Press
Releases and Congressional Testimony
Press
Releases
National Reading Panel Reports Combination
of Teaching Phonics, Word Sounds, Giving Feedback on
Oral Reading Most Effective Way to Teach Reading
Source: National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development
For Immediate Release April 13,
2000
In the largest, most comprehensive
evidenced-based review ever conducted of research on
how children learn reading, a Congressionally mandated
independent panel has concluded that the most effective
way to teach children to read is through instruction
that includes a combination of methods.
The panel determined that effective
reading instruction includes teaching children to break
apart and manipulate the sounds in words (phonemic awareness),
teaching them that these sounds are represented by letters
of the alphabet which can then be blended together to
form words (phonics), having them practice what they've
learned by reading aloud with guidance and feedback
(guided oral reading), and applying reading comprehension
strategies to guide and improve reading comprehension.
The work of this panel was guided by
two unique actions. First, the panel developed a set
of rigorous scientific standards to evaluate the research
on the effectiveness of different instructional approaches
used in teaching reading skills. Second, the work of
the panel was conducted in a public forum, which allowed
for public input at all of its meetings.
"For the first time, we now have
guidance-based on evidence from sound scientific research-on
how best to teach children to read," said Duane
Alexander, M.D., Director of the National Institute
of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), which
supports research in reading and learning. "The
panel's rigorous scientific review identifies the most
effective strategies for teaching reading."
The National Reading Panel was established
in response to a 1997 congressional directive. Specifically,
Congress asked the Director of the NICHD, in consultation
with the U.S. Secretary of Education, Richard W. Riley,
to convene a national panel to review the scientific
literature and determine, based on that evidence, the
most effective ways to teach children to read. The Panel
is composed of 14 individuals and includes leading scientists
in reading research, representatives of colleges of
education, reading teachers, educational administrators,
and parents. The report, along with more information
about the National Reading Panel, is available at the
panel's website, http://www.nationalreadingpanel.org.
The NICHD will undertake an aggressive
effort to distribute the report and its findings to
policy makers, educators, and parents. The NICHD will
collaborate in these efforts with the National Institute
for Literacy and the Public Libraries Association.
For its review, the panel selected
research from the approximately 100,000 reading research
studies that have been published since 1966, and another
15,000 that had been published before that time. Because
of the large volume of studies, the panel selected only
experimental and quasi-experimental studies, and among
those considered only studies meeting rigorous scientific
standards in reaching its conclusions.
The panel's review focused on the following
areas: alphabetics (phonemic awareness and phonics instruction),
reading fluency, reading comprehension, teacher education,
and computer technology.
Phonemic awareness is knowledge that
spoken words are made up of tiny segments of sound,
referred to as phonemes. For example, the words "go"
and "she" each consist of two phonemes. Phonemic
awareness is often confused with phonics, which refers
to the process of linking these sounds to the symbols
that stand for them, the letters of the alphabet. A
comprehensive explanation of these two concepts is available
in the NICHD publication, Understanding Why Children
Succeed or Fail at Reading, http://www.nichd.nih.gov/publications/pubs/readbro.htm.
The panel found that the research conducted
to date strongly supports the concept that explicitly
and systematically teaching children to manipulate phonemes
significantly improves children's reading and spelling
abilities. The evidence for this is so clear cut that
this method should be an important component of classroom
reading instruction.
The panel also concluded that the research
literature provides solid evidence that phonics instruction
produces significant benefits for children from kindergarten
through 6th grade and for children having difficulties
learning to read. The greatest improvements in reading
were seen from systematic phonics instruction. This
type of phonics instruction consists of teaching a planned
sequence of phonics elements, rather than highlighting
elements as they happen to appear in a text. Here again,
the evidence was so strong that the panel concluded
that systematic phonics instruction is appropriate for
routine classroom instruction.
For children with learning disabilities
and children who are low achievers, systematic phonics
instruction, combined with synthetic phonics instruction
produced the greatest gains. Synthetic phonics instruction
consists of teaching students to explicitly convert
letters into phonemes and then blend the phonemes to
form words. Moreover, systematic synthetic phonics instruction
was significantly more effective in improving the reading
skills of children from low socioeconomic levels. Across
all grade levels, systematic synthetic phonics instruction
improved the ability of good readers to spell.
The panel noted that, because children
vary in reading ability and vary in the skills they
bring to the classroom, no single approach to teaching
phonics could be used in all cases. For this reason,
it is important to train teachers in the different kinds
of approaches to teaching phonics and in how to tailor
these approaches to particular groups of students.
The panel also concluded that guided
oral reading is important for developing reading fluency-the
ability to read with efficiency and ease. In guided
oral reading, students read out loud, to either a parent,
teacher or other student, who corrects their mistakes
and provides them with other feedback. Specifically,
guided oral reading helped students across a wide range
of grade levels to learn to recognize new words, helped
them to read accurately and easily, and helped them
to comprehend what they read.
By contrast, the panel was unable to
determine from the research whether reading silently
to oneself helped to improve reading fluency. Although
it makes sense that silent reading would lead to improvements
in fluency, and the panel members did not discourage
the practice, sufficient research to conclusively prove
this assumption has not been conducted. Literally hundreds
of studies have shown that the best readers read silently
to themselves more frequently than do poor readers,
the panel members wrote. However, these studies cannot
distinguish whether independent silent reading improves
reading skills or that good readers simply prefer to
read silently to themselves more than do poor readers.
The panel recommended that if silent reading is used
as a classroom technique, intended to develop reading
skills and fluency, it should be done in combination
with other types of reading instruction, such as guided
oral reading.
To determine how children best learn
to comprehend what they read, the panel reviewed studies
of three areas regarded as essential to developing reading
comprehension: vocabulary development, text comprehension
instruction, and teacher preparation and comprehension
strategies instruction.
Although the best method or combination
of methods for teaching vocabulary has not yet been
identified, the panel review uncovered several important
implications for teaching reading. First, vocabulary
should be taught both directly-apart from a larger narrative
or text-and indirectly-as words are encountered in a
larger text. Repetition and multiple exposure to vocabulary
words will also assist vocabulary development, as will
the use of computer technology. The panel emphasized
that instructors should not rely on a single method
for teaching vocabulary, but on a combination of methods.
Likewise, the panel also found that
reading comprehension of text is best facilitated by
teaching students a variety of techniques and systematic
strategies to assist in recall of information, question
generation, and summarizing of information. The panel
also found that teachers must be provided with appropriate
and intensive training to ensure that they know when
and how to teach specific strategies.
With respect to the overall preparation
of teachers, the panel noted that existing studies showed
that training both new and established teachers generally
produced higher student achievement, but the research
in this area is woefully inadequate to draw clear conclusions
about what makes training most effective. More quality
research on teacher training is one of the major research
needs identified by the panel.
Finally, the panel examined the use
of computer technology to teach reading. The panel noted
that there are too few definitive studies to draw firm
conclusions, but that the available information suggests
that it is possible to use computer technology for reading
instruction. Although not directly applicable to reading
instruction, the use of hypertext-highlighted text that
links to definitions or related text-may be a useful
learning aid in the classroom. Moreover, the use of
computers as word processors may also help students
learn to read, as reading instruction is most effective
when combined with writing instruction.
The NICHD is one of the Institutes
comprising the National Institutes of Health, the Federal
government's premier biomedical research agency. NICHD
supports and conducts research on the reproductive,
neurobiological, developmental, and behavioral processes
that determine and maintain the health of children,
adults, families, and populations.
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