{"title":"Teaching phonics and reading effectively: ‘A balancing act’ for teachers, policy makers and researchers","authors":"Dominic Wyse, Alice Bradbury","doi":"10.1002/rev3.3429","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract The debates about what are the most effective ways to teach young children to learn to read have been described as ‘the reading wars’. In 2022 the research published in a paper by Wyse and Bradbury (2022) stimulated widespread attention including in the media. Wyse and Bradbury concluded on the basis of four major research analyses that although systematic phonics teaching was important the approach in England to synthetic phonics was too narrow and therefore in need of improvement. In 2023 the paper was the subject of a critique by Greg Brooks (2023). This paper responds to Brooks' critique by providing new information about the nature of the responses to the paper to contextualise Brooks' response. It is concluded that Brooks' response includes too many errors, and is too selective, to be regarded as a robust and reasonable critique. It is argued that the nature of Brooks' approach to criticism only serves to entrench the reading wars, and raises ethical considerations about the nature of the attack on Wyse and Bradbury (2022). Context and implications Rationale for this study This paper responds to Greg Brooks' (2023) criticisms of Wyse and Bradbury (2022). Why the new findings matter It is important that the erroneous views expressed in Brooks (2023) are corrected because the debates about reading have important consequences for young children's education. Implications for practitioners, policy makers, researchers Understanding the most effective ways to teach reading is important for children's education worldwide. Research is a source of vital knowledge about what are the most effective ways to teach reading. Interpreting research findings accurately and in a balanced way in order to make recommendations about curriculum policies and classroom practice is vital to ensure that any such recommendations are well justified. Imbalanced and erroneous accounts risk non‐optimal teaching and educational policies, and hence negative consequences for children's learning.","PeriodicalId":45076,"journal":{"name":"Review of Education","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Review of Education","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/rev3.3429","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract The debates about what are the most effective ways to teach young children to learn to read have been described as ‘the reading wars’. In 2022 the research published in a paper by Wyse and Bradbury (2022) stimulated widespread attention including in the media. Wyse and Bradbury concluded on the basis of four major research analyses that although systematic phonics teaching was important the approach in England to synthetic phonics was too narrow and therefore in need of improvement. In 2023 the paper was the subject of a critique by Greg Brooks (2023). This paper responds to Brooks' critique by providing new information about the nature of the responses to the paper to contextualise Brooks' response. It is concluded that Brooks' response includes too many errors, and is too selective, to be regarded as a robust and reasonable critique. It is argued that the nature of Brooks' approach to criticism only serves to entrench the reading wars, and raises ethical considerations about the nature of the attack on Wyse and Bradbury (2022). Context and implications Rationale for this study This paper responds to Greg Brooks' (2023) criticisms of Wyse and Bradbury (2022). Why the new findings matter It is important that the erroneous views expressed in Brooks (2023) are corrected because the debates about reading have important consequences for young children's education. Implications for practitioners, policy makers, researchers Understanding the most effective ways to teach reading is important for children's education worldwide. Research is a source of vital knowledge about what are the most effective ways to teach reading. Interpreting research findings accurately and in a balanced way in order to make recommendations about curriculum policies and classroom practice is vital to ensure that any such recommendations are well justified. Imbalanced and erroneous accounts risk non‐optimal teaching and educational policies, and hence negative consequences for children's learning.
关于什么是教幼儿学习阅读最有效的方法的争论被称为“阅读战争”。2022年,Wyse和Bradbury(2022)在一篇论文中发表的研究引起了包括媒体在内的广泛关注。Wyse和Bradbury在四项主要研究分析的基础上得出结论,尽管系统的语音教学很重要,但英国的综合语音教学方法过于狭隘,因此需要改进。在2023年,这篇论文是格雷格·布鲁克斯(2023)批评的主题。本文对布鲁克斯的批评做出了回应,提供了关于对论文回应的性质的新信息,将布鲁克斯的回应置于语境中。结论是,布鲁克斯的回应包含了太多的错误,而且太有选择性,不能被视为一个有力的和合理的批评。有人认为,布鲁克斯的批评方法的本质只是为了巩固阅读战争,并提出了对Wyse和Bradbury(2022)攻击性质的伦理考虑。本文回应了Greg Brooks(2023)对Wyse and Bradbury(2022)的批评。重要的是,布鲁克斯(2023)中表达的错误观点得到纠正,因为关于阅读的辩论对幼儿教育有重要影响。了解最有效的阅读教学方法对全世界的儿童教育都很重要。研究是最有效的阅读教学方法的重要知识来源。为了对课程政策和课堂实践提出建议,准确和平衡地解释研究结果对于确保任何此类建议都是合理的至关重要。不平衡和错误的账目有可能导致非最佳教学和教育政策,从而对儿童的学习产生负面影响。