استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

استمتع بـUnlimited مع Magzter GOLD

احصل على وصول غير محدود إلى أكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة وقصة مميزة مقابل

$149.99
 
$74.99/سنة

يحاول ذهب - حر

MY PREDICTION - Stuctured Literacy Will Help Level the Educational Playing Field

January/February 2025

|

Maclean's

Canadian students have struggled to read and write. That stops this year.

- Jamie Metsala

MY PREDICTION - Stuctured Literacy Will Help Level the Educational Playing Field

In the AI age, literacy is more important than ever. Even a simple Google search requires users to structure their questions, interpret information and judge the reliability of sources.

Students need these core literacy skills, yet for decades, our teaching methods have often closed doors rather than opened them. In 2019, I worked with the Ontario Human Rights Commission on a public inquiry into the province's education system to find out whether students with reading disabilities were getting the instruction and interventions they needed. The answer was damning: Ontario wasn't only failing those students, but many others as well.

Since the '80s, Canadian school systems have favoured "balanced literacy"-closely related to the "whole language" approach-which places emphasis on oral language and prediction.

Students were encouraged to use cues from sentence structure, pictures, letter-sound connections and other context clues to discern the meaning of what they were reading, rather than receiving explicit instruction on how to read. When students came across words they didn't know, they'd use a carrier sentence they may have memorized, like "The boy ran up to the..." then guess the new word-"truck"-from the picture on the page.

Some students did learn to read using this cueing method, but as of 2019, at least a quarter of Grade 3 students didn't meet the Ontario provincial reading standard.

المزيد من القصص من Maclean's

Maclean's

Maclean's

Keep Classrooms Al-Free

A humanities education is vital in our polarized world. But students need to read the books.

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

Teach Kids Digital Nutrition

Instead of fixating solely on screentime, parents should help children discern between healthy and junky content

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

STILL LIVES

A new retrospective traces how Jeff Wall built a career out of meticulously staged moments

time to read

2 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

THE RICH LIST

THE 40 WEALTHIEST CANADIANS– AND HOW THEY MADE THEIR MONEY

time to read

4 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

THE GREAT UNBUILD

A Vancouver couple salvaged materials from an '80s home to build a carbon-neutral barn by the sea

time to read

3 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

Eight Years of School. Zero Job Offers,

I've completed two master's degrees and submitted more than 200 applications. I still can't find work.

time to read

6 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

THE BATTLE FOR THE SOUL OF THE UNIVERSITY

A group of University of British Columbia professors say their administration is taking too many political stances and should commit to institutional neutrality. They're going to court to prove it.

time to read

22 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

My Secret Addiction

Over eight years, I drained my savings and maxed out my credit cards calling online psychics. How a billion-dollar industry fed my need for human connection.

time to read

19 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

THE INTERVIEW

Jeremy Hansen's job is moon. One day, it might not just be trained astronauts like him up there.

time to read

9 mins

December 2025

Maclean's

Maclean's

When Helicopter Parents Go to University

Making wake-up calls. Tracking locations. Managing assignment deadlines. How hyper-involved moms and dads can't seem to back off.

time to read

6 mins

November 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size