“Reading Without Nonsense” remains a groundbreaking, humanistic antidote to the managed “systems” approach to reading instruction. In his extensively revised fourth edition, Frank Smith brings teachers and teacher educators up to date on how reading should not be taught. It is a necessary reminder that reading and learning to read are natural activities. There is a massive assault on the independence of teachers of reading, mandated under the No Child Left Behind l… More >>
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Reading Without Nonsense
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#1 by Joseph F. Sefranek on January 29, 2010 - 3:53 pm
We are reading this book for a literacy methods class. The style is redundant and reminiscent of listening to a very boring lecture. He has some very harsh things to say about phonics education, which is controversial but not altogether bad.
Rating: 3 / 5
#2 by tangldupnblue on January 29, 2010 - 5:17 pm
Spelling and reading have only been around for about 5000 years. Language is innate because it has been around for 30,000 to 40,000 years. Spelling and reading aren’t natural. Ask any dyslexic. If we treat all children as if the act of reading is natural and they’ll just ’soak’ it up… then we are dooming 15-20% of them to failure. Both basal and whole language programs FAIL these children. Wake up and teach them, please.
Check out realspelling.com with Melvyn Ramsden. Spelling is cognitive in conception and execution. TEACHING IT IS ESSENTIAL FOR MANY STUDENTS’SUCCESS.
Rating: 2 / 5
#3 by Bruce Deitrick Price on January 29, 2010 - 5:37 pm
I read Smith’s book as part of research on the reading wars, the history of education, and for an essay about Rudolph Flesch. This book–written to promote whole word and to discredit Flesch–convinced me, once again, that Flesch was right.
Smith is famous for asserting, in this book, “Readers do not need the alphabet.” I keep wondering how they would use a dictionary.
Smith wants you to ignore the phonetic clues within each word. He wants you to look only at the shapes of words. English thereby becomes a vast chaos of nearly one million logos.
Smith writes what I take to be a brilliant kind of sophistry. Everything seems so clear, so sincere. You have to read a paragraph several times to realize that the meaning is slipping away. In an odd way, I would recommend this book for people who want their minds stretched.
Finally, you have to wait for those flat assertions that you can compare to a reality you know. Smith states that children can acquire vocabularies of 50,000 sight words! I had read years before that only the smartest Chinese can master even 20,000 of their ideograms. (Note that these ideograms come in only one form–no upper case, lower case, script, etc.)
Smith claims that learning new sight words is easy–as when you see new cars or meet new people. Sounds good until you try to imagine somebody memorizing 10,000 cars or faces. Perhaps people with photographic memories could manage it. But not the average kid in school. And 10,000 words is just the threshold of literacy.
People not in education should know that twenty years ago, whole word was king, and Smith was an ed god. But now even California has figured out that reading without phonics is nonsense indeed. I still puzzle over Smith’s motives, but tend to suspect that this book is a modern equivalent of alchemy.
(PS at later date: I created 7 graphic videos for YouTube that explain the problems in Smith’s thinking; search “Phonics versus Whole Word.”)
Rating: 3 / 5
#4 by Anonymous on January 29, 2010 - 8:28 pm
This book really helped me to understand more about teaching reading and about the theories behind teaching reading. i would recommend it ot everyone.
Rating: 4 / 5
#5 by Reginald Williams on January 29, 2010 - 11:19 pm
A revolutionary work!
Smith, using the most astoundingly clear language you will see a excruciatingly long time, lays a overwhelming case for a predominately whole-language approach for literacy instruction.
Every single one of these thirteen chapters equals every one of the others. I cannot pick out a superlative section; all sparkle and educate.
I think I have read the “dismantling & rebuilding” of phonics chapter (#4) the most because he amazes me with his ability to analytical render phonics a mess that needs fixing and re-focusing.
I put this book in my essentials library. Please read it. If nothing else, he will give you much food for thought before creating your emergent literacy lessons in your early childhood classroom.
Rating: 5 / 5