In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert is joined by Jane Ashby, professor in the Reading Science doctoral program at Mount St. Joseph University. They define the concept of “settled science” as a jumping-off point before digging into phonology and the argument for not always basing your teaching practice on the newest research. Dr. Ashby touches on the impact of phonology on comprehension, the Matthew Effect, and why the term “instant words” is more accurate than “sight words.” You’ll walk away from this episode with two practical exercises Dr. Ashby recommends for teaching students to transfer oral segmenting and blending to reading and writing tasks.
Show notes
- Connect with Jane Ashby:
- Mt. St. Joseph University
- Resources
- Teaching Phonemic Awareness in 2024: A Guide for Educators
- Read: Phonological recoding and self-teaching: sine qua non of reading acquisition
- More: The Four-Part Processing Model for Word Recognition
- Read: Matthew effects in reading: Some consequences of individual differences in the acquisition of literacy.
- Join our community Facebook Group: www.facebook.com/groups/scienceofreading
- Connect with Susan Lambert: www.linkedin.com/in/susan-lambert-b1512761/
- Want to hear more of Dr. Ashby? Listen to the bonus episode!
Quotes
“To store a vocabulary word, it's not enough to have the meaning. You have to have the entry for it, and the entry for it is the sound form of the word.” —Jane Ashby
“The greatest gift you can give a kid is letting them know that you see that they're special and that they have something unique that they bring to the world. But the second piece is really, can you help them become a confident, independent reader?” —Jane Ashby
Episode timestamps*
2:00 Introduction: Who is Jane Ashby?
6:00 Defining and contextualizing “settled science”
13:00 Phonology as settled science
17:00 Instant words vs sight words
20:00 How phonology impacts comprehension
26:00 Connection to the Matthew Effect
31:00 Listener mailbag question: How do you suggest teachers teach students to transfer oral segmenting and blending to reading and writing tasks?
37:00 Teaching phonemic awareness guide
39:00 Research that should influence teacher practice
41:00 The greatest gift you can give a child
*Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute