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  • Dyslexia and Teacher Prep Dysfunction

    September 8, 2016

    Is it too much to ask that professionals stay
    abreast of the research? The authors of a recently published study, “The
    Dyslexia Dilemma
    ,” don’t think it is and the extended
    title of the study suggests the reasons why without mincing words: “A History
    of Ignorance, Complacency and Resistance in Colleges of Education.”[1] The
    study highlights the fact that the Science of Reading instruction is neither
    studied nor taught in teacher prep programs.

    For 20 percent of
    children, reading is the most complicated, difficult endeavor they will face
    probably until adulthood. Often these children who struggle to learn to
    read are labeled “dyslexic.” The term has been medicalized into a neurological
    syndrome across the board. The authors of this study, led by David Hurford,
    contend that these children are simply not being properly taught. The authors’
    dissatisfaction with the failure of teacher preparation programs to teach the
    science of reading to aspiring teachers almost rises to the level of outrage—as
    well it should.

    In spite of decades of research and
    legislation going back to the 1980s’ A Nation at Risk, the 1990’s America’s
    Schools Act, the Goals 2000: Educate America Act, the 2001 National Reading
    Panel Report, the 2002 No Child Left Behind Act, and the Common Core State
    Standards initiative, reading achievement in the United States remains
    stagnant. By NAEP measures, reading achievement remains at 1992 levels. Well
    over 50 percent of children in grades 4, 8, and 12 do not read at a proficient
    level. Even the attempted “end run” of a couple decades of teaching to the test
    has not caused the scores to budge.

    Failure to learn to read has dire consequences
    reaching beyond the school years well into adulthood. The psychosocial issues
    related to dyslexia include low self-esteem, depression, post-traumatic stress,
    substance abuse, incarceration, poverty, social dysfunction, and more. Failure
    to learn to read proficiently also constitutes a national economic
    liability. 

    Nonetheless, a survey of hundreds of teachers
    revealed serious gaps in teachers’ knowledge of basic scientific findings. It’s
    especially lacking when it comes to their need to understand the structural
    phonology of language and its relationship to learning to read. Only 20 percent
    in a sample of over 700 teachers could segment words into speech sounds, for
    example. The teachers surveyed reported that they had never received formal
    instruction in phonological processing.

    NCTQ has documented this lack of instruction in the
    reading courses taken by teachers. So too has Kelly Butler from the Barksdale
    Institute in Mississippi, Milt Joshi from Texas A&M, and several others.
    Not surprisingly, phonemic awareness is the single most absent topic in reading
    syllabi. So let’s be clear about reading failure and teacher accountability: teachers cannot teach what they themselves
    have not been taught.

    In the same way that teachers cannot teach what they
    have not been taught, neither can college instructors. The difference is that
    college instructors have a responsibility to be on the cusp of research. Both
    the ignorance and culpability are systemic in colleges of education.

    In addition to documenting the pervasive weaknesses
    in reading found in most Ed.D. and Ph.D. programs, Hurford et al point to the
    persistence of myth in teacher preparation, the most insidious of all being the
    idea that learning to read is a natural, innate process—the myth that gave rise
    to the scientifically discredited and abject failure of the “Whole Language”
    approach to reading instruction. 

    Many children who
    come to school ready to read are labeled dyslexic. The etiology of their
    dyslexia notwithstanding, they can be taught to read. Hurford
    et al close with: “Children with dyslexia and reading difficulties are waiting
    to be taught to read and the knowledge and skills necessary to do so exist. It
    is essential that the Science of Reading become part of the vocabulary,
    knowledge base and training within colleges of education.” Children who are
    neurologically dyslexic or just struggling to learn to read will continue to
    suffer until the benefits of scientific findings gleaned over decades of
    research with tens of thousands of children and adults make their way into
    college classrooms.

    Bob Marino leads
    the NCTQ review of reading coursework as part of the Teacher Prep Review and is
    a former principal in Baltimore City Public Schools.


    [1]Hurford D, Hurford J, Head K,
    Keiper M, Nitcher S, Renner L. (2016) “The Dyslexia Dilemma: A History of
    Ignorance, Complacency and Resistance in colleges of Education.” Journal of Childhood & Developmental
    Disorders.
    ISSN 2472-1786 Vol. 2 Num. 3:26 http://www.carrdinc.org/TheDyslexiaDilemma.pdf

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