That Shriveled Grind:
On Reading to Children
by Andrew Kern
November 2009
“During the past
five years we’ve heard from parents again and again how
difficult it has been to get children who have read nothing
but pap to focus when the books assigned in class get more
complicated.
You wouldn’t believe
someone who said it didn’t matter what your child ate as long
as they ate something, and then fed them candy all day.
Reading is no different.”
I found the
foregoing quotation on a helpful blog called
Walls of Books,
run by Angela, a home-schooling mom. I am continually astounded
at the serious and diligent labour home schooling moms put into
the research required to build their own curricula. Some people
don’t want to reinvent the wheel. The home school mom proves the
irrelevance of that metaphor. Engineers know that to understand
a wheel you have to reverse engineer it. That’s what these moms
are doing with curriculum. If you haven’t had to do it yourself,
you don’t realize how courageous an act it is.
But that’s an aside
– a panegyric to the home schooling mom. What I want to address
directly is the significance of the quotation above on teaching
children to read. Angela quoted Lawrence and Nancy Goldstone
from their book
Deconstructing
Penguins: Parents, Kids, and the Bond of Reading.
In the typical
middle class household, the parent reads books to children
before they go to school and those books are usually dominated
by Dr. Seuss and other children’s literature. 50 years ago, Dr.
Seuss was entering the child’s bedroom in the evening for end of
day reading, but most people read classic fairy tales, fables,
mythology, and nursery rhymes to their children.
To see what parents
read to their children 50 years ago, take a look at the immortal
My Book House series, edited by Olive Beaupre Miller. The child
who read these 12 volumes by, say, sixth grade, received a
junior liberal education. I highly encourage its use as the
“Core Curriculum” for the grammar stage. It’s incredibly cost
effective too, because you can buy 20 or 30 sets used (they
stopped printing it in 1970 after a 50 year run) for about $100
each and be set for 20 years.
I mention this set
partly to make people aware of it and partly to illustrate a
significant change that has taken place in reading over the past
five decades. Fifty years ago, parents read things to children
that children could not read themselves, that were not directed
primarily toward the senses, that contained deep formal and
material lessons for the children.
That is to say, if
a child couldn’t decode the phonograms, that didn’t prevent the
parent/teacher from reading to the child. We tend to confuse
reading with decoding and then to say a child can only read what
he can decode. Such a sentiment misunderstands the very nature
of reading. A four year old child can handle an incredibly
complicated syntax (grammatical structure) with amazing
intellectual dexterity.
My son Matthew used
to sit still for a long time when he was still in soft blue one
piece pajamas with those cute feet that are so adorable in
little kids jammies while I read (at his request) one of
the Chronicles of Narnia. He must have been three at the time.
Maybe even two.
But I’m convinced
we make our children dumber by sending them to school. How? By
stopping reading books over their heads when they arrive in
kindergarten. Suddenly graded readers allow them to read only
books that they can decode themselves. What they used to read
passively (through their ears) is too often removed from their
diets because “it’s above their level.”
Today, the children
of 50 years ago don’t remember that their parents read fairy
tales, adventure stories, fables, etc. to them before they were
in school. So they only read Dr. Seuss to their kids who, not
surprisingly, aren’t often particularly interested in reading
and those who are inclined to read are interested in simple,
inane, contentless works.
As a result, we are
truly dumbing down our children.
We must make at
least two important distinctions: that between dependent and
independent reading and that between reading and decoding. A
child is reading dependently when he needs someone else
to decode the sound symbols (letters) for him. He may not yet
know how to decode or he may just feel like listening. The point
is that he is being read to. But his intellect is still reading.
The order and structure of the communication is the order and
structure of written communication, which is a significantly
different thing from spoken communication.
While listening,
his eyes are not reading, but his mind is. This distinction is
critical. When the child begins to decode words, he is not, to
be very precise, reading. He is decoding symbols. The
intellectual activity is profoundly different, which is why you
can have a superb reader who can’t spel to saiv his lyfe.
Then begins a
gradual transition between decoding and reading, during which
the mind becomes increasingly comfortable with the decoding, so
much so that it becomes automatic, the child no longer needing
to pay any more attention to the specific phonograms (letters
and their combinations) then the adult does. But this becomes
automatic and unconscious only after the child has mastered the
code.
That’s why most
children need to learn the phonograms very consciously.
Some don’t because they seem to intuitively grasp the coding,
but even they benefit from a sound phonics program because it
makes them more conscious of what they are doing so
automatically.
Once the decoding
becomes background work, done unconsciously from practice the
way a basketball player makes just the right move without
thinking about it because it’s been driven into his muscle
memory, then the child can read independently. This is the third
metastage of reading and it is what we are looking for.
So the child grows
through three stages: dependent reading, decoding, and
independent reading. I cannot stress enough how important it is
for the child to continue to read dependently when he is
learning to decode. The four year old who is reading fairy tales
through his mother’s eyes and mouth is gaining far more
intellectual skill than the five year old who is not being read
to beyond what he can decode. And that older child is
probably losing the thrill of reading by virtue of the pap on
which he is practicing decoding. Nobody wants to “see Spot run”
in such a devestatingly unimaginative way.
Of course, once
upon a time, parents used to read books that were not primarily
directed at the senses. Books 50 years ago had pictures in them
and some were even beginning to add color. But most pictures
were simple line drawings that allowed tremendous room for the
work of imagination. Book publishers have since discovered that
children respond to bright red, to primary colors, to thick
black lines. They have found that these properties lead to more
book sales. Some may even have concluded that since children
respond it must be good.
But it has never
been a good thing to indulge the senses as an end in themselves.
The senses have always tried to dominate the intellect and to
distract us from what matters more. They have never been wise in
their distribution of energy. Wisdom requires a well trained
intellect, one that has carefully considered, not sales, but the
health of the soul being nourished.
If we want our
children to love reading, we must stop appealing to their
untrained senses without regard for taste or intellectual
development (cf. Veggie Tales), and we must drive them into the
text itself, where they can live the action, feel the anxieties
and hopes of the characters, enter the imaginative world of the
story, and experience reading as a personal act of the soul
instead of merely an external act of analysis.
The books parents
read 50 years ago contained deep formal and material lessons.
Ideas were contained and communicated in the very structure of
the text, ideas worth learning.
We simply cannot
exaggerate the extent to which the revolution that is
Progressive Education has failed miserably by succeeding
spectacularly. Dewey and Kilpatrick and their disciples were
radically opposed to the traditional curriculum; they argued
that it inhibited the child’s freedom and growth. For it they
wished to substitute a contentless curriculum, at least so far
as the parents and teachers could inculcate content, a
curriculum that minimized the importance of reading because
reading was secondary to social change. They wanted to produce
radicals who would overthrow the old, stifling traditional
culture.
They have succeeded
and it would be fitting for them to apologize.
And they succeeded
primarily by replacing the old stories. When Plutarch wrote his
“Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans” he did so because he
believed that contemplating virtuous actions could help us
become virtuous while contemplating vicious actions could warn
us against vice. Dewey explictly rejected the notion that seeing
vice or virtue in history or literature could cultivate virtue
in a child. Books interfered with experience and experience was
everything.
So King Arthur was
replaced by Dick and Guinevere was replaced by Jane. And as the
movies began to permeate culture with Hollywood values, children
began to find reading boring. They were from the moral restraint
and traditions that tied them down - values found in the great
books. Commitment came to be seen, not as the means to achieving
adult maturity and fulness, but as the obstacle to our
development as human beings.
A new literature
has been forming over the past 50 years, a literature dominated
by excessively sensual art, by trivial, dumbed-down language, by
disrespect for the divine image, and by an almost complete
obliteration of the moral imagination. In this age of the
explosion of children’s literature, shockingly and distressingly
little has been written that should be placed before the child.
Reading must demand
something of the child; it must push him to his intellectual
limits. And it must also reward the child; he must hear the
Piper at the Gates of Dawn in the rhythm of the words, he must
feel the music of the spheres rolling through his bones, he must
be brought alive through the awakening of his faculties of
perception.
He must be allowed
to hear the great books sing.
One of the benefits
of such healthy diet is that the child will be able to read more
complicated books when he is older due to a long habit of
reading things over his head, a habit he received from his
mother who dedicated her life to feeding his soul.
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