Tuesday 4 December 2012

Nonsense words

I've been asked a great deal about nonsense words in the last few weeks. Teachers anxious about the decoding check next June want to know what they should do about nonsense words. They know that the children in their classes will be expected to read 20 nonsense words and being diligent and caring teachers they want to prepare the children as best they can.

My take on the matter is rather different. I want the children to read real words. I want them to be exposed to all the rich and wonderful vocabulary that they could then use in their writing and spoken language. I want them to learn new words and ways of expressing their ideas. to be honest, I don't care if they can decode 'zerb' or 'ock'. I care if they can read and understand 'beware' and 'chaos'.

A head teacher I met had suggested to staff they put up nonsense words around the classroom. I was completely appalled and baffled. What good would this do the children, particularly those who might not know whether they were real or made up words? If you read Letters and Sounds there are so many good words you might want children to use and have understanding, there is no need to make words up. After only a week of phonics teaching Reception children will be able to make the word 'sap'. I doubt many 4 year olds will know that word so there is a great opportunity to extend their understanding. Go outside, find a tree with sap or talk about the term sapping your strength. Who needs nonsense words when there are wonderful words waiting to be understood and used. Words that will enrich children's writing and are perfectly decodable and could be used in a test, if there is insistence that there is one.

I can think of two instances when nonsense words could be used. One of those is when reading. A book like Linley Dodd's, The Dudgeon is Coming! is full of wonderful made up names like the bombazine bear and the stickleback twitch. Matched with imaginative illustrations of these characters it is a delight to read and would test the phonic ability of many children. The other occasion in a game like phonicsplay.co.uk.  The games involve children decoding words and seeing if they are real or nonsense words. As this of necessity involves language comprehension it is a much better use of nonsense words than purely decoding them for the sake of it.

So I say to all those teachers out there, don't teach children nonsense words. Your purpose has to be teaching children to read not just decode. Give them all the wonderful words English has to offer and it will be doing them a far greater service than learning to decode 'blerk'!

Friday 28 September 2012

Phonics Factor- The Results

So the results are out. Nationally 58% of children 'passed' the decoding check, which means 42% of Year 2 children will have to resit it next summer, alongside SATs.

So what has it actually achieved? I know some people might say nothing, but I'm inclined to be a bit more optimistic and say it has actually had a positive impact, though not in the way the Government quite intended.Whilst I doubt it will change the reading success or otherwise of some children, it has raised expectations and created a bit of competition amongst schools. There is the feeling that if Sunnyville Primary down the road can get 70% passing then so should Totside in the same area- but they only got 30%. It is making schools think about why their children are not achieving as well as they might be able to.

 In fact I suspect much of the data, when broken down school by school, will show just that sort of gap is making up the average. Many Local Authorities will find they have a group of schools who did really well and the other half that did really badly- the data needs to elaborate on the percentages of schools that did well. Surely it is of far more concern if a local authority has schools at extreme ends of the scale with their results, rather than a fairly even spread? Something must be wrong if the former is true; no strategic overview and no coordination.

I was in a very nice middle class school last week that got, what we now know, to be below the national average. They were going on about how many special needs they had. I pointed out that a school I knew, with many very deprived children had scored considerably better than them. They asked what they had done and I said they had not used any excuses.  The only children who had not passed the test were one really special need and a handful who had been in school less than a term. The expectations were so high, but they had been achieved. This sobered the middle class school considerably and they stopped using excuses and turned it around to say, we must do as well as that next year.

As I said, I'm not sure that the test will actually raise reading standards, as it is not about reading but decoding. Many good readers did come unstuck on the nonsense words and did not actually do as well as the careful plodders who need to sound every word out. Also schools will become so fixated on the phonics test they will forget the essential element of language comprehension- they won't be able to help it! I saw this with the CLLD (Communication, Language and Literacy Development) Programme. Schools would get to grips with the phonics to the detriment of understanding- particularly as there is now such a strong requirement to use nonsense words. I worked a lot with schools at the latter end of the CLLD to improve phonics use in reading through real application, for example in guided reading. Schools must not forget to keep up all that good work with language comprehension as decoding alone is completely useless!

The other effect of the phonics test has been what I can only describe as OFSTED terror. Schools due an inspection have become paralysed with fear that OFSTED will march in and condemn them before they can correct the faults shown up in the test. In some cases OFSTED would be right to criticise a school, if for example they had not really got round to teaching phonics properly before this year, which is the case for some schools. Other schools however, merely handled things badly, so keen were they not to pressure children they did not actually teach to the pace required and consequently children had simply not covered the amount of phonemes required to pass the test. I hope that if schools are able to show what they are putting in place to remedy the situation OFSTED will not be the executioner schools are expecting them to be.

So what will happen now the results are out? I think no-one has quite decided and there are probably lots of meetings right now to think about what they can do with the statistics and if it really matters anyway? Lots of teachers have asked me if I think the test will be abandoned; sadly I don't think so.

Wednesday 20 June 2012

Observations on the phonics check


I went into ‘Lovely Primary School’ yesterday. It is an oasis of cheerful learning in a desert of poverty. Lovely School is in one of the most deprived areas in London, yet I have never heard any of the teachers use that as an excuse. Quite the opposite, they have high aspirations for their pupils, talking to even the youngest pupils about when they go to university.

At Lovely School they teach systematic phonics really well. I’ve seen them teach it and OFSTED agrees with me. They also have a rich culture of language and books. Children not making expected progress are offered support and extra teaching by experienced and well trained staff.  In fact they do everything that is expected of them and more, in terms of teaching children to read. Yet a large percentage of children in Year 1 will apparently be failing this week.

Lovely School estimate around 50% of their pupils will fail the phonics test. They see the test for what it is- a very crude and blunt instrument that tells them nothing they don’t know already and does not in any way measure progress or achievement. The 50% failure rate will not show how far some children have come in a short time, nor that some have only arrived at the school this term. It will not show the sheer effort and determination of some children to have a go at reading challenging words, nor the time their teachers have spent supporting them, both academically and emotionally.

The test will not show John’s achievements. He was a very young class member, who cried throughout Reception as he’s never left his mother before. He also refused to speak until recently. This term, however, John is not only speaking but showing that he knows many digraphs and trigraphs and is starting to read. The test will not show that he is very immature and how rapid his progress has been this term as he finally copes with the pressures of school life. It will merely show that he has failed. The test takes no account of age which at five is of huge significance. Some children will have had a year longer of living than others, yet they are all expected to reach the same level at the same time. Would we expect them to be the same height too?

The test will not show Susie’s achievements. She arrived at the beginning of the academic year, having never been to school before and speaking little English. Until recently she too was a reluctant speaker but has suddenly understood, not only how to communicate in a new language but how to read and write as well. She got 19 out of the required 40 words, which for her is showing enormous progress. The teacher does not want to tell her parents she has failed, as no-one sees this as a failure, such effort and determination to be successful is not a failure.

The test will not show Thomas’s achievements. A few weeks ago the staff were wondering whether to even enter him for the test as he appeared to have learning difficulties and was not remembering any phonemes. Thomas had one to one teaching with a Teaching Assistant, which catered to his needs through using very active learning and ICT. Yesterday he was able to blend and segment and recognised many digraphs as well as single letters. He will still appear to fail; the test does not allow for children to develop later.

The test will not show Obe’s achievements. He arrived from Africa ,having never been to school before, at the beginning of this term. He is recognising most letters that he has covered in five weeks. He is able to blend and segment, though he had difficulty sounding out the nonsense words as they sounded incorrect to him and he kept trying to make them sound right. He had not covered alternative spellings of common digraphs as he has not been in school long enough, but he is clearly bright and capable and trying incredibly hard. He will still be a failure in terms of this test.

The test will also not show Rachel’s achievements. She is on the autistic spectrum but has picked up the ‘code’ of phonics. She does not read for meaning but can easily do the phonics test. She did however hit herself on the head with the book after every word she read. She passed the test with flying colours but may never be a true reader. The test will also not show how Princess looked at the practise word ‘sum’ and thought they had got it wrong as it is spelt ‘some’! It won’t show that David read the whole lot right but struggled with the pseudo words as it was a retrograde step for him to be reading nonsense.

Learning phonics is a really useful tool, but it is not a magic potion that will cure all the ills in education. What will make a difference will be teachers like the ones at Lovely School. That is so long as they remain in the profession, before getting fed up of the dictatorial nature of central government. Good teaching by good teachers makes the difference; decoding nonsense words does not.

Saturday 5 May 2012

Video Nasty!

First of all let me say I totally agree with teaching children phonics- I've seen some incredible successes with phonics teaching and children who easily learn to read. I'm becoming less and less certain however that a test for all Year 1 children is the way forward. The only good thing might be that schools which are not teaching phonics in a systematic way (and there are quite a few!) will be forced into doing it properly.

The latest guidance about the Year 1 Phonics decoding test (I refuse to call it a check any longer- it is quite clearly a test) is now out. It includes a video of children sounding out mainly nonsense words, as they will do in the test. Go to the DFE website to view the video if you want to see something really depressing.

Having told all the schools I'm working with that the check was 'light touch' and, if they were teaching phonics, nothing to worry about, I am now forced to revise this assessment. In the light of the video the check is definitely a test and the controls more stringent than SATs!

The video has many different children, most looking quite uncomfortable, sounding out the words, with a tick or a cross appearing on the screen and an explanation of why it is right or wrong. I started off thinking that the children were not looking happy and finished with a sense of despair. If a child says the word correctly but follows that up with an incorrect answer, you ignore the first response and the word is marked wrong. It also shows that good readers will probably be at a disadvantage.

A child who is already well on the route to reading and has a significant sight vocabulary, which is of course a very useful skill for reading, tends to look at the nonsense word and try and make it make sense. They are past the stage of using phonics to decode every word  and want to read for meaning; which is after all what we need to be teaching. I rather cynically wondered at the agenda that requires good readers to take a step back and read nonsense without any regard for meaning.

I very much hope all those schools I've worked with who are putting their poor children through the test, will not have stressed out children and teachers, but I can't help feeling that will be the main result of the week of 18th June.

Saturday 18 February 2012

World Book Night

I'm ridiculously excited to be chosen to give books for World Book Night. I've picked Meg Rosoff's How I Live Now and I'm going to give it to some school children who may not have any books of their own.
I've grown up with books. The bookshelves are groaning under the weight of all the books. We just had to get a new bookshelf to try and contain them all! (It hasn't worked, they are still over flowing)  I also went to the library every week as a child and almost as often as an adult. I can't imagine a house without books, yet I know there are many.
So being able to give children a book of their own makes me incredibly happy....until I wondered if a book was going to make a technology savvy child as happy as it would make me. That thought made me so sad. What if books were no longer enough; that they had to be a kindle or a computer game? I love the technology but there is simply nothing that can beat curling up with a good book. What if the technology has taken away that pleasure from the next generation?
Giving books for World Book Night will make me very happy, but will it make the recipients as happy as I am?

Monday 6 February 2012

Great books or just phonics?

I have to admit to struggling with the conflicting demands of the phonics decoding check and wanting to get children to read great books. Of course there should be no conflict at all, but the problem is, testing such young children is going to create that conflict.
I've had the opportunity to observe quite a few guided reading lessons in my time and in schools where phonics is being taught well it is quite often at the expense of the language comprehension. Children are great at decoding but are not reading for meaning or enjoying the rich texts.
Some of the problem is what they are being asked to read. Most reading scheme books do not have extraordinary illustrations and a wide range of language. Take 'Pumpkin Soup' by Helen Cooper- look at the language she uses and the way the illustrations are part of the language. You just don't get that with reading schemes, particularly the latest ones which are all about phonics. Yes, children need to be taught phonics, but not at the expense of everything else.
My fear about the phonics check is that it will do exactly that; phonics will become the end goal instead of the means by which we teach children to read. In twenty years time none of the children will count Book 4 level 2 as their favourite childhood read (at least I hope not) and I would so much rather they had memories of reading wonderful stories.

Monday 23 January 2012

What makes a good lesson?

I was thinking today about what makes a good lesson- I don't mean OFSTED good, ticking all the boxes in that way, I was thinking more about what qualities a teacher needs in order to make the lesson a good experience for the children.
I was in a school and I observed a number of lessons, only one of which was delivered with any sort of enjoyment. Obviously I was there and that makes it more nerve wracking for all concerned; but only one teacher actually seemed to be enjoying herself and enjoying being with the children. Interestingly she was the most inexperienced of all of them. I started wondering whether it was chicken or egg- was she enjoying herself and therefore it was a good lesson or was it a good lesson because she was having such fun? Of course the elements of were the children actually learning anything are extremely important; but they were learning in some of the other classes and yet none of those lessons were as good.
Do we need to put the fun back into teaching? Is that the elusive ingredient to getting better results? Has all the joy been sucked out of teaching and in a double whammy meant the teaching is less good?
I'll have to try out the theory, having fun means a better lesson, the next time I'm in a school!

Friday 20 January 2012

To teach it or not to teach!

I was reading a Telegraph article about ten  Local Authorities who it would appear have refused to back phonics teaching. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/9025860/Warning-as-schools-shun-traditional-reading-methods.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

I have to confess I was originally quite cynical about phonics when Letters and Sounds first came out. I had always taught phonics but never as systematically as the programme dictated. My view was, if it was that easy, why weren't we all doing it long ago? Now I simply ask, why aren't we all doing it?

 I have now seen at first hand the incredible difference good phonics teaching is making to children's lives. It really is transforming teaching and learning in places where it is being delivered well. So I do seriously have to question why certain Local Authorities are so opposed to it.  It works, it is free (if you use Letters and Sounds) and it raises standards. There is nothing there anyone could object to. I do agree phonics alone or in isolation is not sufficient; it is a tool to teach reading and writing, but such a good one you'd be crazy not to try it.

As teachers we all want what is best for our pupils and also something that is easy and effective- here it is, on a plate. Why isn't everyone using it?

Thursday 19 January 2012

Trying it out

I had this fantastic thought for my  literacy newsletter; why not encourage children to write by blogging?

 I have had this vague thought that I should have a blog for some time now but never got round to it. The deadline for the newsletter definitely crystallised my thoughts.  If I try it out, modelling the use of a blog, I will know how to encourage children to use one. I had no idea it was quite so easy, even my four year old will be able to contribute to this!

Of course my next concern is will anyone actually read it? How will anyone know this blog exists? I'll have to go and find out.....