reading for purpose and pleasure

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    Teaching our children to read is the basis of our education system. Literacy skills are not

    just important in themselves for later life, but essential for the proper teaching of other

    subjects in schools. Many of the past failures of education and the problems in our

    secondary schools stem, at least in part, from the fact that too many children leftprimary school without being able to read and write properly.

    It is for this reason that this government has put so much emphasis over the past eight

    years on improving literacy standards. Thanks to the hard work of pupils and teachers,

    coupled with more investment in schools, we have seen dramatic progress since 1997.

    We need, however, to do even better.

    As a government that is passionate about education, we are consistently interested in

    how we can improve the teaching of literacy and reading. My department is engaged in

    learning from the best practice found in our schools and in other countries. We certainly

    are not going to turn our backs on something that works.

    This brings me to the recent media debate about phonics. There is no doubt that

    phonics, properly taught, plays an important part in teaching literacy skills. But there isa risk, and one fuelled by recent coverage of the Clackmannanshire study, that phonics

    is somehow seen as a magic bullet which will ensure that every child leaves primary

    school as an effective and enthusiastic reader.

    Phonics is based on the simple premise that in order to learn to read a child must be

    able to recognise and combine the basic sounds, or phonemes, that make up the English

    language. But it is a big jump to suggest that teaching children phonics at an early stage

    in their education would, on its own, conquer the spectre of illiteracy for good, as some

    of its most enthusiastic supporters claim.

    Mastery of phonics will, of course, enable a child to correctly "decode" all the regular

    words on the page. This means that they have the ability to turn the letters into sounds

    and the sounds into words. This is a critical first step in learning to read, and that is why

    it is at the heart of our national literacy strategy. We promote phonics as the first and

    foremost strategy that children employ as they encounter new words. But on its own it is

    simply not enough.

    When we talk about reading, we are not just interested in teaching a child to decode.

    Reading is more than correctly identifying words on a page. It is also about

    understanding what has been written, and responding critically to the ideas, themes and

    events contained in the words. This is what we mean when we say that we want our

    children to read for purpose and pleasure.

    Authoritative research shows that children learn to read best when clear and direct

    instruction in phonics is combined with a range of different teaching strategies that

    develop a child's ability to understand the context of what is written, instantly recognise

    frequently used words, and use and apply grammar correctly.

    Between 1997 and 2000, the National Reading Panel, commissioned by the US

    Congress, assessed the full range of international research on the effectiveness of

    various approaches to teaching children to read English. It is the most comprehensive

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    Opinion

    Reading for purpose and pleasureLiteracy is not just about recognising words - children will onlyread for pleasure when they respond to them, says Ruth Kelly

    Ruth Kelly

    The Guardian, Tuesday 5 April 2005 0 2.08 BST

    h Kelly: Reading for purpose and pleasure | Politics | The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2005/apr/05/schools.education

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    overview of strategies to teach reading that currently exists. The panel's report,

    published in 2000, found that systematic phonics instruction is only one component -

    albeit a necessary one - of a total and effective reading programme.

    Last year, 92% of 11-year-olds left primary school able to "read a range of text accurately

    and read independently with pace and fluency". But this government's aspiration is that

    children should leave primary school not only able to read fluently, but able to show

    understanding of significant ideas, themes and events. These are the skills children need

    to enable them successfully to access the secondary curriculum. Eighty-three per cent of11-year-olds last year achieved this. That it is a big improvement on the 67% in 1997, but

    we are determined to see standards rise further.

    There is more to do to support teachers in enabling children to read, to further develop

    their knowledge and understanding of phonics teaching, and to learn how this is most

    effectively combined with different reading strategies. That is why, in the primary

    national strategy, we are emphasising this within our major leadership programme, our

    new work with early years settings, and our intensive support for low-performing

    schools. But we are clear that the way forward is not a prescriptive and reductionist

    approach to phonics, to the exclusion of all else.

    To make the most of education and fulfil their potential, the next generation will need

    secure phonics skills. But they also deserve to enjoy a wide range of literature and

    poetry, fiction and non-fiction writing; to develop a rich vocabulary; and to acquire the

    skills that enable them to make sense of, and respond to, what they read. This is what

    educating a child to be literate means.

    Ruth Kelly is education secretary

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    h Kelly: Reading for purpose and pleasure | Politics | The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2005/apr/05/schools.education

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    British heroes and budgeting nous

    2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

    h Kelly: Reading for purpose and pleasure | Politics | The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2005/apr/05/schools.education

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