Personalize Yedda, (And make Danny Happy)
People ask & answer about almost everything. Tell us what you're interested in... So we can personalize Yedda especially for you
I'm interested in:
Originated from
Jpost

Education reform

May 25, 2008 Maria Montessori wrote, almost a century ago, that three- and four-year-old preschoolers will learn to read spontaneously if they get "sufficient" practice forming alphabet letters. Although boldly claimed in her "The Montessori Method" this possibility has strangely never before been subjected to a scientific test. In 2002-2004 I found five kindergarten teachers on the Internet who provided experimental data on 106 experimental kindergarten students as they practiced printing fluency and we monitored their reading ability (and also five other first-grade teachers who did NOT make the effort of inducing printing practice, but who only measured how much of the serial alphabet students could print in a timed, twenty-second period of time, and the correlation with reading skill. These 94 students formed a control group). The correlation was very obvious in all ten classrooms. We found that all but a very small percentage of students read well, and with good comprehension, shortly after the point in time when they were able to print at least the first thirteen letters within 20 seconds. Multiplied by three, this equates with a fluency rate of 39 letters per minute. The children enjoyed the practice sessions, and observing their gradual increase in fluency as the weeks passed. No apparent stress was noted, and it was found that the median kindergartner, after spending five minutes daily of each school day practice printing, was "printing fluent" after a mere three months. But printing fluency didn't correlate with reading skill among older students, according to our results with a group of fifty fourth-graders. The kindergartners wrote and read with about the same skill as the first graders at the end of the winter of school. The fact that kindergartners were reading and writing at a level of children a full grade ahead shows that the early acquisition of literacy in the kindergarten (experimental) group was caused by the dedicated attempt to induce practiced fluency in printing, and not just a coincidental marker of some third, and unknown, causative factor. At the present time (May, 2008) I have collected another group of kindergarten and first-grade teachers on the Internet. Fourteen K-1 teachers have already submitted correlations of the printing fluency and reading skills of their pupils. In each case the correlation has been obvious and strong. Anyone wishing to join and monitor (or participate on) this free list need only send any email to k1writing-subscribe@yahoogroups.com. Returning the automated "confirmation message" to the computer will result in automatic list membership. Printing practice and fluency training in the early grades has completely gone out of style during the twentieth century, though it is still practiced (though not specifically tested) in India and China. This rediscovery of this important principle offers an inexpensive and effective means toward ensuring reading and academic success from the earliest grades for children of all races and ethnic backgrounds. It has also been found that second-graders able to give correct answers to simple addition facts more fluently than 40 answers per minute rarely have problems with math or science thereafter. Bob Rose, MD (retired), rovarose@aol.com Jasper, Georgia


Share Send to a friend Watch Report
 
 

Posted Answers

No answers were posted yet - be the first one to answer!

Sign in to participate

Got an answer for Bob Rose? Would you like to comment on the posted answers, or vote for the one which you think is the best?

Sign up for a free account, or sign in (if you're already a member).

Explore Related Questions

Other people asked questions on similar topics, check out the answers they received:


Q:

Why did the Jewish Americans vote for Obama?

Why did the Jewish Americans vote for Obama?
Submitted by Ronald Adams   10 months ago.
  • viewed 114 times
Last answer posted 10 months ago by daveme


Explore Related Posts in Forums

Lessons From 40 Years of Education 'Reform'

Lessons From 40 Years of Education 'Reform' ," by Louis V. Gerstner Jr. publication interested in education reform while still in high school. I served on school board committees , from American STUDENTS, there will be no "reform" in American education. (Hint: See Harry Braverman's

B203 - Education Reform Bill 2009 (second reading)

B203 - Education Reform Bill 2009 (second reading) B203 - Education Reform Bill 2009, Centre... Party A Bill to reform secondary and tertiary education in the UK to ensure that all students have Re: B203 - Education Reform Bill 2009 (second reading) note: Quote: : by Drogue introducing

Education Secretary (Duncan) Presses for Reforms

Lawmakers to make education reforms or risk falling further behind the rest of the nation and losing states that are focused on education reforms. States that agree to expand public charter schools ' ideas for public education can prevent needless mistakes as we reform...COSTLY mistakes (and I don't
» More...
Powered by
Feed - Subscribe to changes to this Q&A Blog
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
AOL Health Q&A is powered by Yedda an AOL Company
Copyright © 2006-2009, Yedda Inc. and respective copyright owners