Anonymous wrote:Honestly, how do you expect one teacher to teach 28 children how to read?! I taught my kids before they started school. Learning to read is a tedious, time-consuming task that requires one-on-one repetition; the classroom is the worst environment to learn how to read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do know that in many districts teachers are told exactly what and how to teach and have zero autonomy to make these kinds of decisions on their own, right?
This is a pretty big myth. Teachers are told what to teach (standards) but how they do so is largely up to them. Yes, certain principals might want to see specific methods employed such as Daily 5 or Reading Workshop, but for the most part teachers come up with everything on their own.
Anonymous wrote:1st grade teacher here. We definitely teach reading! What frustrates me is when parents don’t support at home and assume that the learning done during the school day is enough. Some kids really do need extra practice at home. Also, we teach phonics and handwriting through FUNdations. I think 3rd grade teaches cursive with another program (handwriting without tears?) this is DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:You do know that in many districts teachers are told exactly what and how to teach and have zero autonomy to make these kinds of decisions on their own, right?
Anonymous wrote:
[b]Many schools systems, public and private, have fallen into the “whole word” method, because it’s less work for overburdened teachers with large K and 1st grade classes.[b]
So this is essentially a resource problem, where school systems thought the kids would learn to read without explicit phoneme instruction and they could get away with inappropriate teacher:student ratios. It would be very difficult to implement phonetic instruction with one teacher and 25-30 kids in lower elementary classes!
It is not a coincidence that the number of students with reading difficulties has shot up, and that MCPS, among others, refuses to consider dyslexia as a learning disorder they need to accommodate, despite the fact they accommodate many other common learning disorders!
People should demand implementation of a more phonetic-based reading method, with much smaller classes in lower elementary.
My kids read early and never had these issues, but we come from a country that made the same mistake as the US. It had to return to phonetics when it saw entire generation of kids had reading challenges. School systems here should learn from other countries’ experiences.
Anonymous wrote:You are spot on, at least in MCPS. Seems teachers are so focused on behavioral issues they can’t/don’t/won’t give the skills we were taught as kids. For the dyslexic kids MCPS is a horror show and always has been...they write them off, pure and simple.
Broadly, I fault the teacher preparation colleges - especially for reading issues we’ve seen recently. (Phonics wins). Also the end of direct instruction. Many teachers call it ‘drill and kill’. Well drill and kill is the way to teach most things for the majority of folks of all backgrounds and socio-economic status.
You can tell the county’s talk of and action on equity is hollow when if they really wanted to close the achievement gap they would move to direct instruction model. Huge Federal study from 1970s still holds today.
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1072120.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do know that in many districts teachers are told exactly what and how to teach and have zero autonomy to make these kinds of decisions on their own, right?
Teacher here - thank you for adding this. There is also administration telling you to prioritize math and reading; and since cursive is so time-consuming, it falls through the cracks.
Anonymous wrote:OP, are you blaming teachers or the school system. I don't know how to answer your question. If it's the former, I won't be diplomatic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A dyslexic child is just a child who has trouble reading. Depending on severity a dyslexic child may not have 100 percent of her needs met by a public school reading curriculum. That’s why there is special ed, pullouts, special schools, and tutors.
Dyslexia is an unexpected difficulty in reading in children of average or above average intelligence. I agree that the general education curriculum may not be sufficient for effective instruction. But I do think that special education instruction needs to be sufficient to teach dyslexic children to read. Private tutoring and schools are very expensive and out of reach for many families.
I think it’s often denial when those expensive programs are used. A parent clings to a diagnosis like dyslexia and the idea that it can be fixed and the child will all of a sudden be a strong student. But there are kids diagnosed with dyslexia that are going to always be in the first few percentiles of academic achievement even when they are in appropriate special ed classes. That is when, if the parents are rich, the parents pull out all the stops and pay for extensive and expensive tutoring. It’s not fair but that is reality. And then it’s those same parents arguing their kids need intensive supports throughout college and even graduate school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A dyslexic child is just a child who has trouble reading. Depending on severity a dyslexic child may not have 100 percent of her needs met by a public school reading curriculum. That’s why there is special ed, pullouts, special schools, and tutors.
Dyslexia is an unexpected difficulty in reading in children of average or above average intelligence. I agree that the general education curriculum may not be sufficient for effective instruction. But I do think that special education instruction needs to be sufficient to teach dyslexic children to read. Private tutoring and schools are very expensive and out of reach for many families.
Anonymous wrote:I am confused, both my kids in mcps and I believe they taught reading, writing, phonics etc
I remember showing them leapfrog videos before k and they learnt quickly ( how’s kids in high school still struggling???) and I think they teach similar way at school ie letter sound
My kid even learned cursive in 3rd grade, she is 14 now..
What school are your kids in??
Anonymous wrote:You do know that in many districts teachers are told exactly what and how to teach and have zero autonomy to make these kinds of decisions on their own, right?