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For over a quarter of a century the AVKO
Educational
Research Foundation
has been investigating
the nature of the English language and its orthography.
what it is about English that causes so many problems for so many
students trying to learn to read and spell English.
what methods are used to teach reading and spelling that work or don't
work
The findings based on an analysis of English orthography:
There are five basic types of words in the English language, each with
three different levels of difficulty.
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Summary of Research by the
AVKO Educational Research Foundation |
There are 5 Types of English
Spellings with 3 gradations of difficulty
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Basic |
Intermediate |
Advanced |
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Simple
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cat, big, call, kite, go, dog, run, stay, boy, girl, jump, ate, shop,
run, skip, tree, top |
shunned, chewing,
missed, spinning,
outfielder, preacher
basement, household |
peddled, strictly,
belittled, reenacted,
enabled, shackled
embittered, quartered |
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Fancy |
onion,
person,
station, caution,
specialties, crucial, social, |
surgeons, suspicions, atrocious suspicious,
personalities, initially,
linguistic, persuasion |
flambeau, Chablis, Basque
ennui, psychiatry, memoir,
psychic, rendezvous, chic,
audacity, piqued, mosque |
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Insane |
does, was, should
have, laughter, eye
cousin, daughter, rough, cough |
lingerie, aye, draught,
soldering, indictment,
corps, Chanukah, through, plough |
hors d'oeuvres, ciao, conch, jai alai, Qin, ribald,
victuals lough, quay, phthisic, queue |
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Tricky |
deer/dear, aunt/ant
be/bee bear/bare
red/read/reed
maid/made see/sea |
do/dew/due, aisle/isle/I'll
missed/mist, passed/past affect/effect accept/except eye/aye/I
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allusion/illusion
cache/cash cue/queue
spade/spayed
counsel/council |
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Scrunched
Up (sandhi / synaloepha) |
It’s, didn’t, Mr., Mrs., Ms., Ave., Dr.,
St.,
they’re, We’re, I’m, won’t, don’t |
'tis, 'twas, ASAP, CIA, etc. PED XING,
(used to / "usta")
(going to / "gonna") |
e.g., "whudja," i.e.,
Ste., Y2K, ibid., sic
et. al., SQ3R, WPA, IDA, AC, DC, PA
@#$%&*! |
1.
Only the Basic words are
generally taught or encountered in the first two grades.
2.
The "Intermediate Patterns"
are rarely systematically taught
3.
The "Advanced Patterns" are
not taught specifically or intensively and are usually assumed to be learned by
osmosis.
4.
75% or more of the words belonging
to the patterns in bold face and color above cannot be read by poor readers.
Likewise, 75% of the words they cannot read contain the same patterns.
AVKO has identified
what needs to be taught. When will the colleges of education and the state and federal
departments of education take action?
The "Simple" words can be defined
as those words whose base has but one syllable. For example, the word fisherman can
be reduced to the monosyllabic morpheme fish. The phonics for these words are fairly
consistent and should be taught in the first two grades. Note that the
-le ending in peddle,
tangle and shackle isn't quite a complete syllable. Although the words ending
in -le are highly consistent as in the
-angle, -endle, -idle, -oble, -oodle, and -uffle
rimes, the words containing these patterns and the patterns themselves rarely occur in
first and second grade textbooks. The advanced "simple" words and their
patterns also are rarely taught in first and second grade.
The "Fancy" words can be defined
as those words whose base (with rare exceptions such as the word "cache"
which is both fancy and tricky) is composed of more than one syllable. These words
generally follow the phonics of the language that they come from such as Latin, Greek,
French, Spanish, Arabic, German, etc. The easy ones generally occur frequently
enough in texts that most students learn them by sight. The phonic patterns such as
"on" being pronounced as "un" at the end of most words such as person,
common, and nation generally is not taught. The difficult
fancy words occur less frequently and their patterns such as ci=/sh/
and ous=/us/ are not taught in most classrooms. Also
rarely taught are the advanced patterns such as the letter u (single yoo) may take the
place of its identical twin the consonant w (double yoo) as in
linguistic (the gw blend) persuasion
(the sw blend).
For a complete listing of all the simple phonic patterns and all the
"Fancy" phonic patterns see Don McCabe's "The Mechanics of English
Spelling" in The Teaching of
Reading: A Continuum from Kindergarten through College.
RESEARCHERS
for a test you can replicate in which both the mode
and the median
is 100%!
when 10 multiple "guess" questions are given that proves the
existence of both "FANCY" and
"SIMPLE" click
here.
The "Insane" words are what
teachers often call "outlaws" or exceptions. The common ones are easy only
because they are so commonly used. The words such as is ("izz"), are
("ar"), were ("wur"), are drilled one way or another into the
young readers' heads. But other words a little less frequently encountered may cause
problems, such as laugh ("laff") and laughter
("lafter") and daughter ("dawter"). The advanced
"Insane" words are almost never taught. There is no provision in most
curricula for the teaching of these words even though the vast majority of students cannot
pronounce them. Most teachers have no idea that the word victuals is only
correct spelling of "vittles" and that the word lough is pronounced
"lock." For the only listing of these insane words by categories of
utility and frequency, see pages 535 to 548 in Volume 5 of The Patterns of English Spelling.
The "Tricky" words are homophones
such as be, bee, Bea, and B; dialect dependent homophones such as ant and aunt
(Does aunt rhyme with can't or haunt?); heteronyms such as lead
(v.) and lead (n.); typography dependent homographs such as to resume
writing a job resume; similarity of configuration such as soldier and solder
or ambitions and ambitious; similarity of letters in words whose only
significant difference is in the transpositions such as in expect and except;
words of almost identical meanings but whose pronunciation is accent dependent such as
"to reCORD" a new "RECord;"
words with variant spellings such as Chanukah and Hanukah; words whose
structural endings cause confusion such as hoping and hopping.
AVKO has yet to find one spelling curriculum or reading curriculum that attempts to ensure
that the students are at least given instruction on most of these words. Samples,
yes. Systematic, intensive instruction, NO. For a suggested order for
diagnosis and remediation of "tricky" words see pages 216 to 228 in The Teaching of
Reading & Spelling: a Continuum
from Kindergarten through College.
An example of the Scrunched Up words is:
Wudja beleev dat duh titul uv en ardikul inna reel skolurly jurnle wuz: "Yoo all gonna
hafta listen" end dis was by a reel eddycated laidy frum Hahvud Yoonuhversity.
Being able to read words that have been deliberately misspelled by writers is something
that good readers take "for granite." What we good readers in the field of
education tend to forget is that not all people are as bright as we are. Not
everybody is acquainted with terms such as sandhi (pronounced "Sunday")
and synaloepha. For a quick diagnostic test on students' abilities to both
read and spell "scrunched up" words, see pages 229 to 233 in The Teaching of Reading: a Continuum
from Kindergarten through College.
The research findings based on an analysis of readings by
adults and their testing at the AVKO Educational Research Foundation's free reading
clinic.
Good readers (those reading at grade levels
8.0 and above) respond correctly and instantly to almost all phonic patterns. Many
of these good readers have never had systematic instruction in phonics. They happen
to be the lucky ones who have learned that which they were NOT TAUGHT. Whole
language approaches seem to work well for them. What weaknesses they have in reading
comprehension lie largely in having poor vocabularies, limited life experiences, and/or
poor reading techniques such as "word calling" instead of thinking as they are
reading.
Poor readers (those reading at grade levels 4.0 to 7.9)
respond correctly and instantly only to the very basic phonic patterns such as -eek
and -eak as in the words peek and peak.
They have difficulty with advanced patterns such as -ique
in the word pique. 75% or more of the words that contain
Difficult or Advanced "FANCY" patterns cannot be read by poor readers. 75%
of the words that they cannot read contain the same patterns. It has been found that
when these patterns are systematically taught to them, they have a much greater chance of
becoming proficient readers. Many (but not all) poor readers can become good readers
with intensive one-to-one tutoring that does not involve the teaching of phonics.
But this is cost-prohibitive for most school districts. Almost all poor readers can
become good readers if the classroom instruction includes systematic multi-sensory
teaching of the advanced "FANCY" patterns. Please note that only AVKO has
made a complete listing of these patterns and grouped them together into word lists
according to pattern. Ask your local expert in references to find any book in any
reference library that has examples of fifty words in which the letters ch have the sound
of /k/ as in the words ache, echo, orchid, and mechanic.
AVKO has found 297! The reference tool in which these can be found is Don McCabe's The Patterns of English Spelling
which should be in every school library, but unfortunately isn't.
Non-readers (Those reading at grade levels
of 1.0 to 3.9 after having reached at least the 6th grade) do not respond correctly and
instantly to many of the very basic patterns of the "Simple" words. To
advance to the next level they must learn the phonics of the "Simple" words plus
mastering the "EASY levels of the Insane" words.
Methods of teaching reading used in regular
and remedial reading programs rarely utilize the teaching of spelling patterns via
handwriting legibility exercises or the teaching of spelling patterns via keyboarding
exercises. AVKO has yet to find a single curriculum that even purports to do so.
The other neglected method of teaching reading involves the teaching of vocabulary
utilizing spelling patterns (roots, prefixes, suffixes) and most importantly the
combination of immediate student self-correction with careful sequencing.
The Challenge to Educational Researchers Worldwide
To adequately establish the relationship of reading test scores to
spelling, there needs to be a baseline study made. The last such study was done in 1954! For a better study to be made, we need
the input of researchers as well as teachers, parents, and employers. Please visit
our Opinion Survey on Spelling/Reading,
print it out, and have as many of your colleagues (and students?) complete it and send it
to Don McCabe, Research Director, AVKO Educational Research Foundation, 3084 Willard
Road, Suite W, Birch Run, MI 48415.
A Challenge to
U.S. Department of Education, All State Departments of Education, All Educational
Organizations, and University Reading Researchers
All donations are greatly appreciated. If you would like to
support our mission which is to raise the level of literacy to the point where the words,
illiteracy, phonemic awareness, learning disabilities, dysgraphia, family literacy, adult
literacy, and illegible handwriting will no longer have relevance, please mail your
tax-deductible check (in U.S. dollars) to The AVKO Foundation, 3084 Willard Road, Suite
W, Birch Run, MI 48415-7801. The AVKO Foundation is recognized by the IRS as a 501(C)3
publicly supported organization working with teachers, parents, tutors, and home schooling
parents, publishing materials developed by its research, and providing free daily tutoring
at its local reading clinic.
If you have comments about this website or questions concerning
spelling, phonics, learning disabilities, homeschooling, etc., you may always
e-mail DonMcCabe@aol.com. We
appreciate any comments that will help us make this website even more useful.
- Call Toll Free: 1-866-285-6612
Fax: (810) 686-1101
E-mail: Webmaster: avkoemail@aol.com
or Write:
Don McCabe,
Research Director
- AVKO Educational Research Foundation
3084 Willard Road, Suite W
Birch Run, MI 48415-7801
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