Anonymous wrote:
Question: Does CC explain how to do the above? Will it provide more robust materials or will it teach the teachers how to teach like they did 30 years ago? I think it's doubtful since they are only a set of standards (what the child is supposed to be able to do and not a manual for teaching).
It doesn't really matter. Poster is going on the premise that lack of phonics is the problem. It is not the problem. Common Core will not solve the problem. It achieves nothing but idiocy.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, they teach phonics but nowhere near as robustly as they used to, and instead rely a lot more on sight words. You might want to take a minute at reading comprehension before making yourself look foolish. Sight words only help kids learn about a thousand words, but that ends with the curriculum - whereas phonics gives them a toolbox that can better help them decode, acquire and build new vocabulary as a lifelong skill. The phonics curriculum in school today is not what it used to be a few decades ago, which is why so many more older kids are struggling with reading and language skills. They teach it, but don't spend as much time on it or reinforce it as they did 30 years ago, despite it being a vital and needed lifelong skill. Not to mention, teaching of grammar has become weaker, and many teachers don't even mark incorrect spelling anymore - because many of the younger teachers do not themselves have the language skills that teachers did a few decades ago. Maybe you are one of the young ones, that you don't know this.
Question: Does CC explain how to do the above? Will it provide more robust materials or will it teach the teachers how to teach like they did 30 years ago? I think it's doubtful since they are only a set of standards (what the child is supposed to be able to do and not a manual for teaching).
signed: one who has been involved in primary education for more than forty years. I have seen many reading programs come and go--and phonics has always been a part of them.
Question: Does CC explain how to do the above? Will it provide more robust materials or will it teach the teachers how to teach like they did 30 years ago? I think it's doubtful since they are only a set of standards (what the child is supposed to be able to do and not a manual for teaching).
PP is more clueless than I thought. signed: one who has been involved in primary education for more than forty years. I have seen many reading programs come and go--and phonics has always been a part of them.
Question: Does CC explain how to do the above? Will it provide more robust materials or will it teach the teachers how to teach like they did 30 years ago? I think it's doubtful since they are only a set of standards (what the child is supposed to be able to do and not a manual for teaching).
There have always been idiot parents. So what are you doing, in response
Yes, they teach phonics but nowhere near as robustly as they used to, and instead rely a lot more on sight words. You might want to take a minute at reading comprehension before making yourself look foolish. Sight words only help kids learn about a thousand words, but that ends with the curriculum - whereas phonics gives them a toolbox that can better help them decode, acquire and build new vocabulary as a lifelong skill. The phonics curriculum in school today is not what it used to be a few decades ago, which is why so many more older kids are struggling with reading and language skills. They teach it, but don't spend as much time on it or reinforce it as they did 30 years ago, despite it being a vital and needed lifelong skill. Not to mention, teaching of grammar has become weaker, and many teachers don't even mark incorrect spelling anymore - because many of the younger teachers do not themselves have the language skills that teachers did a few decades ago. Maybe you are one of the young ones, that you don't know this.
Question: Does CC explain how to do the above? Will it provide more robust materials or will it teach the teachers how to teach like they did 30 years ago? I think it's doubtful since they are only a set of standards (what the child is supposed to be able to do and not a manual for teaching).
Yes, they teach phonics but nowhere near as robustly as they used to, and instead rely a lot more on sight words. You might want to take a minute at reading comprehension before making yourself look foolish. Sight words only help kids learn about a thousand words, but that ends with the curriculum - whereas phonics gives them a toolbox that can better help them decode, acquire and build new vocabulary as a lifelong skill. The phonics curriculum in school today is not what it used to be a few decades ago, which is why so many more older kids are struggling with reading and language skills. They teach it, but don't spend as much time on it or reinforce it as they did 30 years ago, despite it being a vital and needed lifelong skill. Not to mention, teaching of grammar has become weaker, and many teachers don't even mark incorrect spelling anymore - because many of the younger teachers do not themselves have the language skills that teachers did a few decades ago. Maybe you are one of the young ones, that you don't know this.
Anonymous wrote:I have parents come in and scream at me in front of their kids b/c I assign homework. I should know that school is where the work should be done, not home!
Yeah, CC is going to solve that. I don't think I could stay in teaching if I got that treatment. And now you have to worry about standardized test scores being part of your evaluation? Wow. Love from all directions.
Anonymous wrote:This would be funny if you weren't so clueless. FWIW, elementary teachers do teach phonics and have been for years. The problem starts long before first grade.
+10000
It's scary to think that this person might work for the DOE!
I have parents come in and scream at me in front of their kids b/c I assign homework. I should know that school is where the work should be done, not home!
Phonics and sight words will only get you through the first few reading levels. Once you get past them, comprehension comes in along with vocabulary. Much of what we read involves background knowledge and without a teacher guiding students through it, students are left floundering. You cannot always blame the previous years' teachers. I work at a Title One school with an awesome faculty but even we cannot make up for what kids bring (or don't bring) to school. Kids entering kindergarten not knowing how to hold a book properly isn't uncommon. Kids not able to recognize their own name in print when looking at 3 name cards on a desk. Kids who don't know how to count to 10. I could go on. These are native English speakers BTW. I have parents come in and scream at me in front of their kids b/c I assign homework. I should know that school is where the work should be done, not home!
Phonics and sight words will only get you through the first few reading levels. Once you get past them, comprehension comes in along with vocabulary. Much of what we read involves background knowledge and without a teacher guiding students through it, students are left floundering. You cannot always blame the previous years' teachers. I work at a Title One school with an awesome faculty but even we cannot make up for what kids bring (or don't bring) to school. Kids entering kindergarten not knowing how to hold a book properly isn't uncommon. Kids not able to recognize their own name in print when looking at 3 name cards on a desk. Kids who don't know how to count to 10. I could go on. These are native English speakers BTW. I have parents come in and scream at me in front of their kids b/c I assign homework. I should know that school is where the work should be done, not home!