Media
reports last week of the findings of the New South Wales Board of Studies Teaching and Educational Standards (BOSTES) audit of university teacher
education curricula pertaining to the teaching of reading have again stirred the
possum on the thorny issue of what Australian teachers do and don't learn in their pre-service
education about optimal ways of teaching children to read.
To say
that this is an exasperating “debate” is to seriously understate the frustration
of academics, policy-makers, clinicians, teachers, parents, and the media.
Imagine a scenario in which the medical profession in the 1940s had been unable
to agree on the role of penicillin in treating infection. Instead of decades of
improved health care and subsequent cumulative scientific advances, we would be
stuck in circular arguments about the merits of poultices and other folkloric
treatments, the outcome of which was too frequently death, even in young, otherwise
healthy patients. Medicine, of course, has to deal with the inconvenient
obviousness of its failures. As I have stated before on this blog a significant difference between
education and medicine is the fact that education policy-makers and
practitioners are rather “quarantined” from the impact of their failures, and
can even re-ascribe these to characteristics of the learner (e.g. with respect
to capacity, motivation, effort, family background etc). An exception to this
is the publication of PIRLS data, which then needs some explaining.
My question to Education Deans is this – if the findings of the NSW BOSTES audit are incorrect and/or are based on a flawed methodology, then how do we explain (a) teachers’ poor knowledge of the English language code (see for example Fielding-Barnsley, 2010 and Moats, 2014, and (b) the marked under-achievement of Australian children on international measures of reading progress such as PIRLS? There’s a disconnect somewhere.
This
question, it seems to me, creates the kind of bind for which no amount of media
training can adequately assist with the formulation of an obfuscating response.
Or so I thought, until I read this piece by Stewart Riddle (University of Southern
Queensland), in which we are now assured that teachers’ inability to spell does
not interfere with their ability to teach reading and spelling. That’s akin to
saying that the inability to use a protractor shouldn’t interfere with an
architect’s ability to design a house. Knowing that Dr Riddle used a dictionary
on the occasions as a teacher when he didn’t know how to spell a word is no
reassurance either – what about all those times he thought he knew how
to spell a word, and neither he, nor his students were any the wiser in the
face of his errors? That’s like a doctor saying that there’s no need to be
concerned about incorrect drug doses, because when s/he thinks the dose might
be wrong, s/he checks it. On the other occasions of course, the outcome might
be fatal for the poor unsuspecting patient.
Until a
couple of years ago, I was course co-ordinator on a postgraduate diploma for
practising teachers. The teachers who enrolled in this program were highly
motivated and committed to improving the everyday lives of at-risk and troubled
students. I had a great deal of respect for some of the challenging scenarios
their work threw up to them. However when it was time to assess their written
work, I had to suck air in through my teeth and brace myself for constant
frustration and disappointment. On average, I would say about 15% of these
teachers had written skills (spelling and grammar) of a standard the community
would expect of tertiary-qualified professionals. Their work stood out and was
a joy to read, as I could engage with their ideas, without being distracted by
sometimes less than junior secondary standard writing. About 60% had mid-range
skills, characterised by homophone-based spelling errors (e.g. their/there; bear/bare;
compliment/complement, etc) and basic grammatical errors such as poor
subject-verb agreement, poor use of commas, and next to no understanding of
when to use/not use apostrophes. This work was below the standard expected
of university graduates and interfered with the transmission of ideas. The
remaining one quarter or so had very poor written skills, such that the reader
was pre-occupied with anticipating the next error or omission and their ideas
were lost. I remember writing on one such assignment “Please make sure you
proof-read and spell-check your work carefully before you submit it”, to which
I received an email reply, as follows: “Sorry about the sloppy writing. My
husband was away on the weekend and he usually does my proof-reading and
editing”. I wonder how that same teacher would have dealt with such an
excuse from one of her students?
A number
of commentators (Dr Riddle included) have referred in recent times to Louisa
Moats’ oft-quoted line that “Teaching reading* IS rocket science” (*in fact Dr
Riddle refers in his recent piece on The Conversation to “literacy”, which of
course is not the same as reading – a misapprehension that might be part of the
problem). I agree fully that there is a complex science to the application of evidence
in early year’s classrooms; however it is a science to which student teachers
are receiving only patchy and partial exposure, and it is children who bear the life-long cost of this.
Remember too, that when launching a rocket, being inches out on
the launching pad means you’ll be miles out in space.
(C) Pamela Snow 2015
I have just completed a Grad Dip in Early Childhood Education and concur. A component of our first literacy assignment involved critiquing the writing of a fellow student. I was gentle with the student I peer reviewed and spent a lot of time correcting grammar etc, and mentioned via email it must be challenging having English as a second language (she had a very unusual name). The reply came back that English was her first language! I could scarcely believe it. As to the literacy subject itself, I dare not put my true thoughts in writing.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comments Ruth - and what a confronting example of the problem!
ReplyDeletePlease feel free to use this safe space to air your thoughts on the literacy subject :)
Warm wishes
Pam
I read the same The Conversation article, started fuming, and was working up to writing a blog post about it, but I see yours has made that effort unnecessary. What you said. My sister lectured for years in Law at the ANU, so supposedly some of our best and brightest students, and used to constantly complain that they couldn't spell and some of them couldn't string a sentence together. This is a real problem, and acknowledged openly by many teachers and student teachers, who I'm sure would willingly and rapidly make significant improvements, if only the bar on what counts as evidence in literacy education were not set so extremely low, and if only many academics weren't determinedly working to prevent it being raised, and thus protect their publications, positions and reputations.
ReplyDelete