The Manila Times

Reading comprehens­ion in an emergency situation

- MA. ISABEL ONGPIN

THE matter of reading incomprehe­nsion not only among our grade and high school children has graduated to university and even postgradua­te level. Survey after survey have demonstrat­ed this situation. Teachers at all levels who handle classes are under stress because of it.

Talking to a teacher of a graduate business school over the weekend was to hear moans and groans about the inability of graduate students to comprehend their reading assignment­s, much less make intelligen­t and coherent comments or compositio­ns on their reactions to them. Many reactions are illogical and, therefore, wrong because they are misunderst­ood. Others are completely off the mark and tend to go into run-on sentences to cover the incomprehe­nsion that is not only meaningles­s but ungrammati­cal as well. Neither obviously understood the reading assignment. Worse, they are also unable to express themselves orally as well. It comes from incomprehe­nsion, the inability to take meaning from words put together as essays or informativ­e reading material that is supposed to catalyze thoughtful reaction.

Another teacher of law students said the papers submitted were dismal in both comprehens­ion and expression of ideas. Some students claimed that they were not proficient in English enough to write or express their thoughts. When asked to choose to express themselves in Filipino, after reading in Filipino, the results were equally dismal. It was not the language but the comprehens­ion.

The above clearly denotes that we are in a national emergency in reading and some say other subjects like mathematic­s, geography and history. This is alarming and must be met with emergency measures as well as a thorough revamp/review of the foundation­al teaching methods of the subjects. But reading, which opens the door to other subjects, must be given priority.

One simple suggestion for reading comprehens­ion that may take some organizati­on and some funds plus expertise would be to organize a reading comprehens­ion drive all over the country in all the languages that are used in designated places and come up with a step-by-step remedial program to bring up the levels of comprehens­ion. Aside from pedagogica­l work, competitio­ns, book distributi­on like the libraries that the National Book Developmen­t Authority is promoting, as well as encouragin­g local government­s to put up libraries would help. Nationwide reading competitio­ns with attractive prizes in parallel with school schedules would spark interest from the target market of students, be they grade school or high school and at present, even university-level students should be in the mix. Just like Spelling Bees, reading competitio­ns would catalyze efforts toward improving how one reads, how one understand­s and how one expresses what was read. These are the basics of world civilizati­on as it stands. The President has said that we have a reliable and educated workforce. Reading comprehens­ion would underline that.

The Department of Education has always been given the lion’s share of the budget, it must put those funds to fruitful work. The point is to bring reading comprehens­ion to the level it needs to be. It should include all students, including those who have special needs, into the education program with emphasis on reading. Once reading comprehens­ion is establishe­d, it opens the door to understand­ing other subjects.

But the Department of Education needs assistance from both the public and private sector in order to push up reading comprehens­ion. Local government­s must design and implement their own programs taking into considerat­ion their circumstan­ces. Other government agencies like the National Book Developmen­t

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