a Synthesis of its Research on Early Intervention and Early Childhood Education in 2013 212 Its publications and products can be searched by author subject etc 213 National Foundation for Educational Research NFER 214 is a non profit research and development organization based in Berkshire England It produces independent research and reports about issues across the education system such as Using Evidence in the Classroom What Works and Why 215 Office for Standards in Education Ofsted in England conducts research on schools early education social care further education and skills 216 The Ministry of Education Ontario Canada offers a site entitled What Works Research Into Practice It is a collection of research summaries of promising teaching practice written by experts at Ontario universities 217 RAND Corporation with offices throughout the world funds research on early childhood K 12 and higher education 218 ResearchED 219 a U K based non profit since 2013 has organized education conferences around the world e g Africa Australia Asia Canada the E U the Middle East New Zealand the U K and the U S featuring researchers and educators in order to promote collaboration between research users and research creators It has been described as a grass roots teacher led project that aims to make teachers research literate and pseudo science proof 220 Reading from paper vs screens Edit A systematic review and meta analysis was conducted on the advantages of reading from paper vs screens It found no difference in reading times however reading from paper has a small advantage in reading performance and metacognition 221 Apart from that depending on the circumstances some people prefer one medium over the other and each appears to have its own unique advantages 222 Teacher training in science of reading Edit Some teachers even after obtaining a master s degree in education think they lack the necessary knowledge and skills to teach all students how to read 223 A 2019 survey of K 2 and special education teachers found that only 11 percent said they felt completely prepared to teach early reading after finishing their preservice programs And a 2021 study found that most U S states do not measure teachers knowledge of the science of reading 224 In addition according to one study as few as 2 of school districts use reading programs that follow the science of reading 225 226 Mark Seidenberg a neuroscientist states that with few exceptions teachers are not taught to teach reading and don t know what they don t know 227 A survey in the United States reported that 70 of teachers believe in a balanced literacy approach to teaching reading however balanced literacy is not systematic explicit instruction 223 Teacher researcher and author Louisa Moats 228 in a video about teachers and science of reading says that sometime when teachers talk about their philosophy of teaching reading she responds by saying But your philosophy doesn t work 229 She says this is evidenced by the fact that so many children are struggling with reading 230 On another occasion when asked what is the most frequent question teachers ask her she replied over and over they ask why didn t anyone teach me this before 231 In an Education Week Research Center survey of more than 530 professors of reading instruction only 22 percent said their philosophy of teaching early reading centered on explicit systematic phonics with comprehension as a separate focus 223 As of July 28 2022 after Mississippi became the only state to improve reading results between 2017 2019 232 30 U S states have since passed laws or implemented new policies related to evidence based reading instruction 233 These requirements relate to six areas teacher preparation teacher certification or license renewal professional development or coaching assessment material and instruction or intervention However the adoption of these new requirements are by no means uniform For example only five states have requirements in all six areas and three have requirements in only one area Also only fourteen states have requirements related to teacher certification or license renewal whereas 25 have requirements for professional development or coaching Furthermore eight states do not allow or require 3rd grade retention for students who are behind in reading Experts say it is uncertain whether these new initiatives will lead to real improvements in children s reading results because old practices prove hard to shake 234 235 Arkansas required every elementary and special education teacher to be proficient in the scientific research on reading by 2021 causing Amy Murdoch an associate professor and the director of the reading science program at Mount St Joseph University in Cincinnati to say We still have a long way to go but I do see some hope 223 236 237 In 2021 the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development of New Brunswick appears to be the first in Canada to revise its K 2 reading curriculum based on research based instructional practice For example it replaced the various cueing systems with mastery in the consolidated alphabetic to skilled reader phase 238 239 Although one document on the site dated 1998 contains references to such practices as using cueing systems which is at odds with the department s current shift to using evidence based practices 240 The Minister of Education in Ontario Canada followed by stating plans to revise the elementary language curriculum and the Grade 9 English course with scientific evidence based approaches that emphasize direct explicit and systematic instruction and removing references to unscientific discovery and inquiry based learning including the three cueing system by 2023 241 Some non profit organizations such as the Center for Development and Learning Louisiana and the Reading League New York State offer training programs for teachers to learn about the science of reading 242 243 244 245 ResearchED a U K based non profit since 2013 has organized education conferences around the world featuring researchers and educators in order to promote collaboration between research users and research creators 219 Timothy Shanahan acknowledges that comprehensive research does not always exist for specific aspects of reading instruction However the lack of evidence doesn t mean something doesn t work only that we don t know He suggests that teachers make use of the research that is available in such places as Journal of Educational Psychology Reading Research Quarterly Reading amp Writing Quarterly Review of Educational Research and Scientific Studies of Reading If a practice lacks supporting evidence it can be used with the understanding that it is based upon a claim not science 246 Teaching reading Edit Reading to children has many benefits however for most children it is not sufficient to teach them how to read For that all teaching should be initially focused on a single goal the grasp of the alphabetic principle whereby each letter or grapheme represents a phoneme 247 Alphabetic languages Edit Educators have debated for years about which method is best to teach reading for the English language There are three main methods phonics whole language and balanced literacy There are also a variety of other areas and practices such as phonemic awareness fluency reading comprehension sight words and sight vocabulary the three cueing system the searchlights model in England guided reading shared reading and leveled reading Each practice is employed in different manners depending on the country and the specific school division In 2001 some researchers reached two conclusions 1 mastering the alphabetic principle is essential and 2 instructional techniques namely phonics that teach this principle directly are more effective than those that do not However while they make it clear they have some fundamental disagreements with some of the claims made by whole language advocates some principles of whole language have value such as the need to ensure that students are enthusiastic about books and eager to learn to read 63 Phonics and related areas Edit Main article Phonics A Course of Study in Phonics San Francisco U S 1912 248 Phonics emphasizes the alphabetic principle the idea that letters graphemes represent the sounds of speech phonemes 249 It is taught in a variety of ways some are systematic and others are unsystematic Unsystematic phonics teaches phonics on a when needed basis and in no particular sequence Systematic phonics uses a planned sequential introduction of a set of phonic elements along with explicit teaching and practice of those elements The National Reading Panel NRP concluded that systematic phonics instruction is more effective than unsystematic phonics or non phonics instruction Phonics approaches include analogy phonics analytic phonics embedded phonics with mini lessons phonics through spelling and synthetic phonics 250 251 252 63 253 According to a 2018 review of research related to English speaking poor readers phonics training is effective for improving literacy related skills particularly the fluent reading of words and non words and the accurate reading of irregular words 254 In addition phonics produces higher achievement for all beginning readers and the greatest improvement is experienced by students who are at risk of failing to learn to read While some children are able to infer these rules on their own some need explicit instruction on phonics rules Some phonics instruction has marked benefits such as expansion of a student s vocabulary Overall children who are directly taught phonics are better at reading spelling and comprehension 255 A challenge in teaching phonics is that in some languages such as English complex letter sound correspondences can cause confusion for beginning readers For this reason it is recommended that teachers of English reading begin by introducing the most frequent sounds and the common spellings and save the less frequent sounds and complex spellings for later e g the sounds s and t before v and w and the spellings cake before eight and cat before duck 63 256 257 Phonics is gaining world wide acceptance Combining phonics with other literacy instruction Edit Phonics is taught in many different ways and it is often taught together with some of the following oral language skills 258 259 concepts about print 260 phonological awareness phonemic awareness phonology oral reading fluency vocabulary syllables reading comprehension spelling word study 261 262 263 cooperative learning multisensory learning and guided reading And phonics is often featured in discussions about science of reading 264 265 and evidence based practices The National Reading Panel U S 2000 is clear that systematic phonics instruction should be integrated with other reading instruction to create a balanced reading program 266 It suggests that phonics be taught together with phonemic awareness oral fluency vocabulary and comprehension Timothy Shanahan educator a member of that panel recommends that primary students receive 60 90 minutes per day of explicit systematic literacy instruction time and that it be divided equally between a words and word parts e g letters sounds decoding and phonemic awareness b oral reading fluency c reading comprehension and d writing 267 Furthermore he states that the phonemic awareness skills found to give the greatest reading advantage to kindergarten and first grade children are segmenting and blending 268 The Ontario Association of Deans of Education Canada published research Monograph 37 entitled Supporting early language and literacy with suggestions for parents and teachers in helping children prior to grade one It covers the areas of letter names and letter sound correspondence phonics as well as conversation play based learning print phonological awareness shared reading and vocabulary 269 Effectiveness of programs Edit Some researchers report that teaching reading without teaching phonics is harmful to large numbers of students yet not all phonics teaching programs produce effective results The reason is that the effectiveness of a program depends on using the right curriculum together with the appropriate approach to instruction techniques classroom management grouping and other factors 270 Louisa Moats a teacher psychologist and researcher has long advocated for reading instruction that is direct explicit and systematic covering phoneme awareness decoding comprehension literature appreciation and daily exposure to a variety of texts 271 She maintains that reading failure can be prevented in all but a small percentage of children with serious learning disorders It is possible to teach most students how to read if we start early and follow the significant body of research showing which practices are most effective 272 Interest in evidence based education appears to be growing 219 In 2021 Best evidence encyclopedia BEE released a review of research on 51 different programs for struggling readers in elementary schools 196 Many of the programs used phonics based teaching and or one or more of the following cooperative learning technology supported adaptive instruction see Educational technology metacognitive skills phonemic awareness word reading fluency vocabulary multisensory learning spelling guided reading reading comprehension word analysis structured curriculum and balanced literacy non phonetic approach The BEE review concludes that a outcomes were positive for one to one tutoring b outcomes were positive but not as large for one to small group tutoring c there were no differences in outcomes between teachers and teaching assistants as tutors d technology supported adaptive instruction did not have positive outcomes e whole class approaches mostly cooperative learning and whole school approaches incorporating tutoring obtained outcomes for struggling readers as large as those found for one to one tutoring and benefitted many more students and f approaches mixing classroom and school improvements with tutoring for the most at risk students have the greatest potential for the largest numbers of struggling readers 196 Robert Slavin of BEE goes so far as to suggest that states should hire thousands of tutors to support students scoring far below grade level particularly in elementary school reading Research he says shows only tutoring both one to one and one to small group in reading and mathematics had an effect size larger than 0 10 averages are around 0 30 and well trained teaching assistants using structured tutoring materials or software can obtain outcomes as good as those obtained by certified teachers as tutors 273 274 What works clearinghouse allows you to see the effectiveness of specific programs For example as of 2020 they have data on 231 literacy programs If you filter them by grade 1 only all class types all school types all delivery methods all program types and all outcomes you receive 22 programs You can then view the program details and if you wish compare one with another 275 Evidence for ESSA 197 Center for Research and Reform in Education 198 offers free up to date information on current PK 12 programs in reading writing math science and others that meet the standards of the Every Student Succeeds Act U S 276 ProvenTutoring org 201 a non profit organization is a resource for educators interested in research proven tutoring programs The programs it lists are proven effective in rigorous research as defined in the 2015 Every Student Succeeds Act The Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University provides the technical support to inform program selection 198 Systematic phonics Edit The National Reading Panel concluded that systematic phonics instruction is more effective than unsystematic phonics or non phonics instruction 277 Systematic phonics is not one specific method of teaching phonics it is a term used to describe phonics approaches that are taught explicitly and in a structured systematic manner They are systematic because the letters and the sounds they relate to are taught in a specific sequence as opposed to incidentally or on a when needed basis 278 The National Reading Panel NRP concluded that systematic phonics instruction is more effective than unsystematic phonics or non phonics instruction The NRP also found that systematic phonics instruction is effective with varying degrees when delivered through one to one tutoring small groups and teaching classes of students and is effective from kindergarten onward the earlier the better It helps significantly with word reading skills and reading comprehension for kindergartners and 1st graders as well as for older struggling readers and reading disabled students Benefits to spelling were positive for kindergartners and 1st graders but not for older students 279 Systematic phonics is sometimes mischaracterized as skill and drill with little attention to meaning However researchers point out that this impression is false Teachers can use engaging games or materials to teach letter sound connections and it can also be incorporated with the reading of meaningful text 280 Phonics can be taught systematically in a variety of ways such as analogy phonics analytic phonics phonics through spelling and synthetic phonics However their effectiveness vary considerably because the methods differ in such areas as the range of letter sound coverage the structure of the lesson plans and the time devoted to specific instructions 281 Systematic phonics has gained increased acceptance in different parts of the world since the completion of three major studies into teaching reading one in the US in 2000 282 283 another in Australia in 2005 284 and the other in the UK in 2006 285 In 2009 the UK Department of Education published a curriculum review that added support for systematic phonics In fact systematic phonics in the UK is known as Synthetic phonics 286 Beginning as early as 2014 several states in the United States have changed their curriculum to include systematic phonics instruction in elementary school 287 288 289 290 In 2018 the State Government of Victoria Australia published a website containing a comprehensive Literacy Teaching Toolkit including Effective Reading Instruction Phonics and Sample Phonics Lessons 291 Analytic phonics and analogy phonics Edit Main article Analytic phonics Analytic phonics does not involve pronouncing individual sounds phonemes in isolation and blending the sounds as is done in synthetic phonics Rather it is taught at the word level and students learn to analyze letter sound relationships once the word is identified For example students analyze letter sound correspondences such as the ou spelling of aʊ in shrouds Also students might be asked to practice saying words with similar sounds such as ball bat and bite Furthermore students are taught consonant blends separate adjacent consonants as units such as break or shrouds 292 293 Analogy phonics is a particular type of analytic phonics in which the teacher has students analyze phonic elements according to the speech sounds phonograms in the word For example a type of phonogram known in linguistics as a rime is composed of the vowel and the consonant sounds that follow it e g in the words cat mat and sat the rime is at Teachers using the analogy method may have students memorize a bank of phonograms such as at or am or use word families e g can ran man or may play say 294 292 There have been studies on the effectiveness of instruction using analytic phonics vs synthetic phonics Johnston et al 2012 conducted experimental research studies that tested the effectiveness of phonics learning instruction among 10 year old boys and girls 295 They used comparative data from the Clackmannanshire Report and chose 393 participants to compare synthetic phonics instruction and analytic phonics instruction 296 295 The boys taught by the synthetic phonics method had better word reading than the girls in their classes and their spelling and reading comprehension was as good On the other hand with analytic phonics teaching although the boys performed as well as the girls in word reading they had inferior spelling and reading comprehension Overall the group taught by synthetic phonics had better word reading spelling and reading comprehension And synthetic phonics did not lead to any impairment in the reading of irregular words 295 Embedded phonics with mini lessons Edit Embedded phonics also known as incidental phonics is the type of phonics instruction used in whole language programs It is not systematic phonics 297 Although phonics skills are de emphasised in whole language programs some teachers include phonics mini lessons when students struggle with words while reading from a book Short lessons are included based on phonics elements the students are having trouble with or on a new or difficult phonics pattern that appears in a class reading assignment The focus on meaning is generally maintained but the mini lesson provides some time for focus on individual sounds and the letters that represent them Embedded phonics is different from other methods because instruction is always in the context of literature rather than in separate lessons about distinct sounds and letters and skills are taught when an opportunity arises not systematically 298 299 Phonics through spelling Edit For some teachers this is a method of teaching spelling by using the sounds phonemes 300 However it can also be a method of teaching reading by focusing on the sounds and their spelling i e phonemes and syllables It is taught systematically with guided lessons conducted in a direct and explicit manner including appropriate feedback Sometimes mnemonic cards containing individual sounds are used to allow the student to practice saying the sounds that are related to a letter or letters e g a e i o u Accuracy comes first followed by speed The sounds may be grouped by categories such as vowels that sound short e g c a t and s i t When the student is comfortable recognizing and saying the sounds the following steps might be followed a the tutor says a target word and the student repeats it out loud b the student writes down each individual sound letter until the word is completely spelled saying each sound as it is written and c the student says the entire word out loud An alternate method would be to have the student use mnemonic cards to sound out spell the target word Typically the instruction starts with sounds that have only one letter and simple CVC words such as sat and pin Then it progresses to longer words and sounds with more than one letter e g hear and day and perhaps even syllables e g wa ter Sometimes the student practices by saying or sounding out cards that contain entire words 301 Synthetic phonics Edit Main article Synthetic phonics Synthetic phonics also known as blended phonics is a systematic phonics method employed to teach students to read by sounding out the letters then blending the sounds to form the word This method involves learning how letters or letter groups represent individual sounds and that those sounds are blended to form a word For example shrouds would be read by pronouncing the sounds for each spelling sh r ou d s IPA ʃ r aʊ d z then blending those sounds orally to produce a spoken word sh r ou d s shrouds IPA ʃ r aʊ d z The goal of a synthetic phonics instructional program is that students identify the sound symbol correspondences and blend their phonemes automatically Since 2005 synthetic phonics has become the accepted method of teaching reading by phonics instruction in England Scotland and Australia 302 303 304 305 The 2005 Rose Report from the UK concluded that systematic synthetic phonics was the most effective method for teaching reading It also suggests the best teaching included a brisk pace engaging children s interest with multi sensory activities and stimulating resources praise for effort and achievement and above all the full backing of the headteacher 306 It also has considerable support in some States in the U S 283 and some support from expert panels in Canada 307 In the US a pilot program using the Core Knowledge Early Literacy program that used this type of phonics approach showed significantly higher results in K 3 reading compared with comparison schools 308 In addition several States such as California Ohio New York and Arkansas are promoting the principles of synthetic phonics see synthetic phonics in the United States Resources for teaching phonics are available here Related areas Edit Laotian girls sit outside their school reading books they received at a rural school book party Phonemic awareness Edit Main article Phonemic awareness Phonemic awareness is the process by which the phonemes sounds of oral language are heard interpreted understood and manipulated unrelated to their grapheme written language It is a sub set of Phonological awareness that includes the manipulation of rhymes syllables and onsets and rimes and is most prevalent in alphabetic systems 309 The specific part of speech depends on the writing system employed The National Reading Panel NPR concluded that phonemic awareness improves a learner s ability to learn to read When teaching phonemic awareness the NRP found that better results were obtained with focused and explicit instruction of one or two elements over five or more hours in small groups and using the corresponding graphemes letters 310 See also Speech perception As mentioned earlier some researchers feel that the most effective way of teaching phonemic awareness is through segmenting and blending a key part of synthetic phonics 268 Vocabulary Edit A critical aspect of reading comprehension is vocabulary development 311 When a reader encounters an unfamiliar word in print and decodes it to derive its spoken pronunciation the reader understands the word if it is in the reader s spoken vocabulary Otherwise the reader must derive the meaning of the word using another strategy such as context If the development of the child s vocabulary is impeded by things such as ear infections that inhibit the child from hearing new words consistently then the development of reading will also be impaired 312 Sight vocabulary vs sight words Edit Sight words i e high frequency or common words sometimes called the look say method or whole word method are not a part of the phonics method 313 They are usually associated with whole language and balanced literacy where students are expected to memorize common words such as those on the Dolch word list and the Fry word list e g a be call do eat fall gave etc 314 315 The supposition in whole language and balanced literacy is that students will learn to read more easily if they memorize the most common words they will encounter especially words that are not easily decoded i e exceptions On the other hand using sight words as a method of teaching reading in English is seen as being at odds with the alphabetic principle and treating English as though it was a logographic language e g Chinese or Japanese 316 In addition according to research whole word memorisation is labor intensive requiring on average about 35 trials per word 317 Also phonics advocates say that most words are decodable so comparatively few words have to be memorized And because a child will over time encounter many low frequency words the phonological recoding mechanism is a very powerful indeed essential mechanism throughout reading development 63 Furthermore researchers suggest that teachers who withhold phonics instruction to make it easier on children are having the opposite effect by making it harder for children to gain basic word recognition skills They suggest that learners should focus on understanding the principles of phonics so they can recognize the phonemic overlaps among words e g have had has having haven t etc making it easier to decode them all 318 319 320 Sight vocabulary is a part of the phonics method It describes words that are stored in long term memory and read automatically Skilled fully alphabetic readers learn to store words in long term memory without memorization i e a mental dictionary making reading and comprehension easier Once you know the sound based way to decode your mind learns what words look like even if you re not especially trying to do so 321 The process called orthographic mapping involves decoding crosschecking mental marking and rereading It takes significantly less time than memorization This process works for fully alphabetic readers when reading simple decodable words from left to right through the word Irregular words pose more of a challenge yet research in 2018 concluded that fully alphabetic students learn irregular words more easily when they use a process called hierarchical decoding In this process students rather than decode from left to right are taught to focus attention on the irregular elements such as a vowel digraph and a silent e for example break b r ea k height h eigh t touch t ou ch and make m a ke Consequentially they suggest that teachers and tutors should focus on teaching decoding with more advanced vowel patterns before expecting young readers to tackle irregular words 317 322 Fluency Edit Main article Fluency Fluency is ability to read orally with speed accuracy and vocal expression The ability to read fluently is one of several critical factors necessary for reading comprehension If a reader is not fluent it may be difficult to remember what has been read and to relate the ideas expressed in the text to their background knowledge This accuracy and automaticity of reading serves as a bridge between decoding and comprehension 323 Reading comprehension Edit The NRP describes reading comprehension as a complex cognitive process in which a reader intentionally and interactively engages with the text The science of reading says that reading comprehension is heavily dependent on word recognition i e phonological awareness decoding etc and oral language comprehension i e background knowledge vocabulary etc 324 Phonological awareness and rapid naming predict reading comprehension in second grade but oral language skills account for an additional 13 8 of the variance 325 It has also been found that sustained content literacy intervention instruction that gradually build thematic connections may help young children transfer their knowledge to related topics leading to improved comprehension 326 Reading and spelling Edit Evidence supports the strong synergy between reading decoding and spelling encoding especially for children in kindergarten or grade one and elementary school students at risk for literacy difficulties 327 328 Using embedded picture mnemonic alphabet cards when teaching phonics Edit Research supports the use of embedded picture mnemonic memory support alphabet cards when teaching letters and sounds but not words 329 330 331 Whole language Edit Main article Whole language Although widely used whole word methods are not supported by science 332 63 Whole language has the reputation of being a meaning based method of teaching reading that emphasizes literature and text comprehension It discourages any significant use of phonics if at all 333 Instead it trains students to focus on words sentences and paragraphs as a whole rather than letters and sounds Students are taught to use context and pictures to guess words they do not recognize or even just skip them and read on It aims to make reading fun yet many students struggle to figure out the specific rules of the language on their own which causes the student s decoding and spelling to suffer The following are some features of the whole language philosophy Children are expected to learn to read and write as they learned to talk that is gradually without a great deal of direct instruction However researchers and neuroscientists say that learning to read unlike learning to talk is not a natural process and many learners require explicit instruction They point out that millions of adults can speak their language just fine yet they cannot read their language 334 335 63 Learning is emphasized more than teaching It is assumed that the students will learn to read and write and the teacher facilitates that growth Students read and write every day in a variety of situations Reading writing and spoken language are not considered separate components of the curriculum or merely ends in themselves rather they permeate everything the students are doing There is no division between first learning to read and later reading to learn 336 337 As of 2020 whole language is widely used in the US and Canada often as balanced literacy however in some US States and many other countries such as Australia and the United Kingdom it has lost favor or been abandoned because it is not supported by evidence 338 339 340 Some notable researchers have clearly stated their disapproval of whole language and whole word teaching In his 2009 book Reading in the brain cognitive neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene said cognitive psychology directly refutes any notion of teaching via a global or whole language method He goes on to talk about the myth of whole word reading saying it has been refuted by recent experiments We do not recognize a printed word through a holistic grasping of its contours because our brain breaks it down into letters and graphemes 332 In addition cognitive neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg in his 2017 book Language at the speed of light refers to whole language as a theoretical zombie because it persists in spite of a lack of supporting evidence 341 342 338 Balanced literacy Edit Main article Balanced literacy Balanced literacy is not well defined however it is intended as a method that combines elements of both phonics and whole language 343 According to a survey in 2010 68 of elementary school teachers in the United States profess to use balanced literacy 344 However only 52 of teachers in the United States include phonics in their definition of balanced literacy The National Reading Panel concluded that phonics must be integrated with instruction in phonemic awareness vocabulary fluency and comprehension And some studies indicate that the addition of language activities and tutoring to phonics produced larger effects than any of these components in isolation They suggest that this may be a constructive way to view balanced reading instruction 345 However balanced literacy has received criticism from researchers and others suggesting that in many instances it is merely whole language by another name 346 347 348 349 350 According to phonics advocate and cognitive neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg balanced literacy allows educators to diffuse the reading wars while not making specific recommendations for change 255 He goes on to say that in his opinion the high number of struggling readers in the United States is the result of the manner in which teachers are taught to teach reading 351 95 352 353 He also says that struggling readers should not be encouraged to skip a challenging word nor rely on pictures or semantic and syntactic cues to guess at a challenging word Instead they should use evidence based decoding methods such as systematic phonics 354 355 356 Structured Literacy Edit Structured literacy has many of the elements of systematic phonics and few of the elements of balanced literacy 357 It is defined as explicit systematic teaching that focuses on phonological awareness word recognition phonics and decoding spelling and syntax at the sentence and paragraph levels It is considered to be beneficial for all early literacy learners especially those with dyslexia 358 359 360 According to the International Dyslexia Association structured literacy contains the elements of phonology and phonemic awareness sound symbol association the alphabetic principle and phonics syllables morphology syntax and semantics The elements are taught using methods that are systematic cumulative explicit multisensory and use diagnostic assessment 361 Three cueing system Searchlights model Edit The three cueing system the searchlights model in England is a theory that has been circulating since the 1980s Its roots are in the theories proposed in 1960s by Ken Goodman and Marie Clay that eventually became whole language reading recovery and guided reading e g Fountas and Pinnell early reading programs 362 As of 2010 75 of teachers in the United States teach the three cueing system 344 It proposes that children who are stuck on a word should use various cues to figure it out and determine guess its meaning The meaning cues are semantic does it make sense in the context syntactic is it a noun verb etc and graphophonic what are the letter sound relationships It is also known as MSV Meaning Sentence structure syntax and Visual information such as the letters in the words According to some three cueing is not the most effective way for beginning readers to learn how to decode printed text 363 While a cueing system does help students to make better guesses it does not help when the words become more sophisticated and it reduces the amount of practice time available to learn essential decoding skills They also say that students should first decode the word then they can use context to figure out the meaning of any word they don t understand Consequently researchers such as cognitive neuroscientists Mark Seidenberg and professor Timothy Shanahan do not support the theory They say the three cueing system s value in reading instruction is a magnificent work of the imagination and it developed not because teachers lack integrity commitment motivation sincerity or intelligence but because they were poorly trained and advised about the science of reading 364 365 366 In England the simple view of reading and synthetic phonics are intended to replace the searchlights multi cueing model 367 368 On the other hand some researchers suggest that context can be useful not to guess a word but to confirm a word after it has been phonetically decoded 133 Three Ps 3Ps Pause Prompt Praise Edit The three Ps approach is used by teachers tutors and parents to guide oral reading practice with a struggling reader 369 For some it is merely a variation of the above mentioned three cueing system However for others it is very different 370 For example when a student encounters a word they do not know or get it wrong the three steps are 1 pause to see if they can fix it themselves even letting them read on a little 2 prompt them with strategies to find the correct pronunciation and 3 praise them directly and genuinely In the prompt step the tutor does not suggest the student skip the word or guess the word based on the pictures or the first sound Instead they encourage student to use their decoding training to sound out the word and use the context meaning to confirm they have found the correct word Guided reading reading workshop shared reading leveled reading silent reading and self teaching Edit Guided reading is small group reading instruction that is intended to allow for the differences in students reading abilities 371 While they are reading students are encouraged to use strategies from the three cueing system the searchlights model or MSV It is no longer supported by the Primary National Strategy in England as Synthetic phonics is the officially recognized method for teaching reading 372 373 In the United States Guided Reading is part of the Reading Workshop model of reading instruction 374 The reading workshop model provides students with a collection of books allows them the choice of what to read limits students reading to texts that can be easily read by them provides teaching through mini lessons and monitors and supports reading comprehension development through one on one teacher student conferences Some reports state that it is unlikely to lead to literacy success for all students particularly those lacking foundational skills 375 376 Shared oral reading is an activity whereby the teacher and students read from a shared text that is determined to be at the students reading level Leveled reading involves students reading from leveled books at an appropriate reading level A student that struggles with a word is encouraged to use a cueing system e g three cueing searchlights model or MSV to guess its meaning There are many systems that purport to gauge the students reading levels using scales incorporating numbers letters colors and lexile readability scores 377 Silent reading and self teaching is a common practice in elementary schools A 2007 study in the United States found that on average only 37 of class time was spent on active reading instruction or practice and the most frequent activity was students reading silently Based on the limited available studies on silent reading the NRP concluded that independent silent reading did not prove an effective practice when used as the only type of reading instruction to develop fluency and other reading skills particularly with students who have not yet developed critical alphabetic and word reading skills 378 Other studies indicate that unlike silent reading oral reading increases phonological effects According to some the classroom method called DEAR Drop everything and read is not the best use of classroom time for students who are not yet fluent 379 However according to the self teaching hypothesis when fluent readers practice decoding words while reading silently they learn what whole words look like spelling leading to improved fluency and comprehension 380 381 The suggestion is if some students are fluent readers they could read silently while the teacher works with the struggling readers Logographic languages Edit Hieroglyph one of the earliest forms of writing Languages such as Chinese and Japanese are normally written fully or partly in logograms hanzi and kanji respectively which represent a whole word or morpheme with a single character There are a large number of characters and the sound that each makes must be learned directly or from other characters which contain hints in them For example in Japanese the On reading of the kanji 民 is min and the related kanji 眠 shares the same On reading min the right hand part shows the character s pronunciation However this is not true for all characters Kun readings on the other hand have to be learned and memorized as there is no way to tell from each character Ruby characters are used in textbooks to help children learn the sounds that each logogram makes These are written in a smaller size using an alphabetic or syllabic script For example hiragana is typically used in Japanese and the pinyin romanization into Latin alphabet characters is used in Chinese 漢 かん字 じ or かん じ漢 字The examples above each spell the word kanji which is made up of two kanji characters 漢 kan written in hiragana as かん and 字 ji written in hiragana as じ Textbooks are sometimes edited as a cohesive set across grades so that children will not encounter characters they are not yet expected to have learned The Reading Wars phonics vs whole language EditA debate has been going on for decades about the merits of phonics vs whole language It is sometimes referred to as the Reading Wars 382 383 Phonics was a popular way to learn reading in the 19th century William Holmes McGuffey 1800 1873 an American educator author and Presbyterian minister who had a lifelong interest in teaching children compiled the first four of the McGuffey Readers in 1836 384 McGuffey s Primer 1836 Then in 1841 Horace Mann the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education advocated for a whole word method of teaching reading to replace phonics Others such as Rudolf Flesch advocated for a return to phonics in his book Why Johnny Can t Read 1955 The whole word method received support from Kenneth J Goodman who wrote an article in 1967 entitled Reading A psycholinguistic guessing game 385 Although not supported by scientific studies the theory became very influential as the whole language method 386 342 Since the 1970s some whole language supporters such as Frank Smith psycholinguist are unyielding in arguing that phonics should be taught little if at all 387 Yet other researchers say instruction in phonics and phonemic awareness are critically important and essential to develop early reading skills 354 388 63 In 2000 the National Reading Panel U S identified five ingredients of effective reading instruction of which phonics is one the other four are phonemic awareness fluency vocabulary and comprehension 89 Reports from other countries such as the Australian report on Teaching reading 2005 284 and the U K Independent review of the teaching of early reading Rose Report 2006 have also supported the use of phonics Some notable researchers such as Stanislas Dehaene and Mark Seidenberg have clearly stated their disapproval of whole language 389 390 Furthermore a 2017 study in the UK that compared teaching with phonics vs teaching whole written words concluded that phonics is more effective saying our findings suggest that interventions aiming to improve the accuracy of reading aloud and or comprehension in the early stages of learning should focus on the systematicities present in print to sound relationships rather than attempting to teach direct access to the meanings of whole written words 391 More recently some educators have advocated for the theory of balanced literacy purported to combine phonics and whole language yet not necessarily in a consistent or systematic manner It may include elements such as word study and phonics mini lessons differentiated learning cueing leveled reading shared reading guided reading independent reading and sight words 392 393 394 395 According to a survey in 2010 68 of K 2 teachers in the United States practice balanced literacy however only 52 of teachers included phonics in their definition of balanced literacy In addition 75 of teachers teach the three cueing system i e meaning structure visual or semantic syntactic graphophonic that has its roots in whole language 344 396 In addition some phonics supporters assert that balanced literacy is merely whole language by another name 397 And critics of whole language and sceptics of balanced literacy such as neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg state that struggling readers should not be encouraged to skip words they find puzzling or rely on semantic and syntactic cues to guess words 354 348 398 Over time a growing number of countries and states have put greater emphasis on phonics and other evidence based practices see Phonics practices by country or region Requirements for proficient reading EditAccording to the report by the US National Reading Panel NRP in 2000 89 399 the elements required for proficient reading of alphabetic languages are phonemic awareness phonics fluency 323 vocabulary 311 and text comprehension In non Latin languages proficient reading does not necessarily require phonemic awareness but rather an awareness of the individual parts of speech which may also include the whole word as in Chinese characters or syllables as in Japanese as well as others depending on the writing system being employed The Rose Report from the Department for Education in England makes it clear that in their view systematic phonics specifically synthetic phonics is the best way to ensure that children learn to read such that it is now the law 285 400 401 402 In 2005 the government of Australia published a report stating The evidence is clear that direct systematic instruction in phonics during the early years of schooling is an essential foundation for teaching children to read 403 Phonics has been gaining acceptance in many other countries as can be seen from this page Practices by country or region Other important elements are rapid automatized naming RAN 404 405 a general understanding of the orthography of the language and practice Rapid automatized naming the ability to say quickly the names of letters objects and colors predicts an individual s ability to read This might be linked to the importance of quick retrieval of phonological representations from long term memory in reading and the importance of object naming circuits in the left cerebral hemisphere that are recruited to underpin a learner s word recognition abilities 404 405 Orthography describes or defines the set of symbols used in a language and the rules about how to write these symbols i e the conventional spelling system of a language Orthographic Development proceeds in increasing complexity as a person learns to read Some of the first things to be learnt are the orthographic conventions such as the direction of reading and that there are differing typefaces and capitalization for each symbol In general this means that to read proficiently the reader has to understand elements of a written language In the United States a limited amount of spelling is taught up to grade four and beyond that we gain orthographic expertise by reading so the amount and variety of texts that children read is important 406 Practice Repeated exposure to print improves many aspects of learning to read and most importantly the knowledge of individual words It increases the speed at which high frequency words are recognized which allows for increased fluency in reading It also supports orthographic development reading comprehension and vocabulary development Research suggests there is value in reading words both in isolation and in context Reading words in isolation promotes faster reading times and better memory for spellings whereas reading words in context improves semantic knowledge and comprehension 407 Reading difficulties EditDifficulties in reading typically involve difficulty with one or more of the following decoding reading rate reading fluency or reading comprehension Decoding Edit Main article Dyslexia Brain activity in young and older children can be used to predict future reading skill Cross model mapping between the orthographic and phonologic areas in the brain are critical in reading Thus the amount of activation in the left dorsal inferior frontal gyrus while performing reading tasks can be used to predict later reading ability and advancement Young children with higher phonological word characteristic processing have significantly better reading skills later on than older children who focus on whole word orthographic representation 408 Difficulty with decoding is marked by having not acquired the phoneme grapheme mapping concept One specific disability characterized by poor decoding is dyslexia defined as brain based type of learning disability that specifically impairs a person s ability to read 409 These individuals typically read at levels significantly lower than expected despite having normal intelligence It can also be inherited in some families and recent studies have identified a number of genes that may predispose an individual to developing dyslexia Although the symptoms vary from person to person common characteristics among people with dyslexia are difficulty with spelling phonological processing the manipulation of sounds and or rapid visual verbal responding 409 Adults can have either developmental dyslexia 410 411 412 413 or acquired dyslexia which occurs after a brain injury stroke 414 415 or dementia 416 417 411 412 414 415 Reading rate Edit Average reading rate in words per minute wpm depending on age and measured with different tests in English French and German Individuals with reading rate difficulties tend to have accurate word recognition and normal comprehension abilities but their reading speed is below grade level 418 Strategies such as guided reading guided repeated oral reading instruction may help improve a reader s reading rate 419 Many studies show that increasing reading speed improves comprehension 420 Reading speed requires a long time to reach adult levels According to Carver 1990 children s reading speed increases throughout the school years On average from grade 2 to college reading rate increases 14 standard length words per minute each year where one standard length word is defined as six characters in text including punctuation and spaces 421 Scientific studies have demonstrated that speed reading defined here as capturing and decoding words faster than 900 wpm is not feasible given the limits set by the anatomy of the eye 422 Reading fluency Edit Individuals with reading fluency difficulties fail to maintain a fluid smooth pace when reading Strategies used for overcoming reading rate difficulties are also useful in addressing reading fluency issues 399 Reading comprehension Edit Main article Reading comprehension Individuals with reading comprehension difficulties are commonly described as poor comprehenders 423 They have normal decoding skills as well as a fluid rate of reading but have difficulty comprehending text when reading The simple view of reading holds that reading comprehension requires both decoding skills and oral language comprehension ability 147 Increasing vocabulary knowledge listening skills and teaching basic comprehension techniques may help facilitate better reading comprehension It is suggested that students receive brief explicit instruction in reading comprehension strategies in the areas of vocabulary noticing understanding and connecting ideas 424 Scarborough s Reading Rope also outlines some of the essential ingredients of reading comprehension Radio Reading Service Edit In some countries a radio reading service provides a service for blind people and others who chose to hear newspapers books and other printed material read aloud typically by volunteers An example is Australia s Radio Print Handicapped Network with stations in capital cities and some other areas Reading achievement national and international reports EditThe following organizations measure and report on reading achievement in the United States and internationally NAEP Edit Main article NAEP In the United States the National Assessment of Educational Progress or NAEP The Nation s Report Card is the national assessment of what students know and can do in various subjects Four of these subjects reading writing mathematics and science are assessed most frequently and reported at the state and district level usually for grades 4 and 8 425 In 2019 with respect to the reading skills of the nation s grade four public school students 35 performed at or above the NAEP Proficient level solid academic performance and 65 performed at or above the NAEP Basic level partial mastery of the proficient level skills It is believed that students who read below the basic level do not have sufficient support to complete their schoolwork 426 Reading scores for the individual States and Districts are available on the NAEP site Between 2017 and 2019 Mississippi was the only State that had a grade four reading score increase and 17 States had a score decrease 427 The covid 19 pandemic had a significant impact on reading results in the USA In 2022 the average basic level reading score was 3 points lower compared to 2019 the previous assessment year and roughly equivalent to the first reading assessment in 1992 30 years previously Students who are black American Indian Alaska Native Hispanic and Native Hawaiian Other Pacific Islander were disproportionately affected This was substantiated by other sources 428 In 2022 no states had a reading score increase and 30 states had a score decrease 429 The results by race ethnicity were as follows 70 Race Ethnicity 2019 Proficient level 2022 Proficient level 2019 Basic level 2022 Basic levelAsian 57 58 82 83 Asian Pacific Islander 55 56 81 81 White 45 42 77 73 Two or more races 40 38 72 68 National Average 35 33 65 63Native Hawaiian Other Pacific Islander 25 23 58 50 Hispanic 23 21 55 50 American Indian Alaska Native 19 18 50 43 Black 18 17 48 44 NAEP reading assessment results are reported as average scores on a 0 500 scale 430 The Basic Level is 208 and the Proficient Level is 238 431 The average reading score for grade four public school students was 219 432 Female students had an average score that was 7 points higher than male students Students who were eligible for the National School Lunch Program NSLP had an average score that was 28 points lower than that for students who were not eligible PIAAC Edit Main article PIAAC The Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies PIAAC is an international study by the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD of cognitive and workplace skills in 39 countries between 2011 and 2018 60 The Survey measures adults proficiency in key information processing skills literacy numeracy and problem solving The focus is on the working age population between the ages of 16 and 65 For example the study shows the ranking of 38 countries as to the literacy proficiency among adults According to the 2019 OECD report the five countries with the highest ranking are Japan Finland the Netherlands Sweden and Australia whereas Canada is 12th England UK is 16th and the United States is 19th 136 It is also worth noting that the PIAAC table A2 1 2013 shows the percentage of adults reading at or below level one out of five levels Some examples are Japan 4 9 Finland 10 6 Netherlands 11 7 Australia 12 6 Sweden 13 3 Canada 16 4 England 16 4 and the United States 16 9 61 PIRLS Edit Main article PIRLS The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study PIRLS is an international study of reading comprehension achievement in fourth graders 55 It is designed to measure children s reading literacy achievement to provide a baseline for future studies of trends in achievement and to gather information about children s home and school experiences in learning to read The 2016 PIRLS report shows the 4th grade reading achievement by country in two categories literary and informational The ten countries with the highest overall reading average are the Russian Federation Singapore Hong Kong SAR Ireland Finland Poland Northern Ireland Norway Chinese Taipei and England UK Some others are the United States 15th Australia 21st Canada 23rd and New Zealand 33rd 56 57 58 PISA Edit Main article PISA The Programme for International Student Assessment PISA measures 15 year old school pupils scholastic performance on mathematics science and reading 59 In 2018 of the 79 participating countries economies on average students in Beijing Shanghai Jiangsu and Zhejiang China and Singapore outperformed students from all other countries in reading mathematics and science 21 countries have reading scores above the OECD average scores and many of the scores are not statistically different 433 434 Critics however say PISA is fundamentally flawed in its underlying view of education its implementation and its interpretation and impact on education globally 435 In 2014 more than 100 academics from around the world called for a moratorium on PISA 436 437 EQAO Edit The Education Quality and Accountability Office EQAO is an agency of the government of Ontario Canada that reports on the publicly funded school system 438 In 2022 it reported that 77 of grade three students in Ontario met the provincial standard in reading in 2018 2019 This decreased to 73 in 2021 2022 53 of Grade three students with special needs met the standard in 2018 2019 and this reduced to 48 in 2021 2022 72 of grade three students who are English language learners met the standard in 2018 2019 and this reduced to 67 in 2021 2022 439 History of reading Edit A Catholic monk reading in a monastery library The history of reading dates back to the invention of writing during the 4th millennium BC Although reading print text is now an important way for the general population to access information this has not always been the case With some exceptions only a small percentage of the population in many countries was considered literate before the Industrial Revolution Some of the pre modern societies with generally high literacy rates included classical Athens and the Islamic Caliphate 440 Scholars assume that reading aloud Latin clare legere was the more common practice in antiquity and that reading silently legere tacite or legere sibi was unusual 441 In his Confessions Saint Augustine remarks on Saint Ambrose s unusual habit of reading silently in the 4th century AD 441 442 During the Age of Enlightenment elite individuals promoted passive reading rather than creative interpretation Some thinkers of that era believed that construction or the creation of writing and producing a product was a sign of initiative and active participation in society and viewed consumption reading as simply taking in what constructors made 443 Also during this era writing was considered superior to reading in society They considered readers of that time passive citizens because they did not produce a product Michel de Certeau argued that the elites of the Age of Enlightenment were responsible for this general belief Michel de Certeau believed that reading required venturing into an author s land but taking away what the reader wanted specifically This view held that writing was a superior art to reading within the hierarchical constraints of the era 443 Before the mid 18th century children s books in England usually had religious or instructional school books conduct books themes but by the mid to late 18th century books were designed to delight and novels would come into popularity By the end of the 18th century literature made for children were flourishing with perhaps as many as 50 books being printed every year in major cities 444 In 18th century Europe the then new practice of reading alone in bed was for a time considered dangerous and immoral As reading became less a communal oral practice and more a private silent one and as sleeping increasingly moved from communal sleeping areas to individual bedrooms some raised concern that reading in bed presented various dangers such as fires caused by bedside candles Some modern critics however speculate that these concerns were based on the fear that readers especially women could escape familial and communal obligations and transgress moral boundaries through the private fantasy worlds in books 445 Also during the 18th century in England reading novels was often criticized as a time wasting pastime when contrasted with the cultural seriousness carried by reading history classical literature or poetry 446 Chapbooks were small cheap forms of literature for children and adults that were sold on the streets and covered a range of subjects such as ghost stories crime fantasy politics and disaster updates They provided simple reading matter and were commonplace across England from the 17th to the 19th century They are known to have been passed down the generations Their readership would have been largely among the poor and among children of the middle class 447 Reading became even more pronounced in the 19th century with public notes broadsides catchpennies and printed songs becoming common street literature it informed and entertained the public before newspapers became readily available Advertisements and local news such as offers of rewards for catching criminals or for the return of stolen goods appeared on public notices and handbills while cheaply printed sheets broadsheets and ballads covered political or criminal news such murders trials executions disasters and rescues 448 Technological improvements during the industrial revolution in printing and paper production and new distribution networks enabled by improved roads and rail helped push an increased demand for printed reading matter Besides this social and educational changes such as wider schooling rates along with increasing literacy rates particularly among the middle and working classes helped boost a new mass market for printed material 449 The arrival of gas and electric lighting in private homes meant that reading after dark no longer had to take place by oil lamp or candlelight 446 In 19th century Russia reading practices were highly varied as people from a wide range of social statuses read Russian and foreign language texts ranging from high literature to the peasant lubok 450 Provincial readers such as Andrei Chikhachev give evidence of the omnivorous appetite for fiction and non fiction alike among middling landowners 451 History of learning to read EditThe history of learning to read dates back to the invention of writing during the 4th millennium BC 452 With respect to the English language in the United States the phonics principle of teaching reading was first presented by John Hart in 1570 who suggested the teaching of reading should focus on the relationship between what is now referred to as graphemes letters and phonemes sounds 453 In the colonial times of the United States reading material was not written specifically for children so instruction material consisted primarily of the Bible and some patriotic essays The most influential early textbook was The New England Primer published in 1687 There was little consideration given to the best ways to teach reading or assess reading comprehension 454 455 Phonics was a popular way to learn reading in the 1800s William Holmes McGuffey 1800 1873 an American educator author and Presbyterian minister who had a lifelong interest in teaching children compiled the first four of the McGuffey Readers in 1836 384 The whole word method was introduced into the English speaking world by Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet the director of the American School for the Deaf 456 It was designed to educate deaf people by placing a word alongside a picture 457 In 1830 Gallaudet described his method of teaching children to recognize a total of 50 sight words written on cards 458 459 Horace Mann the Secretary of the Board of Education of Massachusetts U S favored the method for everyone and by 1837 the method was adopted by the Boston Primary School Committee 460 By 1844 the defects of the whole word method became so apparent to Boston schoolmasters that they urged the Board to return to phonics 461 In 1929 Samuel Orton a neuropathologist in Iowa concluded that the cause of children s reading problems was the new sight method of reading His findings were published in the February 1929 issue of the Journal of Educational Psychology in the article The Sight Reading Method of Teaching Reading as a Source of Reading Disability 462 The meaning based curriculum came to dominate reading instruction by the second quarter of the 20th century In the 1930s and 1940s reading programs became very focused on comprehension and taught children to read whole words by sight Phonics was taught as a last resort 454 Edward William Dolch developed his list of sight words in 1936 by studying the most frequently occurring words in children s books of that era Children are encouraged to memorize the words with the idea that it will help them read more fluently Many teachers continue to use this list although some researchers consider the theory of sight word reading to be a myth Researchers and literacy organizations suggest it would be more effective if students learned the words using a phonics approach 332 463 464 In 1955 Rudolf Flesch published a book entitled Why Johnny Can t Read a passionate argument in favor of teaching children to read using phonics adding to the reading debate among educators researchers and parents 465 An American girl reading a newspaper 1969 Government funded research on reading instruction in the United States and elsewhere began in the 1960s In the 1970s and 1980s researchers began publishing studies with evidence on the effectiveness of different instructional approaches During this time researchers at the National Institutes of Health NIH conducted studies that showed early reading acquisition depends on the understanding of the connection between sounds and letters i e phonics However this appears to have had little effect on educational practices in public schools 466 467 In the 1970s the whole language method was introduced This method de emphasizes the teaching of phonics out of context e g reading books and is intended to help readers guess the right word 468 It teaches that guessing individual words should involve three systems letter clues meaning clues from context and the syntactical structure of the sentence It became the primary method of reading instruction in the 1980s and 1990s However it is falling out of favor The neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg refers to it as a theoretical zombie because it persists in spite of a lack of supporting evidence 390 340 It is still widely practiced in related methods such as sight words the three cueing system and balanced literacy 469 466 470 In the 1980s the three cueing system the searchlights model in England emerged According to a 2010 survey 75 of teachers in the United States teach the three cueing system 344 It teaches children to guess a word by using meaning cues semantic syntactic and graphophonic While the system does help students to make better guesses it does not help when the words become more sophisticated and it reduces the amount of practice time available to learn essential decoding skills Consequently present day researchers such as cognitive neuroscientists Mark Seidenberg and professor Timothy Shanahan do not support the theory 364 365 366 In England synthetic phonics is intended to replace the searchlights multi cueing model 367 368 In the 1990s Balanced literacy arose It is a theory of teaching reading and writing that is not clearly defined It may include elements such as word study and phonics mini lessons differentiated learning cueing leveled reading shared reading guided reading independent reading and sight words 392 393 394 395 For some balanced literacy strikes a balance between whole language and phonics Others say balanced literacy in practice usually means the whole language approach to reading 471 According to a survey in 2010 68 of K 2 teachers in the United States practice balanced literacy Furthermore only 52 of teachers included phonics in their definition of balanced literacy 344 In 1996 the California Department of Education took an increased interest in using phonics in schools 472 And in 1997 the department called for grade one teaching in concepts about print phonemic awareness decoding and word recognition and vocabulary and concept development 473 By 1998 in the U K whole language instruction and the searchlights model were still the norm however there was some attention to teaching phonics in the early grades as seen in the National Literacy Strategies 474 475 21st century Edit In 2000 the National Reading Panel in the U S identified five ingredients of effective reading instruction phonemic awareness phonics fluency vocabulary and comprehension Beginning in 2000 several reading research reports were published 2000 The National Reading Panel U S that identified five ingredients of effective reading instruction phonemic awareness phonics fluency vocabulary and comprehension 89 2005 The Australian report on Teaching reading that supports the use of systematic phonics 284 2006 The United Kingdom Independent review of the teaching of early reading Rose Report 2006 that supports systematic synthetic phonics 476 In Australia the 2005 report Teaching Reading recommends teaching reading based on evidence and teaching systematic explicit phonics within an integrated approach 477 478 The executive summary says systematic phonics instruction is critical if children are to be taught to read well whether or not they experience reading difficulties 403 As of October 5 2018 update The State Government of Victoria Australia publishes a website containing a comprehensive Literacy Teaching Toolkit including effective reading instruction phonics and sample phonics lessons 479 480 In Scotland a seven year study the Clackmannanshire Report was published in 2005 481 It compared analytic phonics with synthetic phonics and advantaged students with disadvantaged students The report found that using synthetic phonics children from lower socio economic backgrounds performed at the same level as children from advantaged backgrounds in primary school whereas with analytic phonics teaching they did significantly less well and boys performed better than or as well as girls 296 A five year follow up of the study concluded that the beneficial effects were long lasting in fact the reading gains increased 482 Subsequently Education Scotland concluded that explicit systematic phonics programs usually embedded in a rich literacy environment give an additional four months progress over other programs such as whole language and are particularly beneficial for young learners aged 4 7 There is evidence though less secure that synthetic phonics programs may be more beneficial than analytic phonics programs however it is most important to teach systematically 483 Until 2006 the English language syllabus of Singapore advocated a balance between decoding and meaning based instruction phonics and whole language However a review in 2006 advocated for a systematic approach Subsequently the syllabus in 2010 had no mention of whole language and advocated for a balance between systematic and explicit instruction and a rich language environment It called for increased instruction in oral language skills together with phonemic awareness and the key decoding elements of synthetic phonics analytic phonics and analogy phonics 484 In 2007 the Department of Education DE in Northern Ireland was required by law to teach children foundational skills in phonological awareness and the understanding that words are made up of sounds and syllables and that sounds are represented by letters phoneme grapheme awareness 485 In 2010 the DE required that teachers receive support in using evidence based practices to teach literacy and numeracy including a systematic programme of high quality phonics that is explicit structured well paced interactive engaging and applied in a meaningful context 486 In 2008 the National Center for Family Literacy with the National Institute for Literacy 487 published a report entitled Developing Early Literacy It is a synthesis of the scientific research on the development of early literacy skills in children ages zero to five as determined by the National Early Literacy Panel that was convened in 2002 Amongst other things the report concluded that code focused interventions on the early literacy and conventional literacy skills of young children yield a moderate to large effect on the predictors of later reading and writing irrespective of socioeconomic status ethnicity or population density 488 In 2010 the Common Core State Standards Initiative was introduced in the United States The English Language Arts Standards for Reading Foundational Skills in Grades 1 5 include recommendations to teach print concepts phonological awareness phonics and word recognition and fluency 489 In the United Kingdom a 2010 government white paper contained plans to train all primary school teachers in phonics 490 The 2013 curriculum 491 has statutory requirements that amongst other things students in years one and two be capable in using systematic synthetic phonics in regards to word reading reading comprehension fluency and writing This includes having skills in sound to graphemes decoding and blending 401 402 United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO In 2013 the National Commission for UNESCO launched the Leading for Literacy project to develop the literacy skills of grades 1 and 2 students The project facilitates the training of primary school teachers in the use of a synthetic phonics program From 2013 to 2015 the Trinidad and Tobago Ministry of Education appointed seven reading specialist to help primary and secondary school teachers improve their literacy instruction From February 2014 to January 2016 literacy coaches were hired in selected primary schools to assist teachers of kindergarten grades 1 and 2 with pedagogy and content of early literacy instruction Primary schools have been provided with literacy resources for instruction including phonemic awareness word recognition vocabulary manipulatives phonics and comprehension In 2013 the State of Mississippi passed the Literacy Based Promotion Act 492 493 The Mississippi Department of Education provided resources for teachers in the areas of phonemic awareness phonics vocabulary fluency comprehension and reading strategies 494 495 427 The school curriculum in Ireland focuses on ensuring children are literate in both the English language and the Irish language The 2014 teachers Professional Development guide 496 covers the seven areas of attitude and motivation fluency comprehension word identification vocabulary phonological awareness phonics and assessment It recommends that phonics be taught in a systematic and structured way and is preceded by training in phonological awareness In 2014 the California Department of Education said children should know how to decode regularly spelled one syllable words by mid first grade and be phonemically aware especially able to segment and blend phonemes 497 In grades two and three children receive explicit instruction in advanced phonic analysis and reading multi syllabic and more complex words 498 In 2015 the New York State Public School system revised its English Language Arts learning standards calling for teaching involving reading or literacy experiences as well as phonemic awareness from prekindergarten to grade 1 and phonics and word recognition for grades 1 4 499 That same year the Ohio Legislature set minimum standards requiring the use of phonics including guidelines for teaching phonemic awareness phonics fluency vocabulary and comprehension 500 501 502 In 2016 the What Works Clearinghouse 204 and the Institute of Education Sciences published an Educator s Practice Guide on Foundational Skills to Support Reading for Understanding in Kindergarten Through 3rd Grade 503 It contains four recommendations to support reading 1 teach students academic language skills including the use of inferential and narrative language and vocabulary knowledge 2 develop awareness of the segments of sounds in speech and how they link to letters phonemic awareness and phonics 3 teach students to decode words analyze word parts and write and recognize words phonics and synthetic phonics and 4 ensure that each student reads connected text every day to support reading accuracy fluency and comprehension 504 505 In 2016 the Colorado Department of Education updated their Elementary Teacher Literacy Standards with standards for development in the areas of phonology phonics and word recognition fluent automatic reading vocabulary text comprehension handwriting spelling and written expression 506 At the same time the Department of Education in Delaware U S produced a plan to improve education results It states that students who aren t reading at grade level aren t able to comprehend up to half of the printed fourth grade curriculum Furthermore it says a gap exists between what is known about how to teach reading and how teachers are able to teach reading It goes on to say that teachers preparation programs must include evidence based practices including the five essential components of reading instruction phonemic awareness phonics fluency vocabulary and comprehension 507 The European Literacy Policy Network ELINET 2016 508 reports that Hungarian children in grades one and two receive explicit instruction in phonemic awareness and phonics as the route to decode words In grades three and four they continue to apply their knowledge of phonics however the emphasis shifts to the more meaning focused technical aspects of reading and writing i e vocabulary types of texts reading strategies spelling punctuation and grammar 509 In 2017 the Ohio Department of Education adopted Reading Standards for Foundational Skills K 12 laying out a systematic approach to teaching phonological awareness in kindergarten and grade one and grade level phonics and word analysis skills in decoding words including fluency and comprehension in grades 1 5 73 In 2018 the Arkansas Department of Education published a report about their new initiative known as R I S E Reading Initiative for Student Excellence that was the result of The Right to Read Act passed in 2017 236 The first goal of this initiative is to provide educators with the in depth knowledge and skills of the science of reading and evidence based instructional strategies 510 This included a focus on research based instruction on phonological awareness phonics vocabulary fluency and comprehension specifically systematic and explicit instruction 511 512 As of 2018 update the Ministry of Education in New Zealand has online information to help teachers to support their students in years 1 3 in relation to sounds letters and words It states that phonics instruction is not an end in itself and it is not necessary to teach students every combination of letters and sounds 513 In 2018 ScienceDirect published the results of a study of early literacy and numeracy outcomes in developing countries entitled Identifying the essential ingredients to literacy and numeracy improvement Teacher professional development and coaching student textbooks and structured teachers guides 514 It concluded that Including teachers guides was by far the most cost effective intervention Paris France There has been a strong debate in France on the teaching of phonics methode syllabique versus whole language methode globale After the 1990s supporters of the later started defending a so called mixed method also known as Balanced literacy in which approaches from both methods are used Influential researchers in psycho pedagogy cognitive sciences and neurosciences such as Stanislas Dehaene 154 and Michel Fayol have put their heavy scientific weight on the side of phonics In 2018 the ministry created a science educational council that openly supported phonics 515 In April 2018 the minister issued a set of four guiding documents 516 for early teaching of reading and mathematics and a booklet 517 detailing phonics recommendations Some have described his stance as traditionalist 518 but he openly declared that the so called mixed approach is no serious choice 519 In 2019 the Minnesota Department of Education introduced standards requiring school districts to develop a local literacy plan to ensure that all students have achieved early reading proficiency by no later than the end of third grade in accordance with a Statute of the Minnesota Legislature requiring elementary teachers to be able to implement comprehensive scientifically based reading and oral language instruction in the five reading areas of phonemic awareness phonics fluency vocabulary and comprehension 520 521 Also in 2019 26 of grade 4 students in Louisiana were reading at the proficiency level according to the Nation s Report Card as compared to the National Average of 34 522 In March 2019 the Louisiana Department of Education revised their curriculum for K 12 English Language Arts including requirements for instruction in the alphabetic principle phonological awareness phonics and word recognition fluency and comprehension 523 524 And again in 2019 30 of grade 4 students in Texas were reading at the proficiency level according to the Nation s Report Card 522 525 432 In June of that year the Texas Legislature passed a Bill requiring all kindergarten through grade three teachers and principals to begin a teacher literacy achievement academy before the 2022 2023 school year 526 The required content of the academies training includes the areas of The Science of Teaching Reading Oral Language Phonological Awareness Decoding i e Phonics Fluency and Comprehension The goal is to increase teacher knowledge and implementation of evidence based practices to positively impact student literacy achievement 527 In 2021 the State of Connecticut passed an act concerning the right to read that will take effect in 2023 It requires education standards that are evidenced based and scientifically based and focused on competency in the five areas of reading phonemic awareness phonics fluency vocabulary development and reading fluency including oral skills and reading comprehension 528 In the same year the state of North Carolina passed a bill requiring that the teaching of reading be based on the science of reading 529 In Canada on January 27 2022 the Ontario Human Rights Commission OHRC released a report on its public inquiry into the right to read 530 It followed the unanimous decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on November 9 2012 recognizing that learning to read is not a privilege but a basic and essential human right 531 The OHRC s report deals with all students not just those with learning disabilities 532 The inquiry found that Ontario is not fulfilling its obligations to meet students right to read Specifically foundational word reading skills are not effectively targeted in Ontario s education system With science based approaches to reading instruction early screening and intervention we should see only about 5 of students reading below grade level However in 2018 2019 26 of all Ontario Grade 3 students and 53 of Grade 3 students with special education needs students who have an Individual Education Plan were not meeting the provincial EQAO standard The results improved only slightly for Grade 6 students where 19 of all students and 47 of students with special education needs did not meet the provincial standard The Ontario curriculum encourages the use of the three cueing system and balanced literacy which are ineffective because they teach children to guess the meaning of a word rather than sound it out What is required is a evidence based curriculum and instruction including explicit and systematic instruction in phonemic awareness and phonics b evidence based screening assessments c evidence based reading interventions d accommodations that are not used as a substitute for teaching students to read and e professional assessments yet not required for interventions or accommodations The Minister of Education for Ontario responded to this report by saying the government is taking immediate action to improve student literacy and making longer term reforms to modernize the way reading is taught and assessed in schools with a focus on phonics Their plan includes revising the elementary Language curriculum and the Grade 9 English course with scientific evidence based approaches that emphasize direct explicit and systematic instruction and removing references to unscientific discovery and inquiry based learning including the three cueing system by 2023 533 On April 23 2022 the Center for Research in Education and Social Policy at the University of Delaware presented the results of a study of the long term effects of Reading Recovery The conclusion was that the long term impact estimates were significant and negative The study found that children who received Reading Recovery had scores on state reading tests in third and fourth grade that were below the test scores of similar children who did not receive Reading Recovery It suggests three possible hypotheses for this outcome 1 while Reading Recovery produces large impacts on early literacy measures it does not give students the required skills for success in later grades or 2 the gains are lost because students do not receive sufficient intervention in later grades or 3 the impacts of the early intervention was washed out by subsequent experiences 534 535 Between 2013 and 2022 30 States have passed laws or implemented new policies related to evidence based reading instruction 233 For more information on reading educational developments see Phonics practices by country or region Other terms EditSubvocalization is the sense that a reader is combining silent reading with internal sounding of the words Advocates of speed reading claim it can be a bad habit that slows reading and comprehension but some researchers say this is a fallacy since there is no actual speaking involved Instead it may help skilled readers to read since they are utilizing the phonological code to understand words e g the difference between PERmit and perMIT 536 537 538 Speed reading is the claim that you can increase reading speed without experiencing an unacceptable reduction in comprehension or retention Methods include skimming or the chunking of words in a body of text to increase the rate of reading However cognitive neuroscientists such as Stanislas Dehaene and Mark Seidenberg say that claims of reading up to 1 000 words per minute must be viewed with skepticism and that people are as likely to read thousands of words per minute as they are to run faster than the speed of light 332 539 It is estimated that the average reading speed for adults in English is from 175 to 320 words per minute 182 Proofreading is a kind of reading for the purpose of detecting typographical errors It is not reading in the usual sense as they may largely suspend comprehension while doing so 540 Rereading is reading a book more than once One cannot read a book one can only reread it Vladimir Nabokov once said 541 Structure proposition evaluation SPE method popularized by Mortimer Adler in How to Read a Book mainly for non fiction treatise in which one reads a writing in three passes 1 for the structure of the work 2 for the logical propositions made and 3 for evaluation of the merits of the arguments and conclusions This method involves suspending judgment of the work or its arguments until they are fully understood 542 Survey question read recite review SQ3R method often taught in public schools which involves reading so as to be able to teach what is read and is appropriate for instructors preparing to teach material without referring to notes 543 Rapid serial visual presentation RSVP reading involves presenting the words in a sentence one word at a time at the same location on the display screen at a specified eccentricity for studying the timing of vision 544 In Depth Reading is a method that is used to gain deeper meaning and comprehension of a text research detailed information for this assignment and read very difficult sections of a text Five strategies include the RAP strategy the RIDA strategy the Five S method and SQ3R This is also known as Exploratory reading which allows multiple people narrower purpose in order to understand the concepts or arguments of a text 545 546 Gallery EditPaintings Edit Girl Reading 1889 by Fritz von Uhde Oil paint on canvas Young Girl Reading 1924 by George Goodwin Kilburne Young Girls Reading 1891 by Auguste Renoir A Young Girl Reading c 1770 oil painting by Jean Honore Fragonard Miss Auras by John Lavery depicts a woman reading a book A girl reading from the public domain image book What Shall We Do Five Hundred Games and Pastimes by Dorothy Canfield published in 1907 by Frederick A Stokes Company of New York Youth reading Persian miniature by Reza Abbasi 1625 26 Reader a painting by Honore DaumierPhotographs Edit Three girls reading 1880 Girl reading a book featuring the title The Children s Hour and a photograph of a Hippopotamus in Thebarton Primary School South Australia 1945 See also Edit Education portal Linguistics portal Psychology portalEducational software Primary education Reading disability Reading for special needs Women reading in artReferences Edit Definition of Read www merriam webster com Read definition and meaning Collins English Dictionary Read Reproduce mentally or vocally the written or printed words by following the symbols with the eyes or fingers The concise Oxford Dictionary Oxford University Press 1990 ISBN 0198612435 READ English meaning Cambridge Dictionary What is reading Reading Rockets 24 April 2013 National reading panel Teaching child to read Reports of the subgroups PDF 2000 Joyce Terry Borgwaldt S 2013 Typology of Writing Systems John Benjamins Publishing p 2 ISBN 978 9027202703 What Is Braille The American Foundation for the Blind Research evidence on reading for pleasure Department for Education England DFE 57519 2012 2012 The Silent Readers Alberto Manguel Chapter 2 of A History of Reading New York Viking 1996 Retrieved 2013 06 20 How to Read Medieval Handwriting Paleography chaucer fas harvard edu a b Mark Seidenberg 2017 Language at the speed of light p 106 ISBN 978 0465080656 Powell D Stainthorp R Stuart M Garwood H Quinlan P September 2007 An experimental comparison between rival theories of rapid automatized naming performance and its relationship to reading PDF Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 98 1 46 68 doi 10 1016 j jecp 2007 04 003 PMID 17555762 a b c d Pinsker Joe 2019 09 19 Why Some People Become Lifelong Readers The Atlantic Retrieved 2019 10 02 Definition of Literate www merriam webster com Literacy The ability to read and write knowledge or skills in a specific area Oxford learner s dictionary 2021 02 06 LITERACY English meaning Cambridge Dictionary Houston Rab 1983 Literacy and society in the west 1500 1850 Social History 8 3 269 293 doi 10 1080 03071028308567568 Europen Declaration of the Right to Literacy PDF European Literacy Policy Network 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 2021 08 15 Retrieved 2021 02 09 Defining literacy UNESCO PDF 2018 10 18 Skills matter PIAAC OECD PDF 2019 Skills Matter Additional Results from the Survey of Adult Skills OECD Skills Studies 2019 ISBN 978 9264799004 What is literacy National literacy trust 2021 p 1 Introduction to literacy in English Literacy Teaching Toolkit Victoria State Government Australia 2021 04 19 Why literacy International literacy association 2021 02 08 International literacy association 2021 National Assessment of Adult Literacy NAAL nces ed gov Measuring Literacy Performance Levels for Adults 2005 National Academy of Sciences 2005 a b A Brief History of the Quantitative Literacy Movement The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching 2021 Boche B 2014 Multiliteracies in the classroom Emerging conceptions of first year teachers Journal of Language and Literacy Education 10 1 114 135 David R Cole 2009 Multiple Literacies Theory A Deleuzian Perspective Sense ISBN 978 9087909093 Seidenberg Mark 2017 Language at the speed of sight New York Basic Books pp 277 279 ISBN 978 1541617155 Literacy and numeracy Alberta Education 2021 Kress Gunther R 2003 Literacy in the new media age New York Routledge ISBN 978 0415253567 Zarcadoolas C Pleasant A amp Greer D 2006 Advancing health literacy A framework for understanding and action Jossey Bass San Francisco CA Ecological Literacy Education and the Transition to a Postmodern World SUNY Press NY 1991 ISBN 978 0791408742 Reid Gavin Soler Janet Wearmouth Janice 2002 Reid Gavin Soler Janet Wearmouth Janice eds Addressing Difficulties in Literacy Development doi 10 4324 9781315015712 ISBN 978 1315015712 a b Daniels Peter T William Bright eds 1996 The World s Writing Systems Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195079937 Reading for pleasure puts children ahead in the classroom Centre for Longitudinal Studies Sullivan Alice Brown Matt 2015 Reading for pleasure and progress in vocabulary and mathematics British Educational Research Journal 41 6 971 991 doi 10 1002 berj 3180 Menadue Christopher Benjamin Jacups Susan 2018 Who Reads Science Fiction and Fantasy and How Do They Feel About Science Preliminary Findings From an Online Survey SAGE Open 8 2 215824401878094 doi 10 1177 2158244018780946 ISSN 2158 2440 a b Brown Brendan December 12 2016 14 reasons why reading is good for your health Business Insider a b Brown Justin January 31 2018 15 incredible benefits from reading every day Ideapod Imagination And Why Reading Makes You More Creative Why To Read August 30 2018 Long term vocabulary benefits from reading for pleasure in childhood Centre for Longitudinal Studies Sullivan A Brown M 2015 Vocabulary from adolescence to middle age Longitudinal and Life Course Studies 6 2 173 189 doi 10 14301 llcs v6i2 310 Bavishi A Slade MD Levy BR 2016 A chapter a day Association of book reading with longevity Social Science amp Medicine 164 44 48 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2016 07 014 PMC 5105607 PMID 27471129 Koren Marina July 23 2013 Being a Lifelong Bookworm May Keep You Sharp in Old Age Smithsonian Archived from the original on July 7 2013 Retrieved July 5 2013 which cites Wilson Robert S et al July 3 2013 Life span cognitive activity neuropathologic burden and cognitive aging Neurology 81 4 314 321 doi 10 1212 WNL 0b013e31829c5e8a PMC 3772831 PMID 23825173 a b c Louisa C Moats Teaching Reading Is Rocket Science American Federation of Teachers Washington DC USA 2020 PDF p 5 Nations report card reading scores grade 4 2022 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain How Ontario students are performing Ontario Human Rights Commission 2019 2018 2019 Nova Scotia Assessment Literacy and Mathematics Mathematiques in Grade 3 PDF 2019 Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test Education Quality and accountability office PDF 2019 Executive summary Right to Read inquiry report OHRC January 27 2022 a b Progress in International Reading Literacy Study PIRLS Index nces ed gov a b c PIRLS 2016 Exhibit 3 1 Achievement in Reading Purposes PDF a b c Where the world s fourth graders read at the most advanced level Barclays 2017 12 05 5 December 2017 a b Progress in International Reading Literacy Study PIRLS National Report for England 2017 12 12 PDF a b About PISA OECD PISA Retrieved 8 February 2018 a b PIAAC OECD a b c OECD Skills Outlook 2013 p 257 PDF World Bank 2019 Ending Learning Poverty What will it take World Bank Report pp 1 34 hdl 10986 32553 a b c d e f g h Rayner Keith Barbara Foorman Charles A Perfetti David Pesetsky Mark S Seidenberg 2001 How psychological science informs the teaching of reading PDF Psychological Science in the Public Interest 2 2 2 31 74 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 14 4083 doi 10 1111 1529 1006 00004 PMID 26151366 S2CID 134422 The Four Basic Language Skills Gorge Literacy Columbia Gorge Community College www cgcc edu Skills LearnEnglish Center for public education March 2015 NSBA org PDF Put Reading First The National Institute for Literacy PDF Foundational Skills to Support Reading for Understanding in Kindergarten Through 3rd Grade The Institute of Education Sciences PDF Why Reading by the End of Third Grade Matters p 9 the Annie E Casey Foundation 2010 PDF a b NAEP Reading National Achievement Level Results www nationsreportcard gov Many teenagers can t read GCSE exam papers BBC News BBC News 2012 11 16 Third Grade Reading Guarantee Ohio Department of Education a b Reading Standards for Foundational Skills K 12 OHIO Department of Education 2017 National curriculum in England primary curriculum GOV UK PIRLS reading results by country NCES 2016 Mark Seidenberg 2017 Language at the speed of light pp 101 121 ISBN 978 0465080656 Kamil Michael L Pearson P David Moje Elizabeth Birr Afflerbach Peter 2011 Handbook of Reading Research Volume IV Routledge pp 142 143 ISBN 978 0805853421 Harm M W Seidenberg M S August 2000 Phonology Reading Acquisition and Dyslexia Insights from Connectionist Models Psychological Review 106 3 491 528 doi 10 1037 0033 295X 106 3 491 PMID 10467896 Common Core States Standard Initiative USA English language arts p Appendix A 26 Inference says Clare Sealy isn t a skill that can be taught But it can be improved through knowledge ResearchED 24 June 2019 Cohen Sheldon Glass David C Singer Jerome E 1973 Apartment noise auditory discrimination and reading ability in children Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 9 5 407 422 doi 10 1016 S0022 1031 73 80005 8 ISSN 0022 1031 a b Myers L Botting N 2008 Literacy in the mainstream inner city school Its relationship to spoken language PDF Child Language Teaching and Therapy 24 1 95 114 doi 10 1177 0265659007084570 ISSN 0265 6590 S2CID 145153275 a b c Piasta S B Justice L M McGinty A S Kaderavek J N 2012 Increasing Young Children s Contact With Print During Shared Reading Longitudinal Effects on Literacy Achievement 2012 04 17 Child Development 83 3 810 820 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8624 2012 01754 x PMID 22506889 Hempenstall Kerry Whole Language What was that all about National Institute for Direct Instruction National Institute for Direct Instruction Retrieved 29 January 2019 Gough P B Hillinger M L 1980 Learning to read An unnatural act Bulletin of the Orton Society 30 179 196 doi 10 1007 BF02653717 S2CID 143275563 Why Reading Is Not a Natural Process volume 55 number 6 ASCD Alexandria VA 1998 Lyon G Reid 1998 Why Reading Is Not a Natural Process Educational Leadership ISSN 0013 1784 Seidenberg Mark 2017 Language at the speed of sight New York Basic Books pp 114 117 ISBN 978 1541617155 a b c d National Reading Panel NRP Summary Report 2000 PDF Stanislas Dehaene 2010 Reading in the brain Penguin Books pp 199 204 ISBN 978 0143118053 a b English Language Arts Standards Reading Foundational Skills Kindergarten Common Core State Standards Initiative www corestandards org Strauss Valerie 13 January 2015 Report Requiring kindergartners to read as Common Core does may harm some The Washington Post a b Sebastian Suggate Watering the garden before a rainstorm the case of early reading instruction in Contemporary Debates in Childhood Education and Development ed Sebastian Suggate Elaine Reese pp 181 190 Suggate S P Schaughency E A Reese E 2013 Children learning to read later catch up to children reading earlier Early Childhood Research Quarterly 28 33 48 doi 10 1016 j ecresq 2012 04 004 a b PIRLS Achievement Results PIRLS 2016 a b Elkind David 2001 Much Too Early Education Next Brown centre on education policy 9 July 2020 Transitional Kindergarten A Boondoggle by any other name Brown Center on Education Policy 2014 01 14 Overview of the Education System PIRLS 2016 Encyclopedia a b c Refsnes Hege When should reading instruction begin Shanahan on Literacy www shanahanonliteracy com NAEYC Position Statement on Developmentally Appropriate Practice 2020 Proposed Final Draft Not For Citation PDF Myths about reading 20 July 2017 Van Kleeck A Schuele C M 2010 Historical Perspectives on Literacy in Early Childhood American Journal of Speech Language Pathology 19 4 341 355 doi 10 1044 1058 0360 2010 09 0038 PMID 20581109 Education Endowment Foundation Early Literacy Approaches Early Years Toolkit Archived from the original on 3 April 2021 Retrieved 2021 04 03 Education Endowment Foundation Earlier Starting Age Early Years Toolkit Archived from the original on 3 April 2021 Retrieved 2021 04 03 NIH 2011 02 04 High quality Preschool Program Produces Long term Economic Payoff NIH 2015 03 11 Small investment in children s education yields big results What Should Be Emphasized at Each Stage of Reading Development Louisa Moats Carol Tolman Reading Rockets 24 April 2013 Chall Jeanne Sternlicht 1983 Stages of Reading Development ISBN 978 0070103801 Chall Jeanne 1983 Chall on Stages of Reading Development New York McGraw Hill pp 10 24 Maryanne Wolf 2008 Proust and the Squid Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0060933845 Five Stages of Reading Development The Literacy Bug Education www unicef org Big Brother Mouse Books in Laos www bigbrothermouse com Wolf Maryanne Stoodley Catherine J 2007 Proust and the squid the story and science of the reading brain New York Harper pp 115 139 ISBN 978 0060186395 OCLC 471015779 Handbook of Language and Literacy Development A Roadmap from 0 to 60 Months Vocalizing Parent Caregiver theroadmap ualberta ca Ohio s Early Learning amp Development Standards Birth to Kindergarten Entry 2021 Alix Spegel 2012 05 29 Small Change In Reading To Preschoolers Can Help Disadvantaged Kids Catch Up NPR Retrieved 2012 07 17 Simple Yet Powerful Things to Do While Reading Aloud Reading Rockets 19 June 2016 Handbook of Language and Literacy Development A Roadmap from 0 to 60 Months Reading Parent Caregiver theroadmap ualberta ca Maryanne Wolf 2008 Proust and the Squid Harper Perennial pp 115 126 ISBN 978 0060933845 Mark Seidenberg 2017 Language at the speed of light pp 113 117 ISBN 978 0465080656 Maryanne Wolf 2008 Proust and the Squid Harper Perennial pp 126 133 ISBN 978 0060933845 Rimes Reading Rockets 19 March 2013 Phonics Reading Rockets 25 April 2014 Maryanne Wolf 2008 Proust and the Squid Harper Perennial pp 136 143 ISBN 978 0060933845 Comprehension Instruction What Works LD Online 2005 Wolf Maryanne Stoodley Catherine J 2007 Proust and the squid the story and science of the reading brain New York Harper pp 139 143 ISBN 978 0060186395 OCLC 471015779 Maryanne Wolf 2008 Proust and the Squid Harper Perennial pp 143 162 ISBN 978 0060933845 Human language may have evolved to help our ancestors make tools Science Magazine January 13 2015 Stanislas Dehaene 2009 Reading in the brain Penguin books p 63 ISBN 978 0670021109 Mark Seidenberg 2017 Language at the speed of light p 4 ISBN 978 0465080656 a b c d Making Sense of the Science of Reading literacyworldwide org What Is the Science of Reading Timothy Shanahan Reading Rockets 2019 05 29 NAEP 2019 grade 4 reading report PDF a b Skills Matter Additional Results from the Survey of Adult Skills PDF OECD Skills Studies OECD Skills Studies 2019 p 44 doi 10 1787 1f029d8f en ISBN 9789264604667 S2CID 243226424 Seidenberg M S 2013 08 26 The Science of Reading and Its Educational Implications Language Learning and Development 9 4 331 360 doi 10 1080 15475441 2013 812017 PMC 4020782 PMID 24839408 Stanislas Dehaene 2010 Reading in the brain Penguin Books pp 218 234 ISBN 978 0143118053 Kamil Michael L Pearson P David Moje Elizabeth Birr Afflerbach Peter 2011 Handbook of Reading Research Volume IV Routledge p 630 ISBN 978 0805853421 Hoover Wesley A Gough Philip B Overview The Cognitive Foundations of Learning to Read A Framework The Cognitive Foundations of Learning to Read A Framework Castles Anne Rastle Kathleen Nation Kate 11 June 2018 Ending the Reading Wars Reading Acquisition From Novice to Expert Psychological Science in the Public Interest 19 1 27 doi 10 1177 1529100618772271 PMID 29890888 Refsnes Hege Early Reading Intervention Shanahan on Literacy www shanahanonliteracy com Catts Hugh W Hogan Tiffany P Fey Marc E 18 August 2016 Subgrouping Poor Readers on the Basis of Individual Differences in Reading Related Abilities Journal of Learning Disabilities 36 2 151 164 doi 10 1177 002221940303600208 PMC 2848965 PMID 15493430 Kendeou Panayiota Savage Robert Broek Paul June 2009 Revisiting the simple view of reading British Journal of Educational Psychology 79 2 353 370 doi 10 1348 978185408X369020 PMID 19091164 Definition of Dyslexics www merriam webster com Medical Definition of Hyperlexia www merriam webster com a b Simple view of reading Reading rockets 6 June 2019 Hollis Scarborough Haskins Laboratories haskinslabs org Scarborough s Reading Rope A Groundbreaking Infographic The Examiner 7 2 April 2018 Timothy Shanahan 2021 03 06 Why Your Students May Not Be Learning to Comprehend Cutting Laurie Scarborough Hollis 2012 Multiple bases for comprehension difficulties the potential of cognitive and neurobiological profiling for validation of subtypes and development of assessments Reaching an understanding Innovations in how we view reading assessment pp 101 116 Duke Nell K Cartwright Kelly B 2021 05 07 The Science of Reading Progresses Communicating Advances Beyond the Simple View of Reading Reading Research Quarterly 56 doi 10 1002 rrq 411 Theory of mind Ruhl C Simply Psychology 2020 08 07 a b Youtube How the Brain Learns to Read Prof Stanislas Dehaene October 25 2013 YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 10 30 Seidenberg Mark 2017 Language at the speed of light ISBN 978 0465080656 Dehaene Stanislas 2010 Reading in the brain Penguin Books ISBN 978 0143118053 Willingham Daniel T 2017 The reading mind Jossey Bass ISBN 978 1119301370 Stanislas Dehaene 2010 Reading in the brain Penguin Books pp 327 328 ISBN 978 0143118053 How Left Brain Asymmetry Is Related to Reading Ability Neuroscience News Dyslexia Data Consortium 5 April 2022 Retrieved 24 July 2022 Mark A Eckert Kenneth I Vaden Jr Federico Iuricich 5 April 2022 Cortical asymmetries at different spatial hierarchies relate to phonological processing ability PLOS Biology 20 4 e3001591 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 3001591 PMC 8982829 PMID 35381012 Price Cathy J Mechelli Andrea April 2005 Reading and reading disturbance Current Opinion in Neurobiology 15 2 231 238 doi 10 1016 j conb 2005 03 003 PMID 15831408 S2CID 12138423 Turkeltaub Peter E Eden Guinevere F Jones Karen M Zeffiro Thomas A July 2002 Meta Analysis of the Functional Neuroanatomy of Single Word Reading Method and Validation NeuroImage 16 3 765 780 doi 10 1006 nimg 2002 1131 PMID 12169260 S2CID 8122844 a b Dekker Tessa M Mareschal Denis Johnson Mark H Sereno Martin I December 2014 Picturing words Sensorimotor cortex activation for printed words in child and adult readers Brain and Language 139 58 67 doi 10 1016 j bandl 2014 09 009 PMC 4271739 PMID 25463817 a b McCandliss Bruce D Cohen Laurent Dehaene Stanislas July 2003 The visual word form area expertise for reading in the fusiform gyrus Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 7 293 299 doi 10 1016 S1364 6613 03 00134 7 PMID 12860187 S2CID 8534353 a b Cohen Laurent Lehericy Stephane Chochon Florence Lemer Cathy Rivaud Sophie Dehaene Stanislas May 2002 Language specific tuning of visual cortex Functional properties of the Visual Word Form 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regard L art du paradoxe et de l ellipse dans la poetique d Ovide de l omission du regard a la perte de la parole Bulletin de l Association Guillaume Bude Lettres d humanite 61 4 36 48 doi 10 3406 bude 2002 2476 ISSN 1247 6862 Wernicke Carl 1974 Der aphasische Symptomencomplex Eine psychologische Studie auf anatomischer Basis Der aphasische Symptomenkomplex in German Springer 1 70 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 65950 8 1 Aparicio Mario Gounot Daniel Demont Elisabeth Metz Lutz Marie Noelle April 2007 Phonological processing in relation to reading An fMRI study in deaf readers NeuroImage 35 3 1303 1316 doi 10 1016 j neuroimage 2006 12 046 PMID 17329129 S2CID 20053235 Purcell Jeremy J Napoliello Eileen M Eden Guinevere F March 2011 A combined fMRI study of typed spelling and reading NeuroImage 55 2 750 762 doi 10 1016 j neuroimage 2010 11 042 PMC 3035733 PMID 21109009 Hoeft Fumiko Meyler Ann Hernandez Arvel Juel Connie Taylor Hill Heather Martindale Jennifer L McMillon Glenn Kolchugina Galena Black Jessica M Faizi Afrooz Deutsch Gayle K Siok Wai Ting Reiss Allan L Whitfield Gabrieli Susan Gabrieli John D E 2007 Functional and morphometric brain dissociation between dyslexia and reading ability Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104 10 4234 4239 Bibcode 2007PNAS 104 4234H doi 10 1073 pnas 0609399104 PMC 1820738 PMID 17360506 a b Price Cathy J August 2012 A review and synthesis of the first 20years of PET and fMRI studies of heard speech spoken language and reading NeuroImage 62 2 816 847 doi 10 1016 j neuroimage 2012 04 062 ISSN 1053 8119 PMC 3398395 PMID 22584224 a b D Mello Anila M Gabrieli John D E 2018 10 24 Cognitive Neuroscience of Dyslexia Language Speech and Hearing Services in Schools 49 4 798 809 doi 10 1044 2018 lshss dyslc 18 0020 ISSN 0161 1461 PMID 30458541 S2CID 53943474 a b Perkins Kyle Zhang Lawrence Jun 2022 03 24 The Effect of First Language Transfer on Second Language Acquisition and Learning From Contrastive Analysis to Contemporary Neuroimaging RELC Journal 003368822210818 doi 10 1177 00336882221081894 ISSN 0033 6882 S2CID 247720799 a b Li Hehui Yuan Qiming Luo Yue Jia Tao Wuhai June 2022 A new perspective for understanding the contributions of the cerebellum to reading The cerebro cerebellar mapping hypothesis Neuropsychologia 170 108231 doi 10 1016 j neuropsychologia 2022 108231 PMID 35378104 S2CID 247859931 Alvarez Travis A Fiez Julie A September 2018 Current perspectives on the cerebellum and reading development Neuroscience amp Biobehavioral Reviews 92 55 66 doi 10 1016 j neubiorev 2018 05 006 PMC 6078792 PMID 29730484 Eye Movements and Reading Louisa Moats Carol Tolman Reading rockets 2009 Mark Seidenberg 2017 Language at the speed of light pp 61 66 ISBN 978 0465080656 a b Average reading speed Research Digest The British Psychological Society 13 June 2019 How many words do we read per minute A review and meta analysis of reading rate Science Direct 2019 12 10 Journal of Memory and Language 109 104047 December 2019 doi 10 1016 j jml 2019 104047 S2CID 202267075 Hunziker Hans Werner 2006 Im Auge des Lesers foveale und periphere Wahrnehmung vom Buchstabieren zur Lesefreude In the eye of the reader foveal and peripheral perception from letter recognition to the joy of reading in German Transmedia Zurich ISBN 978 3726600686 page needed Coltheart Max Curtis Brent Atkins Paul Haller Micheal 1 January 1993 Models of reading aloud Dual route and parallel distributed processing approaches Psychological Review 100 4 589 608 doi 10 1037 0033 295X 100 4 589 Yamada J Imai H Ikebe Y July 1990 The use of the orthographic lexicon in reading kana words The Journal of General Psychology 117 3 311 323 PMID 2213002 a b Pritchard SC Coltheart M Palethorpe S Castles A October 2012 Nonword reading comparing dual route cascaded and connectionist dual process models with human data J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 38 5 1268 1288 doi 10 1037 a0026703 PMID 22309087 Zorzi Marco Houghton George Butterworth Brian 1998 Two routes or one in reading aloud A connectionist dual process model Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception and Performance 24 4 1131 1161 doi 10 1037 0096 1523 24 4 1131 ISSN 1939 1277 Colin M MacLeod December 18 2011 I said you said the production effect gets personal Psychonomic Bulletin amp Review 18 6 1197 1202 doi 10 3758 s13423 011 0168 8 PMID 21938642 S2CID 11679593 What Is Evidence Based Reading Instruction and How Do You Know It When You See It U S Department of Education March 2012 PDF Reading and the Brain LD at school Canada 15 May 2015 Suarez N Sanchez C R Jimenez J E Anguera M T 2018 Is Reading Instruction Evidence Based Frontiers in psychology 2018 02 01 Frontiers in Psychology 9 7 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2018 00007 PMC 5800299 PMID 29449818 Evidence based practices in schools Reading Rockets 12 January 2013 Schwartz Sarah 4 December 2019 The Most Popular Reading Programs Aren t Backed by Science EdWeek Education Week Best Evidence Encyclopedia Best Evidence Encyclopedia a b c A Quantitative Synthesis of Research on Programs for Struggling Readers in Elementary Schools Best Evidence Encyclopedia PDF Reading Research Quarterly 2021 03 21 doi 10 1002 rrq 379 S2CID 233850664 a b Evidence for ESSA a b c Center for Research and Reform in Education Widespread Support for New Evidence for ESSA Business Insider 2017 02 28 Every student succeeds act US Dept of Education a b Home ProvenTutoring Org Success for All Research Summary PDF 8 September 2021 SFA Science of reading program alignment 2022 a b c WWC Find What Works ies ed gov WWC Review, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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