New York Times
Letters to the Editor

To the Editor:

The front page article on the federal Reading First program (March 9) was terribly disappointing and unconstructive. It neglected to mention that the General Accounting Office recently gave the Reading First program its highest (and unusual) rating of effectiveness. Why is it working to improve reading in low performing schools? Because there is overwhelming scientific consensus that comprehensive reading instruction, as required by Reading First, should include the components named in the legislation, including (but not limited to) phonics. Like the issue of global warming, there is no scientific debate about whether children benefit from direct instruction in how the alphabetic code of English represents speech.
There is, in contrast, plenty of evidence that teaching children to guess at words through context and pictures is, indeed, malpractice, and that most poor readers fall by the wayside early because no one is teaching them how to read. Richard Allington, who was quoted in opposition to Reading First, has no credentials as a researcher or scientist. He and the "reading community" to which he refers have perpetuated myths and ineffective practices associated with Whole Language for decades – and look at what those have brought us. Contrary to the article's data, in a search of Madison's reading achievement scores we find that 45% of African-American children in that city are not proficient readers. After all, they were eligible for Reading First!

The bipartisan legislators who supported the Reading First program never intended this to be another entitlement program. They had the courage to require educators to use the best practices supported by research – or leave our tax dollars for those who will.

Louisa Moats, Ed.D.

(Formerly co-investigator of the NICHD Early Interventions Project, a 5 year, federally funded study of reading instruction in high-poverty schools.)