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Education Board Expected to OK Phonics Rules

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

California today is expected to complete its return to phonics as the foundation of reading instruction when the State Board of Education adopts new guidelines calling for students to learn basic word skills before tackling literature and other material.

The blueprint for classroom lessons will cap four years of reading reform in California and drive fundamental changes in curricula, textbooks and teacher training.

The reading and language arts “framework” will replace 1987 guidelines that called for students to learn to read by being immersed in literature. That approach was based on a method of instruction known as “whole language,” and is now widely blamed for the dismal performance of California’s elementary school students on national tests.

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“The idea of starting with literature certainly didn’t work for large numbers of California children,” said Marion Joseph, a member of the state board. “You can only attend to the great ideas if you can get through the mechanics automatically and fluently.”

Besides shifting philosophies, the new framework urges schools to devote more time to reading.

Pupils in kindergarten through third grade should spend a minimum of 2 1/2 hours on the subject each day. Those in grades four through eight should spend two hours. And high school students should take at least one language arts course per semester.

Now, school districts decide how much time elementary and middle school students spend on language arts and other subjects. High school students are required to take three years of English.

Language arts isn’t the only subject undergoing revision. The board also is scheduled today to approve a separate framework for mathematics.

Both of the instructional road maps will affect schools nationwide because of the influence California exerts as the country’s largest textbook market, analysts say.

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“The textbooks that publishers will develop and submit in California will be the front-list offerings they will try to sell in other states,” said Rick Blake, vice president of the school division for the Assn. of American Publishers.

Few issues have polarized teachers the way reading has divided advocates of phonics and whole language. From colleges of education to elementary school classrooms, instructors have waged sometimes bitter campaigns over how best to teach reading.

The new framework embraces elements of both approaches, reflecting the prevailing view of researchers that effective reading programs need to combine foundational skills and real books. The critical factor, officials say, lies in the sequence of instruction.

The new guidelines make clear that early reading lessons need to explicitly teach fundamental skills.

Starting in kindergarten, pupils need to learn that words are composed of bits of sound, and that those sounds are represented by letters.

As children move through the primary grades, they learn to blend sounds into more complex words.

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At the same time, students must be exposed to literature, expository texts and other materials so they can build their vocabularies and develop a love of reading, according to the framework. Vocabulary and reading comprehension should be taught explicitly as part of the process.

The guidelines emphasize that students must become fluent readers by the end of third grade or risk falling behind as their course work grows increasingly complex.

“The kind of pressure we put on kids after grade three increases dramatically,” said Edward Kame’enui, an education professor at the University of Oregon and coauthor of the framework. “If you can’t read, you can’t get access to the information. You won’t be able to participate, period.”

Officials have held public hearings and revised the framework during the last year. The state board is scheduled to vote on the final draft today.

The vote will culminate a sequence of reforms that began in 1995 after California’s fourth-graders posted the lowest reading test scores among 39 states.

Nearly 60% of the state’s fourth-graders were found to have less than basic skills, preventing them from gaining even a superficial understanding of most texts, the National Assessment of Educational Progress found.

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The scores alarmed educators and lawmakers.

The state’s superintendent of public instruction, Delaine Eastin, convened a task force to fix a “crisis that demands our immediate attention.”

The Legislature passed laws requiring phonics lessons in new textbooks, smaller class sizes in the primary grades and phonics training for new teachers.

Then last November, the State Board of Education adopted new standards for what students need to know at the end of each year.

The framework is based on those standards that, among other things, call for kindergartners to learn sound-letter relationships, develop reading comprehension and write simple words.

Many experts praise the state for taking a comprehensive approach to early reading and for aligning its curriculum, instruction and assessment.

The new standards, they say, are among the best in the nation.

“California’s work gets very high marks because it’s very thorough,” said Christopher Cross, president of the Council for Basic Education, a Washington, D.C., organization that evaluates instructional standards. “It’s well-grounded in research.”

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But the state’s new guidelines also have been criticized by several groups, including the California Reading Assn. and the International Reading Assn. They call the state’s reading formula a narrow approach to early instruction, adding that focusing on word skills alone at the beginning won’t work for some students.

“The heavy emphasis on one-way-fits-all really concerns a lot of educators,” said Armin Schulz, immediate past president of the California Reading Assn. and an associate education professor at Cal State Stanislaus. “Unfortunately, learners don’t come in a neat package and learn the same way. It’s essential for teachers to have a wide menu of instructional approaches.”

Ultimately, classroom teachers will have to make up their own minds because the framework and the standards are voluntary.

Instructors face a daunting task: implementing standards that are nearly 70 pages long and a framework, at more than 300 pages, that is as thick as a phone book.

The state has built in an incentive.

Beginning next spring, California’s standardized test--the Stanford Nine--will be augmented to reflect the new standards in language arts and math.

That fact alone is motivating second-grade teacher Teri Ortt to bolster her language arts lessons with extra doses of the basics.

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“I will be giving my students all of those things, such as decoding skills, grammar skills and reading comprehension through my curriculum,” said Ortt, who works at Hobart Boulevard Elementary in Koreatown. But she added: “If you are a competent educator, you are already doing these things in your classroom.”

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Teaching Blueprint

The reading and language-arts framework is an instructional blueprint to help teachers implement standards for what students need to know in each grade. Below are standards for kindergarten through third grade and the framework’s recommendations on how to deliver the lessons.

Standards:

Kindergarten: Match all consonant and short-vowel sounds to appropriate letters.

First grade: Generate sounds from letters and letter patterns, including consonant blends, and long- and short-vowels, and blend them into recognizable words.

Second grade: Compare and contrast plots, settings and characters presented by different authors.

Third grade: Use the context of words and sentences to find the meaning of unknown words.

Teaching strategy

Review previously introduced letter-sounds and introduce new ones. Model unfamiliar sounds, provide an opportunity for students to match the sounds and then review.

Provide enough time for students to “put the sounds together.” Students will orally blend individual letter-sounds in words and then say the whole words.

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Begin instruction by reviewing the elements of an individual story in which students identify setting, characters, problems and sequence of events. If students have difficulty with specific elements, provide further practice with other stories.

Invite students to suggest other words or passages that can provide clues to the meaning of an unfamiliar word. Ask students to suggest synonyms, and substitute these words in the sentence to see if the meaning changes.

Source: California Department of Education

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