sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Geoff Johnson: We learn to read all of our lives

Learning to read is a lifelong process, and I鈥檓 content to admit that after 40 years in public education, two university degrees and a lasting love of books, I鈥檓 still involved in that process.
TC_180513_web_VKA-library-409001.jpg
It聮s a simple image: A youngster reads a book. But reading development is a lifelong process that can challenge even those who have 40 years in public education, such as columnist Geoff Johnson. DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST

Learning to read is a lifelong process, and I鈥檓 content to admit that after 40 years in public education, two university degrees and a lasting love of books, I鈥檓 still involved in that process.

I have also come to understand that the same obstacles that challenge first-time early childhood readers also apply to adult readers. The purpose of reading is, after all, comprehension 鈥 and that, in turn, is about extracting meaning from text.

Without comprehension, reading is nothing but a frustrating, pointless exercise in deciphering words. So how do we ease kids into reading in such a way that reading and comprehending the meaning of text becomes a source of enjoyment and not just another adult imposition on young minds?

The sa国际传媒 Primary (levels) program describes five stages of reading 颅development: The first is when a child begins to show curiosity about print in his/her environment 鈥 signs, ads in shop 颅windows, anywhere there are words.

The second stage is 鈥渆mergent鈥 when a child 鈥渞ole plays鈥 and pretends to read, remembering words or phrases by rote.

Then comes the stage when a child shows interest in words in print, and wants to explore age-appropriate books independently.

Stages four and five find a child 颅choosing to read silently for increasing periods of time and wanting adult support with text beyond immediate knowledge and linguistic development.

For adults wanting to buy books for a grandchild, niece or nephew, considering the reading level of the books given to or shared with a child is a good place to start.

According to an article in Psychology Today by Paula J. Schwanenflugel and Nancy Flanagan Knapp, most text 颅readability levels are based on some 颅combination of word difficulty as 颅measured by the number of letters, number of 颅syllables and/or frequency of use of words used in a book.

In the same way, sentence complexity, which will either encourage or discourage the early reader鈥檚 willingness to continue, is important. Sentence complexity is about the length in words or phrases in a sentence the child is attempting to read and understand.

Understanding the range of a child鈥檚 day-to-day operational vocabulary simply by listening to the child relay experiences will help adults understand a child鈥檚 potential willingness to persist with a chosen book.

It is only after that, again according to the two child psychologists, that as reading proficiency increases to books which have one-, two- and three-syllable words along with more challenging ideas are suitable.

That way, and without hurrying the process, adults can incrementally support the early reader as he/she progresses both in terms of proficiency and comfort.

Again, at that point guidance from a significant adult to clarify the meanings of words and phrases is invaluable.

So far so good, but the same processes apply to adult readers who choose to move into previously uncharted content. I said at the outset that, even as a more or less semi-educated adult, I am still 颅learning to read and to draw meaning from some texts.

I can well remember deciding to read A Brief History of Time by Stephen Hawking. How complex could it be? It was on the New York Times bestseller list for 100 weeks back in the late 1980s.

But three pages in, I found myself reading the same page over and over again to try to relate what I knew, or thought I knew about Hawking鈥檚 clarification of Aristotle鈥檚 鈥淥n the Heavens鈥 and the emerging assumption that the earth might be round.

Then, on the same page, came Ptolemy鈥檚 second century cosmological 鈥渕odel鈥 closely followed by concepts developed by Nicholas Copernicus about the earth, the moon and the sun that brought the wrath of organized religion down about his ears.

It was tempting just to pack it in with Hawking鈥檚 brilliant book and find something which did not make me feel so intellectually inadequate.

But I didn鈥檛 do that. I knew that if I聽wanted to understand anything about what Hawking was explaining, the content of which others had apparently found so颅 颅interesting, I would need three things: An adjustment of my own expectations, patience and perseverance.

We now know that early readers have that same experience and those same needs. That鈥檚 where adults patiently reading with the child can make a difference. And it is a lifelong difference.

As American author Betty Smith wrote in her best selling novel A Tree Grows In Brooklyn: 鈥淥h, magic hour, when a child first knows he/she can read printed words!鈥

[email protected]

Geoff Johnson is a former superintendent of schools.