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Children's Academic Success, Failure
BLOOMINGTON, Ind., April 22 (A Scribe Newswire) -- The abilities or deficits
that determine children's academic success or failure in the early years of
elementary school are the subject of a landmark research project at Indiana
University. Early results clearly favor the phonics approach over the
controversial whole-language method of early reading instruction.
One of the project coordinators, Charles Watson, a psychologist and emeritus
professor of speech and hearing sciences, said the unusual scope of the
project has been attracting considerable attention at scientific meetings in
this country and in Europe. There are a great many proposed explanations for
the failure of more than 5 per cent of all children to learn to read, or to
succeed in other academic areas, in the first few years of elementary
school, Watson explained, but no previous study has addressed the full range
of the suspected causes of failure, both longitudinally and in the total
population of a school system.
The IU project was initiated when the Benton County School District near
Lafayette, Ind., approached IU in 1995 to request help in identifying
children entering first grade who were likely to have special problems in
learning to read. The request happened to coincide with ongoing discussions
of those same issues among a group of about a dozen IU faculty
investigators.
These investigators told Glenn Kruger, superintendent of the Benton County
Schools, that a large array of possible causes of failure had been
implicated, including deficits in vision and hearing, language development,
cognitive skills, overall intellectual ability, to maintain
attention, and socio-economic status. Kruger was told that looking at all of
these variables in a total population would be necessary if the relative
impact of each of them were to be determined, as well as the consequences of
multiple deficits. In addition, a proper study would measure all of these
variables at the time of children's entry to school and again later, when
the children had learned to read or had failed to do so.
The faculty investigators explained that such studies had not been conducted
because of the expense and resources required, the prolonged timetable, and
the great difficulty in convincing any school system to allow such a
disruptive activity to invade their halls for several years. But when Kruger
still expressed enthusiasm for the project, Watson said that 10 faculty
members agreed to undertake it, because it was an opportunity that might not
occur again in any of their careers to conduct a study of this magnitude
that was bound to yield important knowledge.
After six and a half years, these investigators, from the fields of
optometry, audiology, clinical and experimental psychology, language
development, speech pathology, special education and cognitive science, have
completed the first stage of the project. Almost all of the children
entering first grade in the four elementary schools of Benton County for
three consecutive years were given an eight-hour battery of tests. Testing
was done by the faculty investigators, assisted by their graduate students.
A similar, age-appropriate test battery was then administered when the
children reached fourth grade.
The test results, together with hundreds of measures of academic achievement
for each of the 472 Benton County children, have now been entered into a
computer database. Watson said the complete analysis of the results may
require several years. But although it will take quite a long time to
extract all of the information of value from these data, the initial results
are already confirming some popular notions and rejecting others.
For example, he said the Benton results provide very clear evidence favoring
the phonics approach over the whole-language method of early reading
instruction. From the first look at the data it was evident that, whatever
other strengths or weaknesses a child might have, his or her appreciation of
the breakdown of words into component sounds, and the relation between
sounds and letters, is the single strongest predictor of success or failure
in early reading.
The early results also cast serious doubt on another popular idea, that poor
understanding of spoken language, especially under difficult listening
conditions, is a major cause of many language and reading problems. Watson
said, ''To our surprise, multiple tests showed the children's ability to
understand spoken English to be virtually unrelated to any areas of academic
achievement, although reading success could be accurately predicted from a
number of other measures. We are advising against therapies that assume ear
training to be an appropriate remedial approach to reading and language
disorders.''
Watson said the findings in this study can be used to develop ways to reach
children in the early years through corrective actions to increase their
chance for academic success. ''By identifying the skills that are essential
for successful reading, and the children most deficient in those skills, it
may be possible to initiate appropriate remedial methods before those
children have fallen so far behind that they will never catch up,'' he said.
Watson emphasized that, although he and Professor Douglas Horner in the IU
School of Optometry were serving as coordinators, the entire team of
investigators participated in the design of the study and in the
interpretation of the data, as did an advisory group from several other
universities in the United States and England. This research team is
currently attempting to obtain federal funding to continue the study of the
Benton school population through the eighth grade. With so much effort
already spent on documenting the strengths and weaknesses that the children
had when they entered elementary school, Watson said, the investigators
believe that it would be a great waste to fail to follow them through the
later grades.
Subject of Landmark Indiana University Research Project
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