The Mercury News

Joseph was right about teaching phonics to California students

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CalMatters columnist.

Marion Joseph died last month in Walnut Creek and while her passing received only scant attention in California media, it rated a lengthy obituary in The New York Times.

Why? Because she was a renowned expert on and advocate for rigorous reading instructio­n based in phonics, having delved into the issue when she realized that her own grandson, then a first grader, was having difficulty learning to read.

Joseph took on the improvemen­t of reading instructio­n as a cause in the 1980s after retiring as a top aide to Wilson Riles, then California's superinten­dent of public instructio­n.

“Drawing on the research of G. Reid Lyon, chief of child developmen­t and behavior at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Developmen­t, she confronted the evidence that more than half of California's fourth graders could not read well enough to understand basic texts,” the Times noted in its obituary.

“In 1994, Ms. Joseph was named to a state task force whose mission was to improve reading instructio­n. Instead of accepting the prevailing progressiv­e premise that every child learns differentl­y, Ms. Joseph sought to impose a more rigorous standard that every child needs to know certain fundamenta­l skills.”

Joseph persuaded Gov. Pete Wilson to take up the phonics cause in the 1990s.

He appointed her to the state Board of Education and phonics was adopted as California's preferred reading education technique.

Joseph took her crusade national and in 2005, the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservati­ve public policy research group, honored her for valor and said of her efforts, “Her relentless, research-based advocacy — for which the retired grandma didn't earn a dime — is still a sterling example of what a citizen-activist and lone individual can accomplish in reforming U.S. schools.”

Alas, after Joseph retired from the nation's reading wars, California drifted away from phonics and back into what's called “whole language.”

Phonics stress fundamenta­l instructio­n in the letters and letter combinatio­ns that make up sounds, thus allowing children to “sound out” words and later whole sentences and passages. The whole language approach assumes that reading is a naturally learned skill, much like speaking, and that exposing children to reading material will allow it to emerge.

This month, a few weeks after Joseph died, EdSource, a journalist­ic website devoted to California education issues, published an article about how phonics had a miraculous effect on reading skills in Lodi.

“With $131 million in federal and state COVID relief funds,” EdSource reported, “Lodi Unified chose to prioritize literacy and socialemot­ional learning in its plan to help students recover from the pandemic.

“So far, the district has spent nearly $500,000 on teacher training and materials for a reading program called Systemic Instructio­n in Phenome Awareness, Phonics and Sight Words, or SIPPS, which initially was only used at two of the district's 32 elementary schools.”

The sharp boost in literacy test scores at those two schools led to district-wide adoption.

“In order to have a healthy, thriving community, our schools' No. 1 priority is to send every child into the world knowing how to read,” said Susan Petersen, the district's director of elementary education. “If you can read, then you can access everything else out there,” Petersen said. “It's amazing what's happened. Its positive impact has spread like wildflower­s.”

Marion Joseph would have been proud that Lodi has bucked the education establishm­ent and embraced phonics. It's widely acknowledg­ed that California schools have a reading crisis, so one must wonder why, given the success in Lodi and other school systems using phonics, the establishm­ent continues to advocate whole language.

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