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Unfortunately many children are
deprived of the privilege of an abundant adult life.
The media reports in this country often focus on the high
illiteracy rates that plague our nation’s schools. They are alarming since
they indicate that many of our children are failing to learn to read. In a
national study in 1998, the National Assessment Governing Board tested
students nationwide and rated their reading abilities at four levels:
Below Basic, Basic, Proficient, and Advanced. Thirty-eight percent of
fourth grade students were rated Below Basic. In the same study, only 31%
of students were at or above the acceptable level of Proficient.
Considering that 11% of students were untestable due to learning
disabilities or language barriers, it implies that approximately 44% of
fourth grade students are illiterate and only 25% are reading at an
acceptable level!*
These sobering
results also held true in a 1992 study of 26,000 adults by the same group
(NAEP 1992). Participants were rated on a scale of five levels, and
results showed that 48% of the adults were reading at Level 2 or lower,
i.e. they were barely literate. Only three percent of all adults reached
the highest level, Level 5.*
Surely this is unacceptable. Imagine
doing a survey on the building industry and finding that the walls of
nearly half of the houses are so weak that they collapse. Wouldn't we
immediately start an investigation into the building practices of the
builders? Wouldn't we check whether they were careful to provide proper
foundations?
Before building a house, one needs to
lay a foundation. Unless there is a strong and solid foundation, cracks
will soon appear in the walls, and with no foundations, the walls will
collapse.
In the same way one needs to lay a
proper foundation before it becomes possible for a child to benefit from a
course in reading, writing and arithmetic. If this foundation is shaky,
learning “cracks” will soon appear.
The First Rung of the Learning
Ladder
It is important to note that learning
is a stratified process, in which one skill has to be acquired first,
before it becomes possible to acquire subsequent skills. It is like
climbing a ladder. If you miss one of the rungs you fall off.
Leerprobleme is aan die toeneem, dit
is tyd om ‘n einde daaraan te maak… Unless one has first learned to
speak Afrikaans, there is no way that one would be able to read the above
Afrikaans sentence. This shows that language is at the very bottom of the
learning ladder. Its role in the acquisition of the three R's can be
compared to the role of running in the game of football. One cannot play
football if one cannot run. One cannot read a book in a language — and
least of all write — unless one knows the particular language.
If a child's knowledge of English is
poor, then his reading will also be poor. Evidence that links reading
problems and language problems has been extensively presented in the
literature.
The Second Rung of the Learning
Ladder
While language comprises the first
rung of the learning ladder, non-verbal skills comprise the second. These
are functions that should be taught at preschool level to form the
foundation of good reading, writing and arithmetic. The most important
skills are:
- The skill of
concentration.
- Perception ― visual,
auditory and haptic.
- The ability to
discriminate, synthesize and analyze in terms of foreground/background,
form, size, position in space and color.
- Memory ― short and
long term, visual and auditory.
- Ability to decode and
integrate information.
- Concept of numbers.
- Fine motor
coordination.
Audiblox develops and
reinforces the above-mentioned skills.
Only when a child has climbed the
first and second rung, will he be prepared for the third rung, i.e. the
three R's.
Comparing Children Exposed to
Audiblox to a National Norm
Presently, a large number of
preschools in South Africa are making use of the group application of the
Audiblox program. Their main intention is to prepare children for
formal schooling, thereby preventing learning difficulties in the future.
In November 2001 the Grade 0
(Kindergarten) children of three of these preschools were tested on the
abbreviated battery of the Aptitude Test for School Beginners
(ASB). The abbreviated battery correlates strongly with the total score of
the complete battery. The children at the three preschools (a total of 56
children) had been exposed to Audiblox sessions for 20 minutes per
day, two to four times per week, the majority of them for longer than a
year.
The ASB is considered as the most
important criterion to determine a child’s level of school readiness. It
has been in use for many decades in South Africa and is widely applied in
Grade 1, between the beginning of the eighth week and the end of the ninth
week of the first school term, as the norms had been determined for this
period. The battery was therefore applied four months earlier than usual.
The ASB test has two norms, one for
children who are environmentally disadvantaged and one for children who
are non-environmentally disadvantaged (NED). NED children are considered
to have been exposed to sufficient learning opportunities. The children at
the three preschools will therefore be compared to the NED norm table.
According to the NED norm table 7% of
non-environmentally disadvantaged children in South Africa score a stave
of 1 (very weak), 24% score a stave of 2 (weak), 38% scored a stave of 3
(average), 24% score a stave of 4 (good), and 7% score a stave of 5
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