The following article
originally appeared in Literacy & Learning magazine, Autumn 1997 (UK).
What
sort of phonics?
Systematic
Phonics: the latest research
Dr
Rhona S. Johnston and Joyce Watson are researchers at the School of
Psychology, University of St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. The teaching of
phonics is now a prescribed element of the Government's strategy for
raising literacy standards. But how should phonics be taught and when?
Dr Rhona Johnston and Joyce Watson report on the findings of a five-year
study into the teaching of phonics in Scottish schools.
Since the publication of Adams' (1990) book, there has been a growing
consensus that phonics teaching should form a part of the reading curriculum.
Phonics is taught in most schools in Scotland as part of an eclectic
approach which includes using reading scheme books, and which has a
significant emphasis on reading for meaning. Five years ago we started
a study to examine just how phonics is taught in Scotland, and what
practices seemed to be particularly beneficial.
In a study of 10 schools
in Scotland, we found that phonics teaching followed a systematic programme
which expended over the first three years at school. Up until Easter
of the first year, the letter sounds were taught at the speed of one
letter per week. Children were introduced to these letters in the context
of words which started with that initial sound, e.g. 'bat, bull, bin'
etc. That is, they were introduced to the alphabet by means of alliterative
groups of words. After Easter, the classes were introduced to three
letter consonant-vowel-consonant (C-V-C) words, e.g. 'pat' . This was
mainly by means of work book exercises and teacher devised work sheets.
Words were presented with a missing letter and the child had to complete
the word, having worked out what it was from picture cues. At this stage,
therefore, they were alerted to letters in the middle and final position
of words instead of just the initial position. However, few classes
were explicitly taught to sound out the letters individually and blend
them together in a systematic way.
Reading
Spurt
One school introduced the children to C-V-C words earlier than the others,
encouraging sounding and blending, and we found that this led to a spurt
in reading attainment on the British Ability Scales Word Reading Test
(Elliott et al, 1977). The other classes showed a spurt later on when
they started to study C-V-C words. In Years 2 and 3, the children were
systematically introduced to word families, based on consonant blends
and digraphs, and vowel digraphs. Rules such as the silent 'e' were
also taught. This work was carried out alongside the use of a reading
scheme, but was not integrated with it. This is probably due to a decrease
in the use of phonic readers, which used to make a natural link with
the study of word families in the phonics programme.
This study led us to look
closely at the value of teaching children early on in the reading curriculum
to sound and blend letters to pronounce unfamiliar words. We decided
to investigate whether a 'synthetic' phonics approach, whereby children
are taught groups of letter sounds and then shown words made up of those
letters, is more effective than getting them to break whole words down
into their letter sounds (i.e. analytic phonics).
We became interested in Jolly Phonics (Lloyd, The Phonics Handbook,
1992), which Sue Lloyd developed at Woods Loke School in Lowestoft.
This is a synthetic phonics approach which is introduced soon after
school entry. It lasts eight weeks, and is carried out before the children
are given reading scheme books. The children are taught six letters
of the alphabet per week, and shown how the letters combine to form
words, e.g. in week one they learn s, a, t, i, p, n, and in week two
they learn c(k), e, h, r, m, d . They are shown these letters in all
positions of words, 's' occurs in spots, sand and nest. Books are provided
with pictures of the words containing the target letter, the words being
presented elsewhere on the page. There is a great emphasis on blending,
both as an oral exercise and with printed words. Additionally, a set
of irregular words are taught as sight words.
We assessed the Reception
class at Woods Loke School on a wide battery of tasks, including letter
knowledge (names and sounds), ability to give the sounds in spoken words
(e.g. c-a-t ), rhyme skills, vocabulary knowledge, and emergent reading
skills. We matched them on these measures with a group of Primary 1
children in Scotland whose reading programme included an analytic approach
to phonics. It should be particularly noted that the two groups were
equivalent in their ability to read items on the Clay 'Ready to Read'
Word Test (Clay, 1979), which is a test specifically designed to measure
word recognition skills at this very early age.
Synthetic
phonics
We then retested the children at the end of the first term at school.
The 25 synthetic phonics children had been taught 40+ sounds, including
digraphs such as ch, sh, th. However, they were not taught consonant
blends as it is believed they will work these out for themselves. The
29 analytic phonics children had be then been taught 8/9 letter sounds
in the initial position of words.
At this stage all of the
children were given the British Ability Scales Word Reading Test (Elliott,
1977). We found that the synthetic phonics taught children were 11 months
ahead of the analytic phonics group on this test; their mean reading
age was 5 years 11 months, mean chronological age being 5 years. The
analytic taught phonics children had a mean reading age of 5 years,
and a mean chronological age of 5 years 2 months. The synthetic phonics
group were also ahead on the emergent reading, letter knowledge and
phonemic awareness tests, but not the rhyme task. The synthetic phonics
programme was now complete, whereas the analytic phonics programme continued
with letter sound teaching. In March, when the sounds of the 26 letters
of the alphabet had been taught to the analytic phonics sample, we compared
the two groups again. It was found that the synthetic phonics group
now had a reading age of 6 years 8 months on the BAS Word Reading Test,
being 16 months in advance of chronological age. They were also ahead
in emergent reading, letter sound knowledge, and phonemic awareness,
but not rhyme ability. The mean reading age for the analytic phonics
group was 5 years 4 months, chronological age being 5 years 6 months.
Ability to read single words
is only a part of reading skill, ultimately what is important is that
children can comprehend what they read. In a further study we compared
a synthetic phonics taught group of children at the end of their third
year at school with a group who had learnt by an analytic phonics approach
who were also at he end of their third year. They were the same age
(7 years and 7 months) and had the same vocabulary knowledge on the
English Picture Vocabulary Test (Brimer and Dunn, 1968). Reading was
measured using the Primary Reading Test (France, 1981), which uses a
cloze procedure to measure comprehension. It was found that the synthetic
phonics taught children were nine months ahead of the analytic group
in reading on this test. Further more, only 9 per cent of them had reading
ages more than 12 months behind chronological age, compared with 31.5
per cent of the analytic phonics taught children. This good performance
on a comprehension task may be directly due to the rapid start the synthetic
phonics taught children had in learning to recognise words. However,
it is also the case that having established a procedure in the children
that enabled them to read independently, the teachers could then have
more time available in the curriculum for developing their ability to
comprehend text.
Conclusions
Prior to doing this research we had believed that it was good to use
an eclectic approach to teaching reading from the earliest stages. So
we thought that on school entry it was effective to teach children some
phonics and some sight words, but also that it was necessary to introduce
them to reading books very early on so that they learn that reading
is a pleasurable and meaningful activity. What we have learnt is that
a 'phonics first' approach, whereby children are taught right from the
start that letter sounds can be blended together to pronounce words,
gives them an excellent start, and the basic elements can be completed
in the first term of school if intensive teaching is given. Of course
this phonics teaching can alternatively be carried out in the context
of reading attractive books from a reading scheme.
However, we have established
that it is not necessary to take three years to teach phonics, slowly
working through word families and rhyming words, if the children have
been shown how to sound and blend letters in order to pronounce words
at the start of reading tuition.
References
Adams, M. J. (1990)
Beginning to Read: Thinking and Learning about Print. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
MIT Press.
Brimer, M. A. and Dunn, L. M. (1968) English Picture and Vocabulary
Test, Educational Evaluation Enterprises: Newnham, UK
Clay, M. M. (1979) The early detection of reading difficulties. London:
Heinemann.
Elliott, C. D., Murray, D. J. and Pearson, L. S. (1977) The British
Ability Scales. Windsor: NFER-Nelson.
France, N. (1981) Primary Reading Test : Windsor: NFER-Nelson.
Lloyd, S. (1992) The Phonics Handbook . Jolly Learning: Chigwell, UK.
Acknowledgements We would
like to thank the teachers and pupils at the Scottish schools for taking
part in our study and are particularly grateful for the assistance of
Sue Lloyd in testing the children at Woods Loke School in Lowestoft.
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