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Articles

Reading dis/ability: interrogating paradigms in a prism of power

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Pages 557-570 | Received 26 Jun 2007, Accepted 04 Dec 2007, Published online: 09 Oct 2008
 

Abstract

The dichotomisation of literacy instruction into phonics instruction versus a whole language approach fails to realise a fundamental tenet of providing equitable educational opportunities to diverse groups of children. Diversity becomes a problem to solve through ‘inoculation programmes’ or ‘special’ education expertise. Moreover, children’s individual strengths can fail to be realised because they do not fit well with the programme of the day. Instead of being appreciated for the value that they may bring in higher order conceptual and intellectual tasks, these individual strengths may be neglected at great cost to the individual child because they offer cheap reward in the shape of aggregate test scores. This paper is a philosophical piece, which in refusing to prescribe what one should do on Monday morning joins other strident voices in disability studies in education to question what it is that we are doing today. Whilst not scientific, this is important work – it emphasises the a priori importance of philosophical, moral and ethical questions – reminding science that children are dynamic social beings who cannot be manipulated like genes to ‘express’ themselves in ways more conducive to quick and cheap educational programmes.

Notes

1. Support‐a‐Reader is a programme in which a student who has been ‘caught in the Net’ is withdrawn from class for half an hour of supported reading practice once or twice a week with a teacher or parent aide.

2. During her second term Georgia was also identified by the visiting speech pathologist as lacking oral language skills and enrolled in a withdrawal‐mode Oral Language Skills Support programme involving weekly half hour sessions for 8 weeks.

3. While moving her hand in an arc from left to right Nicole held up one finger when saying the number 1 and an open hand when she said 10. Georgia’s eyes flicked from watching Nicole’s mouth to watching her hands.

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