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| Teaching Reading - a History by Robert McCole Wilson Author's address: Robert McCole Wilson, (87 Cottonwood St.) Box 838, Lake Cowichan, B.C., V0R 2G0 Canada. Author's email address: rmw@island.net |
| Contents: on this webpage: Introduction What is Reading? Origins Early Modern Europe From Meaning to Reading on the next webpage: New Education, New Methods? The Larger Context Who is Right? Some conclusions Further Reading A Final Comment |
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The New England Primer

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Introduction |
Not to know what happened before one was born
is always to be a child.
|
| What is reading? |
Of making many books there is no end; and much
study is a weariness of the flesh.
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| Origins |
It is better that the grammarians should chide
us than that the people should not understand us.
|
| Writing, and therefore reading, came as an aid
and a necessity to early civilizations when food surpluses allowed
specialization, and commerce developed to the extent that regulation was
needed to avoid chaos. Many different types were developed: pictures, signs,
tallies, numbers, shorthand. Because hieroglyphic and pictogram writing
necessitated the memorization of hundreds, even thousands, of different
characters, those that mastered them became a powerful specialist elite who
had spent from childhood to adulthood learning them. There is, however, an
advantage of a pictograph writing in that it is not dependent on a spoken
language; a person literate in it can communicate with the speaker of
another language who is also literate in it. |
| Just as in learning to read, I said, we were
satisfied when we knew the letters of the alphabet, which are very few, in
all their recurring sizes and combinations; not slighting them as
unimportant whether they occupy a space large or small, but everywhere eager
to make them out; and not thinking ourselves perfect in the art of reading
until we recognise them wherever they are found. (The Republic) |
| Dionysius of Helicarnassus, a Greek who lived
in Rome during the first century B.C., described it thus: |
| When we first learned to read was is it not
necessary at first to know the names of the letters, their shapes, their
value in syllables, their differences, then the words and their case, their
quantity long or short, their accent, and the rest? Arrived at this point we began to read and write, slowly at first and syllable by syllable. Some time afterwards, the forms being sufficiently engraved on our memory, we read more cursorily, in the elementary book, then all sorts of books, finally with incredible quickness and without making any mistake. |
| Rome's foremost writer on educational practice,
Quintilian (35-95 A.D.?), describes this method at the beginning of
Institutes of Oratory. "It will be best for children, therefore, to be
taught the appearances of the letters at once." (I, 1, 25. J. S. Watson's
translation, 1856). While he also emphasized the interaction of reading,
writing and speaking, because the art of rhetoric was so important in the
public life of the empire, it is clear in Book X that he viewed reading and
writing as supports for speaking. |
| Early Modern Europe |
Reading maketh a full man; conference a ready
man; and writing an exact man. And therefore, if a man write little, he had
need have a great memory; if he confer little, he had need have a present
wit: and if he read little, he had need have much cunning,to seem to know,
that he doth not.
|
| With the Reformation came a demand for reading
the vernacular by the many not just Latin by the few. First Luther in
Germany, then the Calvinists, asserted that each person should be able to
read and study the scriptures as a means to personal salvation. The Bible
was translated and the new invention, the printing press, meant books were
available to many more people. In England, the monarchy wanted the boys "to
read English intelligently instead of Latin unintelligently." |
![]() Two pages of the 1690 New England Primer. |

| Borrowings from other languages, particularly
French, Latin and Greek, were already making English a rich and diversified
language, but the accommodation of these words meant that its spelling was
so diversified, reading it became far more than deciphering a one-to-one
correspondence between letters and sounds. This situation became aggravated
over time by changes in pronunciation and the many dialects that have to be
accommodated, so that spellings have become less and less indicators of
sounds. |
| For the letter is the first and simplest
impression in the trade of teaching, and nothing before it. The knitting and
jointing wherof groweth on verie infinitely, as it appeareth most plainely
by daily spelling, and continuall reading, till partely by use, and partely
by argument, the child get the habit, and cunning to read well, which being
once goten, what a cluster of commodities doth it bring with all? (The
Training Up of Children, 1581) |
| A century later, John Locke, an advocate of
non-coercive but rational instruction, also equated learning to read with
learning the letters though he recognized the need to make that learning
more interesting: |
| 148. [...] But then, as I said before, it must
never be imposed as a task, nor made a trouble to them. There may be dice
and play-things, with the letters on them, to teach children the alphabet by
playing; and twenty other ways may be found, suitable to their particular
tempers, to make this kind of learning a sport to them. 149. Thus children may be cozened into a knowledge the letters; be taught to read without perceiving it to be anything but a sport, and play themselves into that others are whipped for. (see sections 148-159, Some Thoughts Concerning Education, 1693) |
While a few people, such as Sir Thomas Smith
(1568) and John Hart (1570) understood the problem could be alleviated by a
truly English alphabet (for Smith 34 letters after redundant ones had been
eliminated), teachers were bewildered or angered when their pupils who had
clearly learned their letters could not read. Some tried to alleviate the
dull and exhausting work of learning letters and syllables by using games,
others felt more of the same would improve reading and spelling. A
supplementary problem was that the idea of readiness for learning was not
yet accepted. We read of children as young as three being forced into long
recitations of their letters in many combinations.
The popularity of the New England Primer, 1690, lasted for over a
hundred years in the American Colonies. Their content was religious
instruction combined with learning to read the alphabet, syllables and
words. |
![]() Just below for the front page of Webster's American Spelling Book (1831 edition). ![]() Just below for a lesson from Webster. |


| A number of "spellers" began to replace the
Primers, the most famous being the more secular Noah Webster's American
Spelling Book (1783) which in its hundred years of use sometimes sold
more than a million copies a year. The words were grouped into graded lists,
it had a series of graded reading lessons, and there were some
illustrations. These were all designed for the phonics method of teaching. |
|
See below the teacher suggestions from the first McGuffey Reader, 1879 edition. ![]() Below that image see the same Reader's preface. |


| There was still no necessary connection between reading and writing. In Boston in 1789, for example, three reading schools were established and three writing schools. Handwriting was an important subject in schools and much time was devoted to it; many a child had his knuckles rapped for holding his writing instrument incorrectly as he wrote on his slate. The art of the "scrivener" was often taught separately until the need for this skill gradually disappeared after the invention and widespread use of the typewriter. |
| From Meaning to Reading |
Should you not think it better to learn to
spell, than to be laughed at for blunders?
|
| The first person that we know of who tried to
reverse the process of learning to read was Ickelsamer, a German, whose
language had suffered similar problems by adopting the Roman alphabet. In
contrast to the accepted belief of the time, he felt that speech sounds were
primary and letters secondary and he ignored the conventional names for
letters. In his primer The Shortest Way to Reading, 1527, he had his
pupils learn the individual sounds of speech first and only after had them
name the letters. But this was only a small step, and in any case, others
were not ready for change. |
![]() See below a page from the first McGuffey Reader. |

| This early skirmish in the "reading wars"
appears to have been characterized on both sides by lack of knowledge and by
misrepresentation. One can't help but feel that this conflict had as much to
do with resentment by practising teachers over what they saw as unwarranted
interference by a central authority. While Mann was effective in bringing
attention to the barrenness of much of the teaching, any immediate effect on
the teaching of reading is in doubt, but the prestige of his name was later
used for support by advocates of the whole-word method. |
![]() See below another lesson from the first McGuffey Reader. |

| Teaching by an alphabetic system was also to be
resurrected. In England, Sir Isaac Pitman (1813-1897) developed a phonetic
alphabet of 42 letters for English and he and his supporters used it to
teach reading in some English and Scottish schools. Great claims were made
for the speed with which children learned to read it, and that they had no
problems transferring to the regular alphabet. Its success led to a similar
system in the United States, the Leigh system. |
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| (this paper is continued below |
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http://www.socsci.kun.nl/ped/whp/histeduc/wilson/wilson10.html © Copyright 1997-2000 Robert M. Wilson / The History of Education and Childhood @ Nijmegen University, NL June 18, 2001 |
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| Teaching Reading - a History by Robert McCole Wilson |
| Contents: on the previous webpage: Introduction What is Reading? Origins Early Modern Europe From Meaning to Reading on this webpage: New Education, New Methods? The Larger Context Who is Right? Some conclusions Further Reading A Final Comment |
|
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| New Education, New Methods? |
Education [...] has produced a vast population
able to read, but unable to distinguish what is worth reading.
|
| The next important movement for change centred
at the Laboratory School of the University of Chicago and the work supported
by President Harper, Colonel Parker and John Dewey (a student of Hall). From
here their "Progressive Education" was to be spread widely, at least its
theory. |
![]() See below to read two pages of a 1923 primer. |

| Hall's ideas fitted in well with the
progressive movement. Reading was not to be the centre of the child's
education. The pleasure in learning to live was paramount and he or she
would come naturally to learn to read along with other natural development.
Education was to be a practical, hands-on activity rather than text-book
study. It was at the end of Dewey's "play period" from four to eight years
that the child would be introduced to reading and writing as part of other
activities. |
![]() See below a 1934 primer. |

| Side skirmishes involved the frequency of
English words and the degree to which English is spelled phonetically. One
study showed that three thousand words comprise ninety-eight percent of
those used by adults as well as children -- support for the word method.
Others showed that English spelling was not as illogical as had been
claimed; that its frequent inconsistencies often aided meaning, and context
aided comprehension -- support for the phonics method. After 1900, studies
of eye-movement helped distinguish between the physical actions of oral and
silent reading |
![]() See below two pages of a 1941 primer. |

| After World war II, criticism of the large
proportion of functionally illiterate, estimated at one third to one half of
adults, grew until it reached its peak in the United states with the
publication of Rudolf Flesch's Why Johnny Can't Read in 1955. While
many educators defended the system by saying the aims of education were far
more than teaching the "three R's," public alarm grew. Those outside the
esoteric walls of educational theory saw the ability to read and write as
absolutely fundamental to education. Their target was the word method; to
them "look-and-say" was "look-and-guess" (as opposed to "drill-and-kill").
According to critics, because word attack skills were not being taught,
children were handicapped in deciphering new words and could not handle
further education. |
![]() See below two pages of a c. 1950 primer. |

| In the United Kingdom at the beginning of World
war II, much the same thing was discovered as in the U.S.A.: over 25% of
recruits were functional illiterates. As the cause was seen by many as the
non-phonetic nature of much of the English language, a new call for spelling
reform went out. Among other solutions, Sir James Pitman, grandson of Sir
Isaac, and his followers prepared what was to be called the Initial Teaching
Alphabet or i.t.a. of 45 letters, to be first used in 1961. Again
great claims were made for its effectiveness and that no problems were
encountered in transferring to normal spelling. It was, for a while, used in
places both in the U.K and North America. |
| The Larger Context |
English spelling is weird ... or is it wierd ?
|
| We should be careful not to separate the
teaching of reading from the general philosophy of education and views of
how children should be treated. Another way of looking at the great reading
debate is to ask who is on what side. Those that have an analytic
(scientific) view of the world are more likely to support phonics along with
those who support mental discipline; those who have a holistic (intuitive)
view are likely to support the whole word methods as are those who support
free development. The first are more likely to demand proof through
controlled investigations and the latter are more likely to demand a larger
view than cannot be shown by narrow testing. It could be that there was a
swing back to the phonics method in the 1960s when those who had expected
great things from science were in control, and a swing to whole word in the
1980s when those who had experienced the 1960s self-expression movement rose
to positions of influence. |
| Who is Right? |
We talked of the education of children; and I
asked him what he thought was the best way to teach them first. Johnson: "
Sir, it is no matter what you teach them first, any more than what leg you
shall put into your breeches first. Sir, you may stand disputing which is
best to put in first, but in the mean time your breech is bare. Sir, while
you are considering which of two things you should teach your child first,
another boy has learnt them both."
|
| Who is right? Both and neither. Both in that
most children use the word in context along with analysis of the letters and
syllables to learn to read whether they are taught these ways or not.
Neither in that other factors such as interest in the materials and the
attractiveness of the learning environment are more important than any
theoretical method. Beyond the philosophy behind the teaching of reading is
the adaptability of the books and the willingness and ability of the teacher
to use whatever will help at an any given moment with a particular child.
And with the right books, most children will find their own way. |
| Further Reading |
| Trust yourself. You know more than you think
you do. |
|
| -- Dr. Benjamin Spock, opening
line of Baby and Child Care addressed to new parents. |
| As this paper was meant for general readers
rather than scholars, detailed references were not given. In fact, I found
that much of what appears here had already been dealt with by others but had
usually been ignored by advocates of the different methods. For a similar
work by a reading specialist, the reader is referred to two connected papers
by William T. Stokes Understanding the Phonics Debates: Part I and
Recent History of the Phonics Debates: Part II. These papers also have
useful references for someone who wants to read more deeply on the subject.
See: |
|
http://www.lesley.edu/academic_centers/hood/stokes.html
http://www.lesley.edu/academic_centers/hood/currents/v1n2/stokes.html |
| One useful source that Stokes does not list is: Mathews, Mitford M., Teaching to Read, Historically Considered, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1967 (This is the best book that I have seen on the topic. Much of the information in this article was from it, particularly for the 19th century.) For links to the Whole Language/Phonics debate, one place to start is at: |
|
http://www.middleweb.com/Reading.html#anchor5517892 |
| A number of early school texts can be found at
The University of Pittsburgh site: |
| http://digital.library.pitt.edu/nietz/index.html |
| A Final Comment |
The barbarians are not at the gates. They are
inside the gates -- and have academic tenure, judicial appointments,
government grants, and control of the movies, television, and other media.
Virtually everything that was supposed to make things better made things
worse. What has failed is accepted without question by so-called 'thinking
people' and what worked is disdained as being out of touch with the times.
|
| In reading the works of educational theorists, it is unsettling to see how few have a knowledge of the history of education. So many policy and decision makers do not have a reasonable knowledge of what has been said and done before. |
You teach a child to read, and he or she will
be able to pass a literacy test.
|
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http://www.socsci.kun.nl/ped/whp/histeduc/wilson/wilson10.html © Copyright 1997-2000 Robert M. Wilson / The History of Education and Childhood @ Nijmegen University, NL May 28, 2000 |
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