The Daily Telegraph

The wrong way to start a reading revolution

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sir – Nick Gibb’s enthusiasm for the “reading revolution”, which the Government wants to achieve by encouragin­g the use of phonics in primary schools (telegraph.co.uk, September 28), is misplaced.

Evidence from a recent report by Stephen Machin and his colleagues at the London School of Economics, entitled “Teaching to Teach” Literacy, shows that synthetic phonics instructio­n has little to no effect on reading scores by the time children reach Key Stage 2 (age 11).

Their data are consistent with higher-quality, experiment­al studies that have found that phonics has a modest impact on reading scores initially, but no lasting impact in later grades.

Jeff Mcquillan

Los Angeles, California

 ??  ?? In silent concentrat­ion: Child Reading by Pierre-auguste Renoir, painted in 1890
In silent concentrat­ion: Child Reading by Pierre-auguste Renoir, painted in 1890

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