Overview: How Children Learn to Read Words
Writing is a fairly recent invention, but powerful in improving human intelligence.
The first writing was logographic, where a symbol represented the meaning
of a word. This meant a vast number of symbols to learn. In
a later system, symbols representing syllables were introduced, a shift
to sound-based writing. With the development of the alphabet, writing
used an economical group of symbols representing speech phonemes, the vocal
gestures from which words are constructed in a language. However,
using an alphabet requires sufficient familiarity with phonemes to recognize
them in spoken words, and this can be a serious hurdle. Phonemes
are produced very rapidly in ordinary speech (10-20 per second), and the
vocal gestures overlap, making phoneme boundaries difficult to discern.
This diagram illustrates how alphabetic writing works. The spelling
FISH maps out the pronunciation of fish. The alphabetic code allows
a systematic way to read any word by following its pronunciation map.
To sound out a word, you translate the letters into phonemes, blend the
phonemes to approximate the pronunciation, and recognize the word.
Phonics is simply decoding instruction--teaching beginners to understand
spellings as phoneme maps. However, because phonemes are coarticulated,
phoneme awareness must usually be taught explicitly, not just assumed.
We're used to thinking of two routes to word recognition: sight and
decoding. However, all skilled readers acquire sight words, and all
are expert decoders. Moreover, we can recognize words by analogizing,
stringing together pronounceable word parts, or contextual guessing.
Sight recognition means instant recognition without analysis. Decoding
involves translation; although early decoding requires audible sounding
out and blending, later decoding is fast and silent. To analogize,
we recall a word with the same spelling pattern and make the unfamiliar
word rhyme with the remembered word. The pronounceable word parts
strategy requires a large store of sight chunks, such as ing, ight,
and tion, that readers can string together to identify words.
Contextual guessing is using the rest of sentence to guess unrecognized
words. Because guesswork is slow, effortful, and not very reliable,
readers rapidly abandon it as they gain decoding skill and sight vocabulary.
The problem in reading words is to access the lexicon, i.e., the store
of words and associated information in memory. Before we ever
learn to read, we store an incredible web of words with their pronunciations,
meanings, syntax, and sometimes spelling data. The problem in reading
is to access the lexicon, i.e., to locate the entry in memory from its
spelling. Access routes of skilled readers are memorable (they can
call up a word easily), reliable (they get the same word every time they
see its spelling), and easily learned (in just a few trials). But
accurate, reliable access routes are not good enough: To save resources
for comprehension, we need effortless access to words. Thus sight
word access is the goal of phonics instruction.
Children don't just jump into decoding and acquiring sight vocabulary.
They move through predictable phases of using the alphabet more and more
skillfully. Before children learn to use the alphabet, they employ
a default strategy of attaching a visual cue to meaning. This visual
cue strategy explains why very young children can recognize many words
in their normal surroundings, for example, reading McDonald's with the
arches logo. They are simply recognizing pictures. When
children gain alphabetic insight, they begin to use phonetic cues instead
of visual cues. They use some letters (usually at the beginning of
a word) to cue some of the phonemes in the word, providing a systematic
access route to the word in the lexicon (though not a reliable route).
Reliable access
comes in the alphabetic phase, when children learn to decode words from
spelling alone. Alphabetic phase reading allows children to rapidly
acquire sight vocabulary. Contrary to past beliefs, sight-word learning
does not depend on rote association. Children learn sight words in
just a few quality encounters. Quality encounters connect
letters in a spelling to phonemes in the pronunciation, usually by sounding
out and blending. In other words, we typically learn sight words
through careful decoding. Though decoding demands great attention
in young readers, it sets up reliable access routes to retrieve the word.
Once the access route is established, the tools to build it (correspondence
rules) drop out. The spelling becomes a meaningful symbol of spoken
word (i.e., it "looks like" the word). Learning to decode dramatically
reduces the number of trials to sight recognition from an average of 35
trials to an average of 4 trials.
How do we lead children to the full alphabetic phase where they can sound
out words? Phonics is designed to accomplish this goal. Phonics
is simply instruction in decoding. It involves teaching correspondence
rules and how to blend. Two types of phonics have been developed:
explicit and analytic. Analytic phonics is designed to avoid pronouncing
phonemes in isolation. This necessitates roundabout explanations,
and it presumes phoneme awareness rather than modeling how phonemes are
cued and assembled in decoding. In explicit phonics, teachers pronounce
phonemes in isolation to model how to sound out and blend. Studies
show that explicit phonics is more effective in leading children to early
reading independence.
One other factor has been shown to be important in phonics: decodable
texts. Decodable texts are simply texts in which most of the words
can be decoded using correspondences children have learned to date in their
phonics program. While such control temporarily restricts the literature
value of practice texts, research shows that it induces a decoding strategy
in beginning readers. Because the phonics they learn works to unlock
the words in their stories, they rely on a decoding strategy in reading.
This helps them gain sight words rapidly, and also helps them figure out
patterns not explicitly taught in phonics lessons. As they expand
their sight vocabularies and decoding power, controls on decodability can
rapidly be removed, allowing them to read and enjoy children's literature.
The problem with alphabetic-phase reading is that it is slow and effortful.
Fortunately, as children learn sight words and sight chunks, they learn
shortcuts to word recognition. They remember chunks of spellings
for quick assembly. These chunks are pronounceable word parts that
can be recognized without analysis. Using chunks allows readers to
decode polysyllabic words by stringing together the familiar parts.
The key to expert decoding seems to be learning vowel correspondences--the
heart of every syllable. Also, it takes lots of reading practice
to acquire sight words and sight chunks. Children must be led to
read voluntarily as a leisure time activity to take on this level of practice.
Should our goal for beginning readers be to remember words by sight or
decode? The answer is both. To progress toward reading expertise,
children must learn to decode and to read words by sight. However,
sight word reading depends on decoding--knowledge of our alphabetic system.
Thus, learning to decode must come first.
Return to the Reading Genie.