Findings from the Education Endowment Foundation show that a single approach to catch up literacy is “highly unlikely” to help struggling pupils, writes Helen Ward for the TES.

Secondary schools in the UK should not rely on phonics alone to support the tens of thousands of children each year who are still struggling to read by the time they leave primary education, new research has found.

 Systematic synthetic phonics has been heavily promoted by the government for use with younger students. A report on phonics by Ofsted in 2011 also suggested that the approach should be central to the teaching of reading in secondary schools and colleges.

But a new analysis out today says that, on average, it has less impact with older children than interventions based on improving comprehension – such as practicing taking notes of key points and summarising what is read.

The findings from the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), which was set up by the government to fund research, conclude any single approach is “highly unlikely” to help 11-year-olds who are struggling with reading. It recommends teachers are given the training to enable them to diagnose individual children’s needs and offer a range of support.

View the article here.

 

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