Category: Articles & News

Some thoughts on using sound-based reading strategies in various settings

Llywio Darllen – TRT in Wales

We’ve finally finished adapting and trialling Llywio Darllen, the Welsh adaptation of ThatReadingThing.

It doesn’t translate directly into English but roughly means “being steered into reading”.

The Year 6 pupils in Cardiff had eight hours of LLywio Darllen over two weeks and made substantial progress in both reading and spelling.

Many thanks to Eirian Lloyd Jones and the Welsh Dyslexia Project/ Prosiect Dyslecsia Cymru for all their hard work and support.

If you’re interested in Llywio Darllen please get in touch through our contact page.

Word Reading /45

03/03/10         16/03/10

1           34                          45

2           33                          45

3           29                          44

4           17                          41

Success Story

I received this email from a recently trained TRT tutor.

“I had a really great thing happen today with a learner and am desperate to share it with you!

I put him on The That Reading Thing almost immediately after I got back from the training and have been trying to visit him as often as possible. He has really tried hard during the sessions and we have had some laughs along the way! He is currently on level 22 and the lessons leading up to this have given me mixed feelings…is it working…it’s not working…ooo it is working. At the end of today’s session the learner read a whole chapter independently; he was a completely different person. He was relaxed and confident; he even explained something to me about a sentence in it. That was a real boost for him!

I cannot thank you enough I have never felt such a sense of achievement like I felt today in that lesson and it’s all because of the programme you created.”

Training – ThatReadingThing

 

Do you work with any young person, in school or out, who struggles with reading?

Do you wish you had a clear answer to the question,

“How do you teach a teenager to read?”

Do you have good literacy skills and a curiosity about how English works?

Upcoming Trainings:  

There will be trainings in the following areas in 2012.

Please check back for details or get in touch here if you’d like to be contacted by email.

  • London  The Gap Project -Bethnal Green – July 12th and 13th – 9:30-3:30 Trainer: Sarah Warburton – 305 Cambridge Heath Road  E2 9LH
  • West Midlands Smethwick – September 2012
  •  Ellesmere Port
  • Huddersfield

TRT Boost and TRT for Teachers are closed trainings. Please enquire if you’re interested.

 

 

ThatReadingThingis recommended by the National Literacy Trust

Adult literacy tutors also most welcome!

For Welsh medium training dates, please see Llywio Darllen
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Phonics & Adult Literacy in the Guardian

Please visit my new (and developing) website phonics-for-adult-literacy.com for lots of information about using phonics with adults.

This morning in the Guardian, Peter Kingston writes about the possibilities of using phonics in adult literacy.

The NRDC report he refers to, Improving Reading: Phonics and Fluency, can be found here.
And here’s my response:

Hello,

It’s great to see that the idea of using sounds to help older struggling readers is finally being recognised.

I got into the world of literacy by accident and, not knowing that there was a reading war on, simply picked the most obvious and logical method for helping people discover how the English language works for reading and spelling. The result is that I’ve been using sound-based strategies with older struggling readers for many years now, happily ignoring the usual advice that you “can’t use phonics to teach adults”.

Phonics is a viable option for adults as long as instructors understand a few things:

• Don’t teach phonics. Instead, help adult learners to figure out for themselves how the English code works.

• Don’t teach phonics. Instead, in the context of whole words and text, help adult learners to gain the skills and knowledge necessary for reading and spelling.

• Don’t teach phonics. Ever. It’s boring. Just use phonics as a tool to open up the world of reading. Adult learners don’t need to know phonics. They need to be able to read and spell.

• And finally, get beyond the idea that it’s all about “c-a-t says cat”. Adults have much bigger spoken vocabularies than children do but they haven’t met those words in print. Here’s an example I use to explain what it feels like for an adult to use phonics to work out a word that they don’t “just know”:

ekzajirait

If the word doesn’t pop into your mind, say the sounds clearly and listen for a familiar word.

Phonics isn’t an easy answer but it’s a powerful tool when used well.

I’m looking forward to seeing how this all pans out in the world of adult education.

Sincerely,

Tricia Millar

Evidence 4 ~ One Story

One particular line of numbers caught my attention.

F

13

05:11

06:05

00:06

5 hrs

continuing

White British

truancy

It’s the “Data Story” of a thirteen year old white British girl with truancy issues who struggles with reading and agreed to start meeting with a ThatReadingThing tutor.  I’m going to call her Amber.

At their first session, her reading age was 5 years and 11 months which is what we would expect of a child at some point in Year 1.

Assuming that she’s now in Year 8, she hasn’t made much progress in the intervening seven years at school.

Amber met with her tutor five times and they probably worked on reading for about 45 – 50 minutes in each of those sessions.  I wonder how many weeks it took to get in five sessions?  In my experience, a young person with a history of truanting shows up sporadically at best.

However, thanks to this thirteen year old’s willingness to risk doing the very thing that she tends to run away from and, thanks to the dedication of one TRT tutor, Amber gained six whole months on her reading age.

She needs to gain at least another four years if she is going to cope with the GCSE curriculum, but I’m hoping for the best for her.

Amber is still committed to showing up for TRT sessions and I look forward to finding out what happens in the next five hours.