As districts move to replace the “whole language approach” to reading instruction with methods that are aligned to the Science of Reading, administrators have a fresh challenge on their hands — how to get rid of whole language for good.
Even as districts do the right thing by investing in High Quality Instructional Materials (HQIM) and implementing evidence-based Tier 1 curricula, college programs are still training future teachers to use disproven methods, and teaching websites are rife with supplemental materials based on discredited strategies.
How do you ensure traces of whole language instruction don’t linger in your classrooms as your district makes an instructional shift? If you’re serious about ensuring every student receives evidence-based reading instruction every time, start by looking for these tell-tale signs of whole language strategies.
The whole language approach is a discredited teaching philosophy that focuses on teaching kids to read by immersing them in written materials and instructing them to use context and background knowledge to read words. Rather than teaching kids to identify individual letters and letter patterns, students are taught to recognize and then memorize entire words.
The approach is widely credited to Kenneth Goodman, a professor at Michigan’s Wayne State University who is often called the father of whole language thanks to his 1967 paper published in the Journal of the Reading Specialist detailing his theory that reading was “a psycholinguistic guessing game.”
It wasn’t until the 1980s, however, that whole language truly took off in American classrooms. It was popularized by Marie Clay, the New Zealand teacher and researcher behind Reading Recovery©, a reading intervention used in schools across the U.S. to teach millions of American kids over the past four decades.
Whole language proponents like Clay subscribe to the belief that learning to read is a natural process that can be taught in much the same way that kids learn to speak. They take the constructivist view that exposing students to a print-rich environment with a lot of books is what will help them learn to read.
Science tells us otherwise:
Despite the science, whole language has remained popular — as of 2019, 68 percent of K-2 and special education teachers said they were still using the approach to teach reading.
Often this is because many teachers were explicitly taught to teach practices that do not align with the Science of Reading. A 2023 review of teacher preparation programs by the National Council on Teacher Quality revealed 25 percent of programs do not adequately cover even a single component of scientifically based reading instruction, and 10 percent are explicitly teaching whole language methods.
After 40 years of use in the classroom, it’s no surprise that whole language methods have not disappeared overnight, but it’s imperative that districts face the problem head-on to ensure the efficacy of the shift to Science of Reading-based instruction.
Here’s what to look for.
One of the cornerstones of the whole language approach is the use of rote memorization of sight words. Sometimes going by a variety of other names from star words to snap words, these words may even be incorporated into a classroom goal, such as “we will learn X number of sight words by the end of the school year.”
With the sight word approach to teaching kids to read, students are taught to recognize entire words from long lists instead of learning the letter sounds that come together to form each word.
The Science of Reading has proven that students learn to read by mapping individual sounds (known as phonemes) to letters or groups of letters that represent them (known as graphemes). This process is called orthographic mapping, and it’s crucial to early reading skills development.
Through repeated practice, students form this “map” in their brain which they will use for the rest of their lives, calling on the memory of how these phonemes and graphemes work together to automatically decode words as they read. Eventually, students will reach a point where a word can be recognized within a fourth of a second, not because the whole word was memorized but because the brain has “mapped” the way letters and sounds work together within words.
With this skill in hand, students don’t just know a list of memorized sight words. They’re able to apply these mapped rules to any word they encounter as they read.
This grapho-phonemic instruction has proven especially important for developing readers. Scientists found that if a teacher calls attention to the parts of words, rather than presenting words as whole entities, it helps students better learn to read and spell.
Because whole language proponents believe kids will naturally learn to read simply by being exposed to more books, it’s common for teachers in a whole language classroom to encourage students to select “just right books” to read on their own during an independent reading block.
These “just right books” are defined as books at a level that stretches their skills just a little but not enough to frustrate them. In the whole language classroom, this is referred to as an “instructional” level because it’s supposed to help students grow as readers, and kids learn to pick them using the “5 Finger Rule.”
First they select a book and open it to a random page. Students then read the page and hold up a finger for each word they don’t know. The rubric for this rule varies from classroom to classroom, but in general if students hold up 0 to 1 fingers, the book is ruled too easy. If they hold up 2 to 3 fingers, it’s considered “just right.”
Reading researchers have found more than a few problems with the use of just right books and the 5 finger rule.
One of the core tenets of whole language is the idea that learning to read is a natural process, and the more kids read, the better they get.
We know this isn’t how the brain works — reading researchers estimate as much as 90 percent of students (or more) will not learn to read without direct, explicit, systematic instruction — but it’s why independent reading blocks are common in whole language classrooms.
Before these blocks of time, teachers model “what good readers do,” then direct students to select books — typically using the 5 finger rule or similar methods to find their “just right” selection. Students then spend a portion of their literacy block with their chosen book, whether they have the skills to decode the words or not.
Independent reading in and of itself is not a problem. The goal, after all, is for kids to read independently, optimally turning to a book on their own, outside of the classroom.
For kids who are still in the early stages of foundational reading skills development, however, free reading will not enhance those skills.
Simply put, kids do not learn to read simply by doing it.
Study after study (after study) has proven that the ability to read independently with proficiency is entirely dependent on a solid grounding in foundational reading skills like phonics, and the vast majority of kids require varied amounts of direct instruction and practice in order to develop these skills to the point of automaticity and fluency.
What’s more, independent reading blocks run the risk of worsening what’s known as the Matthew Effect in Reading, a theory developed by Canadian psychologist Dr. Keith Stanovich who found that early success in reading leads kids to read more while early difficulties in reading lead students to read less.
When they’re left to read on their own, students who are reading at or above grade level may benefit somewhat from the time, but those whose reading skills are below benchmark will instead become increasingly frustrated.
Another whole language-based strategy goes by the name “The Skippy Frog” or “Skip the Word, Then Come Back” in early grade classrooms.
You might spot this one on posters or anchor charts with images of kid-friendly animals. You may also hear it during a teacher observation, or spot it on materials in the classroom book nook or classroom library.
No matter the name, the concept is the same — when students encounter an unknown word, they’re taught to skip over it, reading the rest of the sentence before returning to the unidentified word. Students are then supposed to use context clues to guess what the unknown word could be.
Skippy the Frog and Skip The Word, Then Come Back are just other names for the whole language strategy otherwise known as three-cueing.
Researchers have found the strategy can worsen reading difficulties for students because it takes readers’ attention away from the letters in a word and reduces the likelihood that they will map the spelling of the word to the spoken word in their memory bank.
The Eagle Eye is another cutesy whole language-based mnemonic strategy that often pops up on classroom posters. Students are taught to decipher unknown words by using their “eagle eye” to look at pictures and other clues on the page to identify unknown words.
Although slightly different in form from the word skipping strategy, the Eagle Eye is yet another version of the debunked three-cueing strategy.
The name of the Tryin’ Lion mnemonic hits right at the heart of the problem with three-cueing. As the name implies, kids who encounter a word they can’t decode are taught to “try” different words in its place — literally to “guess” what word would fit.
“Think of a Word That Might Make Sense” is another name for the Tryin’ strategy, albeit one that’s often used with older students who lack the foundational reading skills necessary to decode a word by sounding it out. Students are encouraged to guess a word that might make sense in the sentence.
The danger in allowing these whole language methods to linger in classrooms isn’t simply that they run counter to the strong literacy program your district is creating that’s grounded in science-based practice.
It could also be against the law.
Dozens of states now mandate districts employ evidence-based instructional methods to teach reading, effectively rendering whole language-based instruction illegal.
Thirteen states even go so far as to explicitly ban the use of three-cueing:
These strategies clearly don’t belong in your classrooms, so what does? These resources provide information on what a science-based approach to instruction looks like and how it can be implemented in your school or district:
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