Archived Information
State of the Art: Reading - November 1993
3. Phonemic awareness, a precursor to competency in identifying words, is one of the best predictors of later success in reading.
(Adams 1990, p. 412)
Phonics--instruction in the relationship between letters and sounds--can help children attain automatic, visual recognition of spelling patterns within words for word recognition. Efficient recognition of spelling patterns, in turn, depends on accurate and automatic recognition of individual letters. Studies of young children show that the most important precursor to success in learning to read is rapid recognition of the letters of the alphabet. Studies also show that the efficient use of sound patterns in speech depends on the awareness of phonemes in spoken language. This awareness relates strongly to success in beginning reading. Many children develop these prerequisites without formal instruction. This is likely due both to the frequency and quality of early experiences these children have with oral language and to the amount of exposure they have to print before entering school.
Effective beginning reading instruction is that which contains a
balance of activities designed to improve word recognition,
including phonics instruction and reading meaningful text. Writing
and spelling activities are also part of effective reading
instruction because they affect overall reading ability in a
positive way. Encouraging children to make invented spellings (to
spell words as they sound) helps develop phonemic awareness as well
as increase knowledge of spelling patterns (Clarke 1988).
Effective teachers interweave these activities within their
instruction and, above all, ensure that phonics teaching is not done apart from connected, informative, engaging text.
-###-