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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 6, 2023

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I can't remember how I was taught, but I can say for certain that children in the UK today are taught using phonics. I've seen my nieces and nephews learning to read and they sound out each letter before saying the word. The conservative government forced all schools to teach phonics from 2010, and this approach hasn't been changed since then.

According to this article, the previous approach was one of 'balanced reading', which seems to be a mixture of phonics and whole language instruction. From what I can gather, criticism of phonics in the UK is based on the same impulses that work against it in the US.

https://www.theguardian.com/education/2022/jan/19/focus-on-phonics-to-teach-reading-is-failing-children-says-landmark-study

Our view is that the system doesn’t give teachers enough flexibility to do what they think is best for their pupils

Wonderful. I am all for flexibility, innovation, and initiative... When there's a strong system that gives people feedback and incentives of what is/is not working. That's the case in a contestable market, but not generally in state education.

Since the introduction of the phonics screening check in 2012, the percentage of Year 1 pupils meeting the expected standard in reading has risen from 58% to 82%, with 92% of children achieving this standard by Year 2

However:

All but one of the 936 comments from the survey [of teachers] were negative about the screening test [that they were using phonics] while one teacher described having to “live and breathe phonics” and another appealed for “reflection on the mass of skills involved in reading rather than solely focusing on phonics”.