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Every Child Left Ignorant or No More Excuses 

 

The recently released Inspector General report regarding Reading First 
 programs (one of the central components of No Child Left Behind, 
 specifically directed at struggling readers) indicates favoritism, 
 mismanagement and widespread corruption are operating at the highest levels 
 of the Department of Education. Every person in this state who has a school 
 aged child, grandchild, niece, nephew, or pays taxes should be outraged. 
 
 Reading First was designed to provide money to states to teach reading to 
 students and insisted on a higher level of accountability from schools in 
 return. But instead of providing real support to states, the Reading First 
 program became a sham that reaped huge profits for favored publishing 
 companies and researchers, such as CTB McGraw Hill, and the University of 
 Oregon Center for Teaching and Learning. This last group is largely 
 responsible for the infamous DIBELS test (a five-minute test that  demands 
 children say non words such as pag or ret, after which the children  may be 
 categorized as 'at risk'). Students are expected to read nonsense words 
 within poorly researched phonics programs in order to get ready for the 
 DIBELS. Children are really learning that reading can be nonsensical. 
 Interestingly, the authors of DIBELS just happen to also sit on the “Expert 
 Review Panel" set up by the Department of Education to approve Reading First 
 grant applications. Little wonder that solid teaching resources or programs 
 that teachers had used previously were now relegated to the "dirtbag" 
 (Reading First director's word) category, in favor of programs that use 
 scripts, carnival clickers, and stop watches. The Expert Panel made sure 
 that accountability became nothing more than test scores that could be 
 manipulated for their own economic and personal advantage. 
 
 Our children deserve much more than a program that teaches them reading 
 means barking out words (or nonsense words) as fast as they can. Our 
 children aren't automatons coming down the assembly line beltway.  Deep, 
 proficient learning and literacy take time. This requires dialogue between 
 teachers and students, something that is crucial for students learning 
 English. Scripted programs that treat teachers like clerks and children like 
 cogs in a spinning gear are the least desirable instructional option we 
 have, and yet that is what the present structure of No Child Left Behind and 
 Reading First forces upon our schools. 
 
 The National Reading Panel's recommendations formed most of the Reading 
 First section of No Child Left Behind. The Panel specifically cautioned 
 against using scripted programs, recognizing their extreme limitations; and 
 cautioned against placing too great an emphasis on phonics, stating phonics 
 must be only a part of a balanced program. The Panel further recognized the 
 critical role the teacher plays in guiding children towards proficient 
 literacy, especially those students from diverse backgrounds.  Teachers know 
 their students best, and with ongoing professional development and the 
 appropriate tools, they can teach children to read. 
 
 The corrupt officials in Reading First hijacked the Panel's words and 
 transmuted them into an endorsement for programs such as SRA, Direct 
 Instruction, Open Court, and the DIBELS test. All are programs that 
 downplay the importance of the teacher, as well as the diversity of 
 children, and allow little dialogue or deep learning to take place.  All are 
 programs that ignore the diversity of our state. Some schools entering their 
 second year of participation in New Mexico's Reading First had to waste 
 precious allocated money to purchase these programs. 
 
 New Mexico has one of the highest poverty levels in the entire United 
 States. Everyone here recognizes the critical difference a quality 
 education can make. Without question, our schools are one vehicle for change 
 for the children in this state. And yet billions of dollars have been 
 wasted on ineffective mandated programs that ignore the rich cultural 
 heritage that our students represent and leave them at the lowest levels of 
 thinking and learning, all courtesy of the U.S. Department of Education. 
 
 One of the Reading First slogans repeated over and over again was "No 
 Excuses." We couldn't agree more. No more excuses for the lack of 
 oversight with Reading First. No more excuses for wasting precious learning 
 time with nonsense programs. No more excuses for phony baloney 
 "scientifically-based" instruction or accountability. And no more excuses 
 for blindly accepting what we KNOW is counter to best instruction for our 
 students. Demand the best from state and federal legislators for our 
 children. Our children are worth the effort and deserve so much more than 
 what they are getting from the current corrupt Reading First program. 

 

Sent to the Albuquerque Journal by:

 



 Dr. Rick Meyer, PhD Reading Professor, UNM 
 Dr. Kyle Shanton, Reading Professor, NMSU 
 Dr. Priscilla Gutierrez, Outreach Specialist 
 New Mexico School for the Deaf 
 Dr. Anne Calhoon, Reading Professor, UNM 

 

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