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Home Curriculum

A third of Aussie children can’t read proficiently

by Rhiannon Bowman
February 12, 2024
in Curriculum, Latest News, Literacy and Numeracy, Research and Reports
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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A key cause of Australia’s reading problem is decades of disagreement about how to teach reading. Image: StockPhotoPro/stock.adobe.com

A key cause of Australia’s reading problem is decades of disagreement about how to teach reading. Image: StockPhotoPro/stock.adobe.com

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A new report from the Grattan Institute shows that a third of Australian children can’t read proficiently.

Grattan Institute Education Program Director and report lead author, Dr Jordana Hunter, said Australia is failing these children.

“In the typical Australian school classroom of 24 students, eight can’t read well,” she said.

“It’s a preventable tragedy – the reason most of those students can’t read well enough is that we aren’t teaching them well enough.”

The report, The Reading Guarantee: How to give every child the best chance of success, calculates that for those students in school today who are hardest hit by poor reading performance, the cost to Australia is $40 billion over their lifetimes.

Students who struggle with reading are more likely to fall behind their classmates, become disruptive, and drop out of school. They are more likely to end up unemployed or in poorly paid jobs.

A key cause of Australia’s reading problem is decades of disagreement about how to teach reading. But the evidence is now clear.

According to the Grattan Institute, the ‘whole-language’ approach – which became popular in the 1970s and is based on the idea that learning to read is an easy, natural, unconscious process – does not work for all students.

“Its remnants should be banished from Australian schools. Instead, all schools should use the ‘structured literacy’ approach right through school, which includes a focus on phonics in the early years,” the Grattan Institute said.

It said students should learn to sound out the letters of each word, and teachers should read aloud rich literature to their class. Once students have mastered decoding new words, they still need explicit teaching to build up their background knowledge and vocabulary, so they can comprehend what they read – the ultimate goal of reading.

If schools don’t take this approach, the Grattan Institute said, disadvantaged students will be left even further behind their advantaged peers, who tend to have richer learning opportunities outside of school.

“Australia needs a reading revolution,” Dr Hunter said.

“We need to transform the way we teach reading in school, so that every Australian child gets their best chance in life. This report shows how to do it.”

The Grattan report calls on all Australian state and territory governments, and Catholic and independent school sector leaders, to commit to a six-step ‘Reading Guarantee’:

  1. Pledge that at least 90 per cent of Australian students will become proficient readers.
  2. Give principals and teachers specific guidelines on how to teach reading in line with the evidence on what works best.
  3. Provide schools with the high-quality curriculum materials and assessments that teachers need to teach reading well.
  4. Require schools to do universal screening of students’ reading skills and help struggling students to catch-up.
  5. Ensure teachers have the knowledge and skills they need, through extra training, and by appointing Literacy Instructional Specialists in schools.
  6. Mandate a nationally consistent Year 1 Phonics Screening Check, and regularly review schools’ and principals’ performance on teaching their students to read.

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