Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

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Debbie_Hepplewhite
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Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

Post by Debbie_Hepplewhite »

Jennifer Buckingham is a pioneer and advocate for systematic synthetic phonics in Australia - constantly having to address misinformation in the national domain.

Jennifer draws attention to the status quo in Australia:
Spelling tricky for kids, so good phonics programs are vital

Jennifer Buckingham
The Australian
December 8, 2015

Ten years ago today, the report of the national inquiry into the teaching of literacy was released. Called Teaching Reading, the report was critical of the teaching methods being used in classrooms, and even more damning of the education faculties of Australian universities that failed to equip teachers with effective, evidence-based instruction methods.

The inquiry chairman, the much-missed Ken Rowe, who died in 2009, wrote in his inimitable style, ‘‘Higher education providers of education and those who provide ongoing professional development of teachers, with a few exceptions, are still puddling around in postmodernist claptrap about how children learn to read.”

The report found most initial teacher education degrees devoted between 3 per cent and 7 per cent of their compulsory course load to the teaching of reading, and that even this small amount was of questionable quality.

The 2005 NITL report supported the findings of the US National Reading Panel five years earlier, and pre-empted the findings of the Rose review in Britain in 2006. Each of these reviews found strong research evidence that high quality, high-impact literacy teaching has five essential components — phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension. These elements underpin the widely accepted simple view of reading; that reading requires both accurate word recognition and comprehension.

The reviews also found that some teaching methods were more effective than others.

In particular, the foundation aspects related to the alphabetic code — phonemic awareness and phonics — are likeliest to be learned early and quickly by children if they are taught explicitly and systematically.

Explicit and systematic instruction is highly structured, meticulously planned and teacher-directed.

For phonics (the relationship between letters and sounds), one particular approach emerged as superior — systematic, synthetic phonics teaching, whereby carefully selected groups of letters and sounds are introduced sequentially and children learn how to blend these sounds together to make words. Children are encouraged to use phonics or sounding out when they are reading, rather than guessing from picture cues.

On the basis of the best scientific research, the NITL committee recommended “that teachers provide systematic, direct and explicit phonics instruction so that children master the essential alphabetic code-breaking skills required for foundational reading proficiency. Equally, that teachers provide an integrated approach to reading that supports the development of oral language, vocabulary, grammar, reading fluency, comprehension and the literacies of new technologies.”

This recommendation sounds, and is, reasonable and defensible. Recent research confirms this approach to be the most effective. But despite phonics having one of the most consistent and extensive evidence bases in educational research, it remains a source of contention. In response to the NITL report, the Australian Association for the Teaching of English argued against the teaching of phonics and lamented the priority given to evidence from scientific research.

The AATE president at the time wrote: ‘‘I don’t want my daughter to be in the rigid, sterile surrounds of a ‘laboratory’. This is a risible characterisation of scientific research in education. It is simply that which uses methodologies and measures that allow useful conclusions to be drawn about the validity of the results.

What has changed in the past decade? There is good news and bad news. The introduction of the National Assessment Program — Literacy and Numeracy in 2008 put a necessary focus on fundamental skills and now provides much-needed data about the progress of students and schools. NAPLAN data shows some improvement, but there are still hundreds of thousands of students who cannot read at more than a basic level.

Recognition of the role of phonics in reading is growing at the policy and school level. The revised Australian curriculum has greater emphasis on phonemic awareness and phonics content while preserving the other important elements of literacy. Many schools around Australia have adopted evidence-based, explicit teaching to great success, especially where it is needed most, such as in far north Queensland.

Yet there is still resistance and misinformation among education academics. A recent article in The Conversation said only 12 per cent of English words could be decoded using simple sound-letter matches, that anyone who didn’t know letter sounds simply could Google them and, therefore, phonics programs were a ‘‘con’’. None of this is true. Research has shown the ­English language has phonetic rules that allow about 84 per cent of words to be decoded. Written English is more complicated than other alphabetic languages and it is for precisely this reason that good phonics programs, developed and tested by language specialists, are so vital.

A phonics book at the supermarket check-out does not meet those criteria.

Nobody claims that phonics alone is sufficient to learn to read. This is the ultimate straw man ­argument in the reading wars. Phonics is one essential part of a comprehensive reading program that includes good literature and the development of literacy in the broader sense, but it must be taught well. It would be a great tragedy if we are still having the same debate in 2025
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opinion ... dd74a75b1b
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Debbie_Hepplewhite
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer

Post by Debbie_Hepplewhite »

Here is Jennifer putting the record straight via a radio broadcast in Australia regarding the efficacy of phonics programmes. Misty Adoniou has really upset a number of people by her rather misleading comments regarding phonics:

Literacy expert challenges criticism of the use of phonics

https://radio.abc.net.au/programitem/pg ... ?play=true
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer

Post by Debbie_Hepplewhite »

Alison Clarke of the 'Spelfabet' site and blog provides very good information regarding the literacy debate. She also felt impassioned to address Misty Adoniou's misleading piece about phonics programmes:

http://www.spelfabet.com.au/2015/11/sev ... -149691929
Seven things to consider before you buy into phonics programs

I’ve just written a comment in response to today’s article in The Conversation called “Seven things to consider before you buy into phonics programs” by Senior Lecturer in Language, Literacy and TESL at the University of Canberra, Misty Adoniou.

Her Seven Things are, in distilled form:

1)That “English is not a phonetic language”, so spending money and time teaching phonics is of questionable value,
2)That sounds are free and people who sell phonics teaching materials are con artists,
3)That older students only have comprehension problems, not decoding problems,
4)That politicians are not educators or educational researchers, and have no business pushing educational reform,
5)That many phonics programs are rubbish,
6)That many activities that people call “phonics” are rubbish,
7)That everyone learns literacy differently, and phonics programs are only relevant to learners with “particular learning needs”.

I only agree with points 5 and 6 (one of the reasons I set up this blog was to help people avoid the rubbish) so I wrote a fairly long comment in reply. Then I realised that lots of people will read the article but not the comments, and that the editor might not approve my comment (though it is tremendously polite and restrained) so given TC has a Creative Commons licence I’ve decided to post my comment here too, hoping to get more people to read it.

Here it is:
Do read Alison's full response!
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Debbie_Hepplewhite
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer

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Jennifer Buckingham announces the launch of the Centre for Independent Studies (CIS) 'Five from Five' project - starting from Tuesday March 8th in Sydney.

https://vimeo.com/133404949

Do spread the word if this is in your part of the world!

Good luck to all concerned for this much-needed project.

:D
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

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In 'The Australian':

Five from Five: We can end the reading wars

Jennifer Buckingham
5th March 2016

A million Australian children are at risk of reading failure, with ­serious adverse consequences for their quality of life and the ­progress of Australian society.

In a developed country with record levels of education spending, there is no good reason for low ­literacy on this scale.

The figure of one million students — based on the results of ­national and international literacy tests — is five times higher than the number of children reading scientists estimate have serious learning difficulties that cause them to struggle with reading.

Children from disadvantaged backgrounds are five times likelier to have low literacy at school than their more advantaged peers, perpetuating a cycle of low educational attainment and poverty.

One in three disadvantaged children arrives at school with very poor language skills, and the gap between the language-rich and the language-poor grows across time.

Despite there being various causes of social, economic and educational disadvantage, there is only one domain in which a school system can have a significant and sustained impact: by harnessing the power of improved instruction, especially in literacy in the early years of school. Major reviews of research on reading in the US, Australia and Britain not only agree on the key components of reading programs but also on the most effective way of teaching them. These reviews have found there are five essential and interdependent components of effective, evidence-based reading instruction in school — the five keys to reading.

They are phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension. There is also mounting evidence that explicit, systematic instruction is the most effective teaching method, especially for the fundamental code-based components ― phonemic awareness and phonics — and especially for children at risk of reading failure.

Reading researcher and cognitive scientist Keith Stanovich says: “That direct instruction in alphabetic coding facilitates early reading acquisition is one of the most well-established conclusions in all of behavioural science.”

In recent years, research has continued to demonstrate that explicit teaching of the five keys to reading benefits all children and can significantly reduce literacy gaps.

The impact of reducing the number of struggling students through more effective initial class teaching should not be under­estimated. School resources and teacher time can be deployed more effectively, learning support can be targeted to children with serious learning problems, and benefits for students extend from improved educational achievement through to a lower likelihood of the mental health and behavioural problems that frequently arise following reading difficulties.

Progress in knowledge of teaching and reading is dependent on evidence from studies that conform to the rigours of research in other disciplines (such as medical science) where the human and economic costs of failure are high.

Scientific research, especially from the field of cognitive science, has provided an extensive and rigorous body of evidence about how children learn to read and the most effective ways to teach them.

A group of Australian reading specialists has drawn the country’s attention to this research twice in open letters published in The Australian — once in 2004, which led to the 2005 National Inquiry into the Teaching of Literacy, and again in 2012, when the recommendations of the inquiry had not been implemented.

More than 10 years after the inquiry report, this research is slowly beginning to be acknowledged in government policy. The revised Australian Curriculum has a stronger emphasis on phonemic awareness and phonics, while the NSW government announced last week that teacher education courses that did not include evidence-based approaches to literacy, including expli­cit and systematic phonics instruc­tion, would not be accredited.

But there is still a long way to go. To achieve the goal of effective, evidence-based reading instruction in every classroom, every day, there will need to be a concerted effort from principals, teachers, parents and policymakers.

This decade could be the beginning of one of the most exciting periods in education, as the sleeping giant of educational knowledge — long ignored — begins to influence education systems globally.

If the evidence on teaching reading is adopted and implemented, there should be no more casualties in the reading wars.

Read About It: Scientific Evidence for Effective Teaching of Reading by Kerry Hempenstall (edited by Jennifer Buckingham) will be released at the launch of the FIVE from FIVE literacy project next Tuesday at NSW Parliament House. The FIVE from FIVE project aims to bridge the gap between research and practice in effective reading instruction.
IFERI is very pleased that Jennifer Buckingham and Kerry Hempenstall have kindly accepted invitations to join IFERI's Advisory Group - see here:

http://www.iferi.org/advisory-group/
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

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More publicity for the 'Five from Five' campaign via 'Mamamia':

http://www.mamamia.com.au/too-many-of-a ... -about-it/
Too many Australian kids can’t read properly — here’s what we need to do about it.

Dr Jennifer Buckingham

Around a million Australian children are at risk of reading failure. That’s roughly one in four students in our schools.

Concerned your child might be — or become — one of them? Rest assured, it’s not because there’s something wrong with the children. The number of children who have an actual learning disability that makes reading very difficult account for only about 20% of the million children with low reading ability.

Nor is the poor reading standard due to a lack of funding. Billions of dollars have been spent over the past decade trying — and failing — to improve literacy levels.

So what is the problem? Largely, it’s that children can’t read properly simply because they have not been taught properly.

Forty years’ worth of solid scientific research has shown that some ways of teaching reading are better than others. It would make sense for schools to use the teaching methods that are most likely to be effective for the greatest number of children — but this is not always happening.

Teaching degrees don’t always equip teachers with the most effective methods for teaching reading. A survey by the Australian Primary Principals Association found that 54% of new primary school teachers could not teaching reading to a reasonable level.
Do read the whole piece - parents should be, rightly, very interested and concerned about the state of affairs in Australia - and in other countries around the world where the English language is taught for reading and writing.
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

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Dr Jennifer Buckingham's opening address at the launch of the 'Five from Five' project - it says a huge amount in a succinct and warm manner:

http://www.fivefromfive.org.au/wp-conte ... ch2016.pdf
Launch of FIVE from FIVE

Tuesday, 8 March, 2016, NSW Parliament House

Speaker: Dr Jennifer Buckingham, Education Research Fellow at The Centre for Independent Studies (CIS) and Head of the 'FIVE from FIVE' Literacy Project

Good evening, Minister Piccoli, Senator McKenzie, Professor Schwartz, fellow speakers, colleagues and friends.

I have been looking forward to this evening for a long time. It is wonderful to see so many familiar and new faces, including some children, which I think is a first for CIS. It’s an exciting occasion.

What, then, is the point of all this?

I have been working at CIS for just over 17 years. One of the first tasks I was given was to update the CIS publication State of the Nation, which was a compendium of social and economic statistical trends.

As part of that work, I looked at trends in education. I noticed something that not many people had been talking about at the time – the educational achievement and attainment of boys had been declining.

One of the factors implicated was changes in teaching, especially in teaching reading. The decline in boys’ reading skills coincided with a move away from explicit teaching of reading, including phonics, to the whole language philosophy. This change affected girls as well but their earlier language development gave them a buffer many boys didn’t have.

Over the years since then, literacy has been a recurring theme, so much so that the teaching of reading became the subject of my PhD research. Literacy is the fundamental skill that underpins school success and has profound consequences for later life.

Tragically, a large number of children are not learning to read at a sufficient level for them to make good progress at school...
There is a sense of urgency here - and so there should be.

There is no reason why all teachers cannot provide all children with the best possible start to their education to raise their life-chances and to truly 'fulfil their potential'. We know how.

Please support the 'Five from Five' project regardless of the country in which you reside - and please support IFERI in spreading good information informed by research - and please share with us your results and projects to promote evidence-informed reading instruction whatever your context.

You can read more about Jennifer's pioneering work and addresses here:

http://www.fivefromfive.org.au/events/
http://www.fivefromfive.org.au/events/
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

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http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-03-22/b ... ed/7266410
Low literacy cannot be tolerated or excused any longer

By Jennifer Buckingham

Many schools believe they are using the most effective methods when in fact they are not.

There are a number of key reasons why Australian students are not getting the best possible literacy teaching - and funding is not one of them, writes Jennifer Buckingham.

The levels of literacy and numeracy among Australian school students are a national disgrace.

The Grattan Institute's new analysis of results from the National Assessment Program for Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN) provides yet more proof of what reading specialists have been saying for over a decade: far too many children are not learning to read in the early years of school - and the longer they are at school, the larger the gap between the highest and lowest performing children becomes.
Read Jennifer Buckingham's piece in abc news - many of the readers' comments are dismaying but they demonstrate what an uphill struggle it continues to be to inform people legitimately and for that information to be reflected upon as a bigger picture of what are, in effect, shocking revelations about ineffective teaching methods in so many schools (and of course we know that this is not only the situation in Australia which is why IFERI is an international organisation). :(

Please note that the electronic links embedded with Jennifer's report provide evidence that Jennifer's piece is considerably more than an 'opinion piece'!
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

Post by Debbie_Hepplewhite »

Jennifer writes another great article, this time appearing in 'Teacher Magazine' - a question and answer piece which I've posted about on the parents' forum here:

http://www.iferi.org/iferi_forum/viewto ... p=972#p972

Although I have posted this on the parents' forum, it will also be helpful for teachers in Australia, and in other regions and countries, where systematic synthetic phonics provision has yet to be adopted for the reading instruction in English.
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Re: Aus:Jennifer Buckingham - true pioneer - announces CIS 'Five from Five' project

Post by Debbie_Hepplewhite »

Read about the fantastic development of Education Minister, Simon Birmingham, announcing the use of a year one phonics check:

http://www.iferi.org/iferi_forum/viewto ... ?f=2&t=605
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