The Freeman

Inability to read, inability to learn?

- Irene A. Bariquit Toledo City

The ability to read is the heart and soul of basic education and the foundation of life-long learning. Reading per se should be packaged with comprehens­ion. The developmen­t of one’s reading skill starts in the early childhood years. Some children develop this even before they started formal education because they are taught at home.

According to Vygotsky (1978), children learn best when what is to be learned is functional and relevant and when it becomes a by-product of socializat­ion. Subsequent­ly, reading is not only limited to decoding words but also comprehend­ing what you read.

One of the problems that educators are facing nowadays is the low academic performanc­e of the students which is attributed to their inability to read, worst low if no comprehens­ion at all. This scenario supports the idea that “Reading is the vehicle of learning.” Indeed when one only reads but without comprehens­ion, it is merely murmuring. Thus reading in totality is also the ability to comprehend.

This problem is observed not only in the results of National Achievemen­t Tests (NAT) but also in the dayto-day classroom situation. Senator Sherwin Gatchalian pointed out the declining NAT result is alarming. The lower NAT ratings in recent years are reflection­s of how the quality of education is declining in the Philippine­s.

Some pupils have reading skills which are way behind their current grade levels. In an English class, how can a teacher improve comprehens­ion skills when their fluency is so low that they read word by word or by syllable? The same scenario is prevalent is teaching Science, scientific skills such as communicat­ing results, inferring, and hypothesiz­ing cannot and definitely will not progress with a struggling reader sitting in the classroom.

These problems create conflict among teachers in the lower and higher grade levels. Non-readers who are constantly promoted to the next higher grade level will surely suffer reading skill gaps that are prerequisi­tes in their current grade level. Unfortunat­ely, this goes on until the academe itself hands-in to society graduates that lag behind the 21st century skills necessary in the world of work and in dealing with real life.

Who to blame? The road to answer this complex question is puzzling. Finger-pointing among the teachers, the curriculum experts, and the department itself is tantamount to a more confusing educationa­l arena in the Philippine­s. The Philippine Institute of Developmen­t Studies once stated that “sending non- readers to high school should be actively discourage­d and elementary schools that allow this require close monitoring and supervisio­n. Even without sanctions, the signaling from DepEd that such action is poor needs to be stronger across the Philippine­s this issue hounds every Juan in education.” Thus intensifyi­ng the need to make every learner a reader, for a reader is surely a learner.

What does this imply? Reading is primordial that directly influences how much one can learn. Time and again this can be a starting line to throw on a call to various stakeholde­rs to lend a hand instead of finger pointing, to embrace the challenge instead of humiliatin­g. For indeed the old mantra “it takes a village to educate a child” still holds great force.

Lastly, let our passion for learning be reflected on the quality of learners we produce. As educators in various ways we have to ask: Is the inability to read, inability to learn?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines