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War Over Teaching Reading





In War Over Teaching Reading, a U.S.-Local Clash

By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
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NY Times
3/9/07

MADISON, Wis. --- Surrounded by five first graders learning to read at
Hawthorne Elementary here, Stacey Hodiewicz listened as one boy
struggled over a word.

"Pumpkin," ventured the boy, Parker Kuehni.

"Look at the word," the teacher suggested. Using a method known as whole
language, she prompted him to consider the word's size. "Is it long
enough to be pumpkin?"

Parker looked again. "Pea," he said, correctly.

Call it the $2 million reading lesson.

By sticking to its teaching approach, that is the amount Madison passed
up under Reading First, the Bush administration's ambitious effort to
turn the nation's poor children into skilled readers by the third grade.

The program, which gives $1 billion a year in grants to states, was
supposed to end the so-called reading wars --- the battle over the best
method of teaching reading --- but has instead opened a new and bitter
front in the fight.

According to interviews with school officials and a string of federal
audits and e-mail messages made public in recent months, federal
officials and contractors used the program to pressure schools to adopt
approaches that emphasize phonics, focusing on the mechanics of sounding
out syllables, and to discard methods drawn from whole language that
play down these mechanics and use cues like pictures or context to teach.

Federal officials who ran Reading First maintain that only curriculums
including regular, systematic phonics lessons had the backing of
"scientifically based reading research" required by the program.

But in a string of blistering reports, the Education Department's
inspector general has found that federal officials may have violated
prohibitions in the law against mandating, or even endorsing, specific
curriculums. The reports also found that federal officials overlooked
conflicts of interest among the contractors that advised states applying
for grants, and that in some instances, these contractors wrote reading
programs competing for the money, and stood to collect royalties if
their programs were chosen.

Education Secretary Margaret Spellings has said that the problems in
Reading First occurred largely before she took over in 2005, and that
her office has new guidelines for awarding grants. She declined a
request for an interview.

Madison officials say that a year after Wisconsin joined Reading First,
in 2004, contractors pressured them to drop their approach, which blends
some phonics with whole language in a program called Balanced Literacy.
Instead, they gave up the money --- about $2 million, according to
officials here, who say their program raised reading scores.

In New York City, under pressure from federal officials, school
authorities in 2004 dropped their citywide balanced literacy approach
for a more structured program stronger in phonics, in 49 low-income
schools. At stake was $34 million.

Across the country --- in Illinois, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Maine and
New Jersey --- schools and districts with programs that did not stress
phonics were either rejected for grants or pressured to change their
methods even though some argued, as Madison did, that their programs met
the law's standard.

"We had data demonstrating that our children were learning at the rate
that Reading First was aiming for, and they could not produce a single
ounce of data to show the success rates of the program they were
proposing," said Art Rainwater, Madison's superintendent of schools.

Both the House and the Senate are laying the groundwork for tough
hearings on Reading First, which is up for renewal this year.

Robert Sweet Jr., a former Congressional aide who wrote much of the
Reading First legislation, said the law aimed at breaking new ground by
translating research into lesson plans. Under the law, the yardstick of
a reading program's scientific validity became a 2000 report by the
National Reading Panel.

That panel, created by Congress, with members selected by G. Reid Lyon,
a former head of a branch of the National Institutes of Health
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set out to review the research and tell Americans what worked. It named
phonics and related skills, vocabulary, fluency and reading
comprehension as the cornerstones of effective reading instruction.

Mr. Sweet firmly believes that phonics is the superior method of
instruction; he is now president of the National Right to Read
Foundation, a pro-phonics group. His e-mail address begins phonicsman.

With Reading First, he said, "we felt we could put education on a new path."

Dr. Lyon, another architect of the legislation, also strongly favors
phonics. Teaching children to read by reason and context, as Parker did
in Madison, rather than by sounding out letters to make words, is
anathema, he said in an interview, suggesting that teachers of the whole
language approach be prosecuted for "educational malpractice."

Mr. Sweet agreed. "You've got billions used for the purchase of programs
that have no validity or evidence that they work, and in fact they
don't, because you have so many kids coming out of the schools that
can't read," he said.

But educators in Madison and elsewhere disagree about the effectiveness
of phonics, and say their results prove their method works.

Under their system, the share of third graders reading at the top two
levels, proficient and advanced, had risen to 82 percent by 2004, from
59 percent six years earlier, even as an influx of students in poverty,
to 42 percent from 31 percent of Madison's enrollment, could have driven
down test scores. The share of Madison's black students reading at the
top levels had doubled to 64 percent in 2004 from 31 percent six years
earlier.

And while 17 percent of African-Americans lacked basic reading skills
when Madison started its reading effort in 1998, that number had plunged
to 5 percent by 2004. The exams changed after 2004, making it impossible
to compare recent results with those of 1998.

Other reading experts, like Richard Allington, past president of the
International Reading Association, also challenge the case for phonics.
Dr. Allington and others say the national panel's review showed only
minor benefits from phonics through first grade, and no strong support
for one style of instruction. They also contend that children drilled in
phonics end up with poor comprehension skills when they tackle more
advanced books.

"This revisionist history of what the research says is wildly popular,"
Dr. Allington said. "But it's the main reason why so much of the reading
community has largely rejected the National Reading Panel report and
this large-scale vision of what an effective reading program looks like."

Under Reading First, many were encouraged to use a pamphlet, "A
Consumer's Guide to Evaluating a Core Reading Program Grades K-3,"
written by two special education professors, then at the University of
Oregon
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to gauge whether a program was backed by research.

But the guide also rewards practices, like using thin texts of limited
vocabulary to practice syllables, for which there is no backing in
research. Dr. Allington said the central role Washington assigned the
guide effectively blocked from approval all but a few reading programs
based on "made-up criteria."

Deborah C. Simmons, who helped write the guide, said it largely
reflected the available research, but acknowledged that even now, no
studies have tested whether children learn to read faster or better
through programs that rated highly in the guide.

Fatally for Madison, the guide does not consider consistent gains in
reading achievement alone sufficient proof of a program's worth.

In making their case, city officials turned to Kathryn Howe of the
Reading First technical assistance center at the University of Oregon,
one of several nationwide paid by the federal Education Department that
helped states apply for grants. But early on, they began to suspect that
Dr. Howe wanted them to dump their program.

At a workshop, she showed them how the guide valued exposing all
children to identical instruction in phonics. Madison's program is based
on tailoring strategies individually, with less emphasis on drilling.

Dr. Howe used the Houghton Mifflin program as a model; officials here
believed that approval would be certain if only they switched to that
program, they said.

In interviews, Dr. Howe said she had not meant to endorse the Houghton
Mifflin program and used it only for illustration, and had no ties to
the company. She added that she might have been misunderstood.

"I certainly didn't say, 'You should buy Houghton Mifflin,' " she said.
"I do remember saying: 'You can do this without buying a purchased
program. It's easier if you have a purchased program, so you might think
about that.' "

Dr. Howe said Madison's program might have suited most students, but not
those in the five schools applying for grants. "Maybe those students
needed a different approach," she said.

Mary Watson Peterson, Madison's reading chief, said the city did use
intensive phonics instruction, but only for struggling children.

After providing Dr. Howe extensive documentation, Madison officials
received a letter from her and the center's director, saying that
because the city's program lacked uniformity and relied too much on
teacher judgment, they could not vouch to Washington that its approach
was grounded in research.

Ultimately Madison withdrew from Reading First, said Mr. Rainwater, the
superintendent, because educators here grew convinced that approval
would never come. "It really boiled down to, we were going to have to
abandon our reading program," the superintendent said.

A subsequent letter from Dr. Howe seemed to confirm his view. "Madison
made a good decision" in withdrawing, she wrote, "since Reading First is
a very prescriptive program that does not match your district's reading
program as it stands now."