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Three Arguments Against Whole Language & Why They Are Wrong

Stephen D. Krashen, Emeritus, University of Southern California

ISBN 978-0-325-00119-7 / 0-325-00119-7 / 1999 / 112pp / Paperback
Imprint: Heinemann
Availability: In Stock
Grade Level: K-5
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Stephen Krashen, one of the country's most respected authorities on language and literacy, sets the record straight about today's reading wars, offering an incisive analysis of the three major "battle cries" of whole language critics. In a step-by-step dissection, Krashen reiterates the three arguments, then explores the most salient studies that support or refute them.

  • CLAIM: Eye movement studies prove that readers assay text "completely," and therefore do not sample text to confirm predictions, as maintained by whole language advocates. In exploring the Eye Fixation Studies, which attempted to disprove the Goodman-Smith reading theory, Krashen reveals that study participants had no alternative but to examine every fine detail of the print. Further evidence is provided that supports the hypothesis that literacy development and comprehension are in fact closely related.
  • CLAIM: Context interferes with reading. This is only true, says Krashen, if the context (e.g. pictures) is too rich, or "overdetermining." We also see how the results of studies supporting this claim were biased by the methodology used.
  • CLAIM: Skill-building approaches to reading have been shown to produce better results than whole language. In fact, asserts Krashen, when whole language is correctly defined as providing comprehensible texts, it is a consistent winner.
The author also skewers the national frenzy over early intervention and illustrates his point with a humorous scenario showing how "prenatal phonemic awareness testing" could be the logical outgrowth of an entirely skills-based approach! But beyond its point/counterpoint format, Three Arguments offers some real solutions, chief of which is making sure that all children have access to interesting reading material so they can finally achieve the standards of literacy they deserve.

Contents:
I. Three Arguments, Three Answers
1.
Eye Fixation Studies Do Not Disprove the Smith-Goodman Hypothesis
2. Does Context Interfere with Learning to Read?
3. When Whole Language Means Real Reading, It Is a Consistent Winner over Skills in Method Comparison Studies
II. Two Solutions: One Real, One Imaginary
4.
Eliminating Print Deprivation
5. Phonemic Awareness Training for Prelinguistic Children: Do We Need Prenatal PA?

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