A Critique of Pure Teaching Methods and the Case of Synthetic Phonics
examines how research into the effectiveness of teaching methods can
and should relate to what takes place in the classroom. The discussion
brings to light some important features of the way we classify
teaching activities. The classifications are unlike those we use in
natural science – for instance, how we classify drug dosages. This
point has very important implications for what should be considered
the appropriate relationships between educational research and
classroom practice. Andrew Davis applies the results of this
discussion to the teaching of early reading, focussing in particular
on the approach known as synthetic phonics. He provides a
philosophical investigation into the nature of reading, and into the
concepts that feature in approaches to teaching it, such as the idea
of building words from letter sounds, the nature of words themselves
and reading for meaning. He concludes with a discussion of why this
matters so much, reflecting on how stories and books can be part of a
child's emerging identity within the family. He explores how values of
family life should be weighed against the importance of achievements
in school, and argues for the claim that school reading policies of
certain kinds may have a destructive impact if they are felt to trump
the private interests of children and their families.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781474270687
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter