Letter to the Times.

Dear Sir or Madam:

Diana Jean Schemo's article (March 9, In War Over Teaching Reading) evidences a lot of sloppy reporting. The article makes it sound like mismanagement of the Reading First program occurred because "federal officials and contractors used the program to pressure schools to adopt approaches that emphasize phonics." Actually, the Reading First law required schools to employ programs that emphasized research-based instruction in phonics and other key elements of reading.

Ms. Schemo describes successful schools serving Madison, WI and federal efforts to undermine their success. But Reading First funds are only for failing schools, so the schools in the Times article would not have been eligible for funding.
If poor, minority kids were suffering high failure rates in Madison, why were Madison school officials so unwilling to improve reading instruction?

The article quotes Richard Allington as saying that "the reading community has largely rejected the National Reading Panel." The Panel's report became the basis of Reading First, and has been cited hundreds of times in scholarly research journals, endorsed by the International Reading Association, and identified as one of the most influential educational reports by the Editorial Projects in Education Research Center. It is sad that there are some who still would prevent schools from providing sound reading instruction to children, and even sadder the Times would trumpet such misinformation, with no attempts at balance.

Timothy Shanahan
Professor of Urban Education, University of Illinois at Chicago
President, International Reading Association