[FocusOnBasics] [Technology] New Issue of "Focus on Basics"
Robin Millar
r.millar at uwinnipeg.ca
Wed Dec 21 19:12:36 EST 2005
You experience and mine differ. Many students I have run into do not
lack basic literacy (e.g. decoding skills) but rather lack fluency to
perceive themselves as readers. More than a phonetic approach is needed
with these folks.
Dr. Robin Millar
Executive Director
Centre for Education and Work
515 Portage Avenue
Winnipeg, MB R3B 2E9
204-786-9395
>>> jn at cloudworld.co.uk 12/20/05 11:56 AM >>>
Hi Robin,
Certainly there is diversity. But a common factor in illiteracy is the
inability to decode. If that can be conquered, then fluency and
experience
will follow through practice. A single, concerted approach to tackling
the
decoding problem can achieve remarkable results,
compared to a mixed or 'balanced' approach, as was discovered in the
Clackmannanshire study.
Cheers from Chiswick,
John
(John Nissen)
----- Original Message -----
From: "Robin Millar" <r.millar at uwinnipeg.ca>
To: <focusonbasics at nifl.gov>
Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2005 2:35 PM
Subject: Re: [FocusOnBasics] [Technology] New Issue of "Focus on
Basics"
> In response to Kathy's comments. I can only say that I heartedly
agree.
> Adults come not only with varying degress of reading abilities, but
> varying degrees of schooling (good and bad) that affect how and what
> kinds of approaches they might need to make progress. We are
talking
> about folks who may have some very specialized reading needs as
well.
> In my experience, most adults lack fluency and experience, decoding
is
> simply one of many issues they need to conquer. I might refer to my
> colleague Pat Campbell in Alberta who has written an excellent guide
for
> teachers of adults called "Teaching Reading to Adults: A Balanced
> approach."
>
> Dr. Robin Millar
> Executive Director
> Centre for Education and Work
> 515 Portage Avenue
> Winnipeg, MB R3B 2E9
> 204-786-9395
>
>>>> kolson2 at columbus.rr.com 12/16/05 12:02 PM >>>
> John,
>
> The lack of research on evidence-based adult education is a major
> reason why
> the ESOL lab school in Oregon was established. It provides
> documentation
> through video and audio for teachers/researchers to observe what
> happens in
> the classroom and which particular teaching approaches are more
> successful.
> This issue of Focus on Basics describes some of the research that
has
> been
> carried on to date. It is my hope that we will someday (soon, I
hope!)
> have
> research which shows or at least hints at which reading methods
produce
> the
> best results. Having said that, though, I am well aware that the
> answer is
> not so simple as our students come with varying degrees of reading
> abilities
> in their native languages and thus are not starting out from the
same
> minimal reading abilities that entering school children are. In
> addition,
> while primary teachers have their students for six or more hours a
> day,
> adult education teachers do not. We have no way to determine whether
> our
> students actually learned their reading outside of class, through
> self-study, from their children, etc. In other words, there are so
> many
> variables to control for that it does make scientifically-based
> research
> very, very difficult.
>
> Kathy Olson
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: focusonbasics-bounces at nifl.gov
> [mailto:focusonbasics-bounces at nifl.gov]
> On Behalf Of John Nissen
> Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2005 5:52 PM
> To: The Technology and Literacy Discussion List
> Cc: familyliteracy at dev.nifl.gov; Debbie Hepplewhite;
> focusonbasics at nifl.gov
> Subject: Re: [FocusOnBasics] [Technology] New Issue of "Focus on
> Basics"
>
>
> Hello all,
>
> I am trying to find out how one should teach literacy skills to
adults.
[snip]
> The evidence of the Clackmannanshire study, shows that the
> [synthetic phonics] approach
> works for everybody, including 'dyslexics' and childen with special
> needs.
> In this study of 300 children in a deprived area of Scotland there
were
> no non-readers after synthetic phonics had been introduced!
>
> Anyway, the UK government is now convinced, and is going to adopt
> synthetic phonics for schools. See
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/4485062.stm.
> Should we adopt it for adults?
>
> Cheers from Chiswick,
>
> John
>
>
> John Nissen
> Cloudworld Ltd - http://www.cloudworld.co.uk
> maker of the assistive reader, WordAloud.
> Try WordAloud with synthetic phonics:
> http://www.cloudworld.co.uk/teaching-synthetic-phonics.htm
> Tel: +44 208 742 3170 Fax: +44 208 742 0202
> Email: info at cloudworld.co.uk
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