Saturday, January 4, 2020

Skippy Frog or Skip the Frog?

My childhood home in Billings, Montana had a huge unfinished basement providing ample storage space and room for my sisters and I to roller skate year round. I do not have a basement; I have a crawl space. A pitch back, spider web infested, 4-foot-tall crawl space where my prized possessions from years as a kindergarten teacher have lived since I left the classroom a few years ago to be a literacy coach. Over these past years, I have slowly given away most of what I once considered “must keep in case I go back to the classroom” items. 


The oral language development and use
of graphic organizers for prewriting captured here
are both obviously important.
 Also, I love that stool my mama gave me!
A few containers labeled and organized remain in my personal dungeon: a classroom set of yoga mats, little baggies of items corresponding to each letter of the alphabet (which I painstaking gathered from junk drawers, swiping my children’s toys and countless trips to my local thrift store long before similar phonological awareness tubs could be commercially purchased), puppets and my watermelon stool.  

Kiddos ready for Yoga Friday

Recently, I needed some counters for a professional development I am leading on using manipulatives to support phonological awareness interventions and I knew just where to find some. I opened the hatch, lowered the ladder and climbed down with a flashlight gripped between my teeth. As I opened the tote, the flashlight fell from my mouth as I exclaimed, “What the hell?” Staring up at me in the dim light were Lips the Fish, Eagle Eye, Stretchy Snake, Chunky Monkey, Skippy Frog, Trying Lion and that darling Dolphin. 







Let me rewind 20ish years. My undergraduate Early Literacy course was taught by Dr. Kathleen Brown, the eventual founder and director of the University of Utah Reading Clinic. Thanks to her, I understood about top-down/bottom-up processing, explicit and systematic phonics instruction as well as distributed practice.  One class period, she literally made each of us raise a hand and swear to never teach the Letter of the Week format, warning us about the push back we would get from colleagues. 

I have been reflecting on my college years often in light of the exciting, and sometimes heated, national conversation regarding how well university education programs prepare teacher candidates for the classroom. I feel incredibly lucky to have gotten a solid foundation from my undergraduate work, but even that could not save me from getting sucked in by the cute faces of those beanie babies when I met them on Teachers Pay Teachers. During my first few years in the classroom, I knew I should be gathering the little humans around the rainbow table for some sort of guided reading/tier 2/small group/intervention type instruction, but had no idea what that should entail. In exchange for my hard earned $3, I printed and hung up these cards. 




I now know that these "strategies" represented by the beanie babies are based on the 3-cueing system, also called the psycholinguistic guessing game, and assumes that students use context and guessing in order to decode unknown words. The evidence from the Science of Reading suggests that this is not what occurs during skilled reading. These cues are slow, inefficient and encourage students to take their focus away from the act of decoding. These deceptive beanie babies actually represent the habits of struggling readers.

When we look at the Simple View of Reading, as presented by Gough and Tumner (1986), we see that reading comprehension is the product of decoding and language comprehension. When we understand the role of decoding in this way, it becomes vital to instruct students to decode in the way that will lead to automatic word recognition and consequently free up working memory for comprehension. 



 The Simple View of Reading: The product of Decoding and Language Comprehension is equal to
Reading Comprehension


I am relieved to say that I never really did a thorough job of teaching what each beanie was supposed to remind my budding readers to do. But unfortunately, I do clearly remember flying that stuffed eagle around the room telling my students to use picture cues.   



If you are interested in learning about the evidence that using Lips the Fish and the 3-cueing approach are not in the best interest of emergent readers, I have a few recommendations. First, read Assessing, Preventing and Overcoming Reading Difficulties by David Kilpatrick. Rightfully so, this book is currently taking the educational world by storm. The cognitive psychologist, Mark Seidenburg address these same topics brilliantly in his book Language at the Speed of Sight. His words on page 304 help to ease my mind when I think of students who had passed through my class while I was using this approach. The 3-cueing approach, Seidenburg writes, “didn’t develop because teachers lack integrity, commitment, motivation, sincerity or intelligence. It developed because they were poorly trained and advised.” Finally, the APM Reports podcast At a Loss For Words by Emily Hanford is part of a trilogy of reports that examine why so many students in America struggle to read. The one linked is the third in the trio and looks closely at this topic.  

This quote is becoming a bit cliché, but I don't care.
I still find it relevant as an important guiding belief. 
If you clicked on the blog because you currently use these confusing creatures and now your beanie baby bubble has burst, I have been there and I got you. We are educators at a time where knowledge, research and evidence-based practices are within our grasp. And it is ok, no it is admirable, for us teachers, coaches and administrators to change our minds. To look at our students, parents and communities and say, “I learned something new and now I will do better for every human who comes through that door.”  

Oh, what did I do with those darling stuffed creatures you wonder? They dove headfirst into the bin of Breathing Buddies! But that is another post... 

9 comments:

  1. I’m not an educator but I thoroughly enjoyed this. Dax remembered the eagle. I have to say that my two younger boys had different kindergarten teachers (obviously) but the way Dax learned from you put him far above the reading levels as he moved on from year to year. There wasn’t a year that his teachers didn’t mention his abilities and I credit you for that! You’ve definitely figured the right way to teach out! I’m glad D got to benefit from your experiences.

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    2. I can not believe D remembers the eagle! At least I also taught him solid phonics! I am so glad he got a good start in my class. Give him a hug for me (or maybe a fist bump as he is getting older).

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  2. "When you know better, you do better." When I taught first grade I made cutesy bookmarks for the parents called "Reading Strategies When you Get Stuck." I didn't even know what the three cueing system was specifically but somehow it ended up in my instruction. A few of my bookmark strategies included, skipping the word and using the pictures to guess. I just thought they were good tips for kids. Now that I know the research behind I see how these strategies are what struggling readers do, they are compensation strategies because they can't sound it out. Sometimes I wish I could sneak into all my previous parents households and take the bookmarks back, remove them from their homes and hope they are never used again. Alas, I can't, so I move forward. "When you know better, you do better."

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    1. Casey! I finally figured out how to comment on my own blog! lol

      It is so interesting how many "strategies" we use with kids that are not based in the Science of Reading and we have no idea. That is why we gotta shout from the rooftops. And I am thrilled to be shouting next to you!!!

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  3. I love this post for so many reasons. Thank you for sharing your journey and important discoveries in early literacy. Working with you these past few years has increased my own understanding of how to teach kids to read. Thanks for your words and sharing your knowledge. #perkypaceforlife

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    1. Thank you my friend! Our team has been pretty inspiring! and I love that you added "for life" to the perky pace hashtag!!!

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