How Some of California's Worst Schools Got Better at Teaching Reading
Some of the worst-performing elementary schools in California retrained teachers to teach reading with phonics. A new paper says the change worked.

Back in 2017, the families of children in some of California's worst-performing public schools sued the state for failing to teach low-income black and Hispanic children how to read. This led to a legal settlement in which the state's 75 worst-performing elementary schools agreed to invest in evidence-based reading instruction—that is, in training teachers to use techniques, such as phonics, for which there is strong evidence that they work.
According to a new working paper from two Stanford researchers, the extra training helped. Students' reading scores improved when compared to students from other poorly performing schools. The score increases were roughly as valuable as an additional 25 percent of a school year.
Considerable research shows that children learn to read best by using phonics—essentially, by "sounding out" words they don't know. Unfortunately, many schools over the past several decades have eschewed phonics in favor of methods like "three-cueing," which encourages children to guess words they don't know using context clues, not the actual letters in a word.
Even with these gains, most of the students in these schools are still struggling. At the end of the study, two-thirds of them still failed to meet state reading standards.
"I wouldn't call the results super large," Princeton sociologist Jennifer Jennings told The Hechinger Report, an education news site. "I would call them cost-effective"
Small though these results are, they are much larger than those prompted by most other interventions. The paper notes that the change had a "larger effect size than almost 90 percent of educational interventions serving more than 2,000 students."
This change was funded by the settlement—the training costs came to about $1,000 per student—but it's not hard to imagine how similar results could be met without a big funding increase. School funding tends to have a very weak relationship with school quality. This isn't because money doesn't matter; it's that many schools waste funds on things like additional non-instructional staff and steep teacher benefits. (In 36 states, schools with higher poverty rates already receive more funding per pupil than schools with higher-income student bodies.)
Retraining teachers is likely well within the budgets of many poorly performing schools—as long as administrators choose to devote their resources to a proven method.
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End taxpayer funding of all government schools.
"Unfortunately, many schools over the past several decades have eschewed phonics in favor of methods like "three-cueing," which encourages children to guess words they don't know using context clues, not the actual letters in a word."
So when are they going to go back to the older way of doing math? Cause the current shit they teach is nuts.
that is, in training teachers to use techniques, such as phonics, for which there is strong evidence that they work.
Fucking hell, the author of this can’t even write properly.
She sadly grew up in a world without phonics.
I'd believe it, except she’s worse at guessing what words mean in context.
But what if the words believe they mean something else. Time to call in the DEI squad.
Pretty sure phonics is racist. Also reading.
Hooked on Monkey Fonics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xBGZpM7t-34
Well that explains the stench of rotting monkey corpses at my kid's elementary school all those years ago.
How Some of California's Worst Schools
Got Better atResumed Teaching ReadingFixed it.
The modest results probably are mostly due to the teachers and parents being unable to read. It's been a long time since reading instruction was stopped.
I honestly don't ever remember not being able to read, but I do remember phonics more as a way to pronounce unknown words. It can work, but the problem is that the English language is weird.
Nuclear and clear. No-clee-ar (or ur) vs cleer.
And foreign words or names are trouble. For years I said Persephone as "Per-se-phone", not "Per-seph-o-nay". And I still have no idea how to say Hermione
It's pronounced nuculer.
+1, Homer Simpson!
You lost $1M on Wheel Of Fortune didn't you?
Per-seph-oh-nee.
But yes, English is weird as heck.
Just give the teachers a collection of McGuffey Readers and call it good.
Phonics? Seriously? They finally figured out that the method that has worked ever since the inception of written languages not formed in pictograph is the best way to teach literacy?
You don't need to reinvent the wheel to make yourself relevant. Just make the friggin' wheel.
Every couple of years, some slickster in a suit comes around to sell a new package deal and everybody buys into it for a "trial run"; only to realize that it is BS and the slickster ran off with their money.
Example: Remember in 1st grade when the alphabet had pictures on them ? For decades A was for apple, D was for dog , H was for horse, etc. ? Well now some idiot has sold the school district the idea that a sheep should be on the letter A because it makes a Ba-a-a sound and that the dog should be on the letter H because it is a Hound, while the horse in on the letter N because it has a long Nose (which it doesn't, it has a long face).
No, I'm not making any of that up. Kids today don't stand a chance with this nonsense.