Education Week
American Education's Newspaper of Record

September 8, 2004
The President's Reading Lesson
By Dennis Baron
Education Week
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| Direct instruction is the reading equivalent of school
uniforms, and it makes literature as exciting as a pressed white
shirt. |
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One scene in Michael Moore?s documentary "Fahrenheit 9/11" keeps playing in my
head: George W. Bush placidly follows along as 2nd graders from Florida read a
story called "The Pet Goat." Off camera, in New York City and Washington,
planes
are crashing into buildings. "The Pet Goat" is far from riveting, yet it keeps
the president in his seat as the most devastating terrorist attack in the
nation?s history unfolds.
George Bush went to the Emma E. Booker School in
Sarasota on Sept. 11, 2001, to publicize his "No Child Left Behind" education
initiative, the one (now a federal law) that?s supposed to turn around American
schools. An amateur video of the president?s class visit, available on the
Internet, begins with an aide whispering to Mr. Bush that the second plane has
hit the towers. The tape runs another five minutes and eight seconds, though
given the context it seems to last forever. When I saw Mr. Moore?s film, I
was
appalled that the president stayed in the classroom and didn?t react to the
emergency. He just watched as the students droned on about a girl and her goat.
When I saw the Internet video, I was appalled as well at the mindless drill
that
passes for reading instruction in too many American schools. I saw not a class
embracing the written word, exploring it and turning it inside out, but a class
that?s learned to follow orders, to chant a story as if it were a list of words
and not connected prose. I saw a class of children being left behind. In
1985,
the Commission on Reading called for America to become a nation of readers, a
goal we have failed to meet. In July, the National Endowment for the Arts
warned
in a report called "Reading at Risk" that fewer than half of all Americans over
the age of 18 read any literature at all. The president?s reading lesson shows
why: Reading in this school has become a group exercise, like jumping jacks,
not
an individual intellectual struggle in which readers are rewarded by
discovering, questioning, and ultimately making, their own meaning. "The Pet
Goat" is a selection in a popular "direct instruction" textbook. The
direct-instruction reading method claims to be teacher-proof and promises to
raise student test scores, especially among at-risk students. Everything about
the method is explicit; nothing is left to chance. Teachers follow scripted
lessons, telling students, who do everything in unison, when to take out their
books, when to start reading, when to touch specific words, when to repeat,
when
to stop, and when to put their books away. Instead of thinking for themselves
and learning through trial and error, students parrot packaged answers to
preselected questions. There?s less chance for teachers or students to fail
this
way, but there?s also less opportunity for them to excel. Direct instruction is
the reading equivalent of school uniforms, and it makes literature as exciting
as a pressed white shirt. While Mr. Bush observes the recitation, the
teacher,
mechanically following the lesson plan provided with the story, beats time on
the desk to mark each word. If one student reads to a different drummer, the
teacher orders a do-over. Once in a while, as they read, the teacher barks out,
"Good job." It?s in the script. When the class ignores a comma, she directs the
students to place their fingers on the comma and tell what it signals. The
children respond, "The comma says, ?Slow down.?" Then, when instructed, they
repeat the sentence, slowing just the slightest bit after the comma as the beat
goes on. Chanting a text in unison won?t turn these children into readers.
Neither will the stories they are given to read. The plot of "The Pet Goat" is
straightforward, moralistic, and about as compelling as "See Spot run." There
are four characters: a girl; her goat; her father, who wants to get rid of the
goat because it eats everything in sight; and a villain called the "car
robber."
| What?s wrong with the lesson sheds light on what?s
wrong with the nation: These students are being shortchanged. |
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Direct instruction asks students to read only words they?ve already
been introduced to in their vocabulary lessons. There are no proper names on
the
2nd grade vocabulary list, so none of the characters has a name. They are the
girl, the dad, the goat. Stories with nameless characters sound strange enough,
but a story with a car robber sounds stranger still. The class has surely heard
of car thieves and even carjackers, but there are no thieves and carjackers on
their word list. However, there are robbers. In fact, robbers knocked over a
store in an earlier lesson, so the bad guy in this story has to be called
a "car
robber." The students know that "car robber" isn?t idiomatic English, but it?s
in the book, so it must be correct. "The Pet Goat" ends as the robber
prepares to steal the family car. The denouement must wait for the next lesson,
but it?s not hard to guess what will happen: Goat gets robber; girl keeps goat.
When the students finish reading, and they?ve put their books under their
chairs, President Bush, who is in no hurry to leave the room, banters with the
teacher, asks a few questions, and compliments the class. He gives no
indication
that anything is wrong, not with the lesson, not with the nation. What?s
wrong
with the lesson sheds light on what?s wrong with the nation: These students are
being shortchanged. They regularly demand more of themselves and of one
another,
linguistically, than their reading curriculum, with its controlled vocabulary
and awkwardly simple sentences, demands of them. But all they have to do to
meet
the school?s low expectations is to follow the five-minute script. Reading
takes
a lot more time than that.

To become competent readers, students need real stories in ordinary English
with real action, comedy, and tragedy, stories that raise difficult questions,
questions which the teacher might not anticipate, questions which students
can?t
answer in unison. Characters with real names would be a start. When these
students have to wrest meaning from an unfamiliar passage, something a nation
of
readers must do every day, I?m afraid that they will respond as George Bush did
that day. Sept. 11, 2001, presented the president with a real-world reading
test, but like the 2nd graders in that Florida classroom, instead of accepting
the challenge to interpret the unexpected, the president seemed content to
follow the script laid out for him. He stayed in his seat and looked around
with
a dreamy, slightly bored expression, a docile student waiting for instructions.
He seemed the kind of at-risk reader who will be left behind because he hasn?t
been able to do what all readers must do: Read, and think, for
themselves.
Dennis Baron is a professor of English and linguistics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

PHOTOS: White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card tells President Bush, in a Florida school, that a second plane has hit the World Trade Center.
?Win McNamee/Reuters
© 2003 Editorial Projects in Education
Vol. 24, number 02, page 43
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