The Good, the Bad and the Ugly of Pinterest

SATISFACTION LEVEL

This post was previously published under the title, 'A Review of Online Resources - Pinterest'. 

 

Teachers LOVE Pinterest. We try and have a Pinterest perfect classroom, with cute displays on our doors. (Here’s mine from a few years ago)

Oh, how much time I spent on that house!


I’ve made rain clouds out of balloons, paper Mache and cotton balls. I’ve created a box of paper fruit and veg for my dramatic play area. I’ve even made whole immersion experiences for my kiddos using MANY ideas I’ve gained from that magical website that seems to have all the answers!   Pinterest can be amazing for helping lighten the creative load of teaching. However, when you are searching for more than preschool fine motor activities or crafty fun, things can get a little tricky.



In light of this, I’ve put together a review of some of the good, problematic and downright ugly pins I’ve seen about the teaching of reading.  After all, not everything we find online constitutes effective practice.

Before we delve into this blow by blow description of my findings, I’d like to outline five components of evidence based teaching practice that we should be keeping in mind as we explore Pinterest in hope of finding free, downloadable resources that will meet our students’ needs and save us loads of time.


Evidence based reading instruction includes:

1.Teaching phoneme grapheme (sound/letter) correspondences explicitly and systematically.  That is, there is a purposeful sequence of teaching where the adult outlines exactly what is to be taught and children can demonstrate that knowledge or skill. This does not involve children discovering or problem solving these connections.

2. Children are taught to blend sounds in words together to read and pull them apart to spell. There are no stand alone spelling programs. Children are taught decoding and encoding (spelling) at the same time.

3. Children are taught to deal with single sounds, not chunks of sounds. So, no blends (str, pl, nt) or word familes (at, op, an) are taught. The only method of decoding that a beginning reader needs to be taught is to blend sound by sound. As children progress, they will be taught about base words, prefixes and suffixes as well as word origins and spelling patterns. All of this will support their reading, but to start off with, it’s sounding out that we need to teach.

4.Instructional reading materials only contain sounds and high frequency words that the child knows.  Decodable readers are used to avoid children guessing. Naturally, we want children to have access to a range of wonderful, more complex books, but we are not expecting them to read these on their own straight away.  

5.There is no sight word program.  High frequency words are taught in such a way that children learn to understand words, not memorise them. The evidence is clear that we do not process words as whole units, but rather sound by sound. Once children are taught the alphabetic code well, there are few words that fit into the category of ‘irregular, high frequency’. 97% of words can be decoded once you have the knowledge.


The inclusions above relate strongly to the teaching of phonics. Of course, there are other components of reading instruction that include fluency, vocabulary development, comprehension and phonological and phonemic awareness.  However, there seems to be such confusion about what effective phonics teaching actually is, that I felt it necessary to focus on it today.  So, here we go!

In preparing to write this post I used a few different search terms including “Teaching Reading”,  “Phonics”, “Reading Instruction” and “Learning to Read”.  Regardless of what I searched for, there were a few common and consistent types of pins that came through.  Let’s start with the worst pin of them all.


Wrong, Wrong, Wrong


This message is just plain irresponsible. A small percentage of children will seem to just ‘pick up’ reading, but the vast majority require systematic, explicit instruction to develop a high level of reading proficiency.  The fact is that learning to read is NOT as ‘instinctual as learning to talk’.  Pins like this spread damaging and false messages about reading instruction.  If you see one like it, look away! Look AWAY!


So Many Pins About Word Families and Blends!

As stated above, we should only be teaching children to decode one sound at a time. Blends (consonant clusters st, pl, nt) should not be taught as whole units.  Teaching children to read lists of word families in the hope that learning the unit ‘at’ will make it easier for children to develop fluency  (cat, hat, rat, mat) also falls into this category. There are about 30 consonant clusters (blends) in English and up to 80 different common word families. If you have an in-depth look at word families there can be literally 1000s of them to learn.  Systematic Synthetic Phonics teaches the 44 sounds of English and how they are represented (in approximately 150 different ways).  Teaching word families and blends means that children will need to learn an additional 110+ separate pieces of information in order to read effectively.  Why almost double what children need to learn? For children with potential reading difficulties, this makes learning to read even harder. It is much better to teach children to read all through a word, processing sound by sound. I have attached some useful resources around this at the end of this post.


The pin below provides a great little activity to practice reading simple words.

Remember to ensure that the children really do know all of the sounds in the game AND can blend on their own before asking them to do something like this.


And for students ready to move on to the more complex code, this one would be useful.


Resources that masquerade as ‘phonics’.

It seems that there is a bit of confusion about what 'phonics' teaching actually is. This most certainly, is not it. At no point is cutting up sentences and putting them back together phonics instruction. Nor is it a worthwhile activity for beginning readers to be doing. This kind of thing is whole language instruction at its worst and has no place in an evidence-based program. (I feel rather strongly about this one…)


The pin below shows a ‘phonics mat’.  I call it an exercise in guessing. You may, very loosely, describe it as comprehension work, but the child would need to the get to the third sentence before they have a clue what that first word would be. They would need quite a high degree of reading proficiency to the complete it, by which time it would be a redundant task. I also question the wisdom of ‘busy work’ in rotations.  Unless an adult was sitting with the child, I highly doubt that the activity would be done with any accuracy.  Also, this is a word family activity which means that it’s on the list of ineffective strategies for reading instruction.



Busy Work That Doesn't Teach Anything

Some activities look good, but the question to be asked is, “What is the child actually getting out of this?”  If a child is not thinking, they are not learning.


I predict that any young child asked to do this independently would not actually read the word, sound it out and recreate it (without copying) using the pegs.  At best, this activity is a copying and matching exercise. More likely, Little Jimmy and Joanie end up with the pegs on the end of their fingers, acting like peg monsters.

As far as peg activities goes, the following two pins are much better.  One requires the child to decode the word and select the appropriate picture. The other, to think about the spelling choices in the word. A word of caution. Activities such as these should only ever be given when you can be confident that the child is proficient in these skills, particularly if they are intended to be an independent task. Before assigning activities such as these reflect on how the child will know if they have made an error? Who will provide support and feedback if they need it?


Below are two examples of CVC puzzles. The one on the right provides a picture for the child to match up. What are the chances that the child is actually going to read the sounds and blend them? I’m guessing none. And, no, incidental exposure to these words will not support the child’s reading.  Instruction needs to be explicit and teacher lead. This puzzle on the left is a much better option. Keep in mind the same reflection question about who will provide correction and support, these puzzles actually require the child to use their reading skills to solve them.

Here is another example of a ‘don’t think, just copy’ activity. We have visions of children standing blissfully at the white board ‘learning their words’. This falls into the category of a ‘goldfish’ task.  That is, you could have a child sit in front of a gold fish bowl for a while and they would come away with the same level of learning. It would be much better to just have the pictures and require the children to segment and create the word using the magnetic letters.



Readers

There are quite a few pins claiming access to ‘phonics readers’. The point of decodable readers is to provide a controlled level of spelling choices that the child needs to decode. The texts below do focus on the sound that is being taught (and word families - tsk, tsk, tsk) , but I have doubts about whether a teacher would be able to say with any certainty that the child knows ALL of the other sounds and high frequency words contained in the passages. This is really important as children tend to resort to guessing (or give up altogether) when they are asked to read using sound and high frequency words they haven't learned yet.




The above book may be ok, but please ensure that readers are cumulative in nature (they add on to what the child already knows).  Here is a link to my previous post about how to use decodable readers for different students.  


This one may look nice and simple, bit it is really sight words and word family instruction in disguise.


Global shapes and Sight Words

The idea of learning words according to their global shapes or as sight words has been debunked by some serious research.  Sight word programs are VERY hard for most schools to let go of.  However, they are based on a false theory of how we develop automatic word recognition and really need to go.



Use the link below to learn how to teach high frequency words without memorisation.

 

Tasks that are way too complicated

This task is an example of something that sounds good to our adult ears, but really is way too complicated for a little person. Presuming that the child could segment the words on their own, there are three separate steps that they need to navigate for each picture as well as keeping track of all of those little bits of paper BEFORE they can solve the word at the end. This activity may be OK for a very small group or one on one activity with an adult, but I would never give this to an average  beginning reader and expect them to do it on their own.



Other useful pins on Pinterest

This free phonological awareness skills checklist. Phonological and phonemic skills are the biggest predictor of reading success or failure and are all too neglected.  Great find!


Teaching children about syllable types can really help make spelling transparent. I’d recommend that you engage in some professional learning before teaching this one.


When searching for resources to use in your classroom, go to the page of a reputable practitioner. You still need to critically evaluate resources, but you will know that what you find is much more likely to be valuable.



Regardless of where you get your resources from, be sure that you know why you are using them and exactly what learning will result from the time children spend on them.  Resources from Pinterest can be really useful in the classroom, just be sure to provide the right level of support and select carefully! Happy Pinning!


Want to learn more about using activities and 'centres' in your classroom?  Watch my clip below

Looking for ready-made resources to help you implement structured literacy in your classroom?  Read more about the Resource Room here. 
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11 comments

Jasmine
 

Fantastic information for teachers who are weeding out the busy work from the evidence. What a great blog this is for all teachers and leaders in education.
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Natalie Campbell
 

Fabulous blog, which I will be sharing on the 17th Jan with a workshop attended by approx 100 new grads going our into WA Kindy and Pre Primary classrooms. #ReadingRevolution. I am really concerned about the choice of ‘activities’ (learning experiences might be too loose a term) that pass the time of early literacy learners. Teachers spending loads of time searching for and laminating and using ineffective, picture-perfect resources. Thx for all the links to the FREE QUALITY resources too! But…I was concerned by the content of the so called ‘phonics reader’ – the rod going in and out…that sentence took a few rereads until I got the intended meaning!! Big fan of your blog. I am promoting a Wait B4 U Laminate and Wait B4 U Rotate movement in WA. Which is code for: choose purposeful, effective, evidence based teaching/learning experiences that are tied to concise learning intentions.
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jocelynseamer0721
 

Thank you Natalie. I absolutely love the Goldfish analogy and encourage our school to be a goldfish free zone. Rotations can be problematic for a number of reasons. Took me a minute with that phonics reader as well! 😆 All the best for your workshop. Great that grads get strong information from the start.
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Kristen B Koeller
 

This LITERALLY contains all my favorite links and the message (much better said) I’ve been sharing with Teachers for years! Thank you for the jam-packed post!
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jocelynseamer0721
 

Hi Kristen. I'm glad the message is resonating with others so well. My aim with the blog is to show teachers what evidence based teaching looks like in their classrooms. After all, once we wade through the theory, it's what we all really want to know.
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Amy Breon
 

Thank you for addressing this! The internet is a wonderful tool, but we need to be savvy consumers. These tools need to be carefully vetted for quality rather than cuteness. Every second of literacy instruction counts!
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jocelynseamer0721
 

I couldn't agree more. Some things have been so ingrained as standard practice and are very hard to let go of (like sight word programs) despite the evidence. So glad that you enjoyed the post.
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A Review of Online Teaching Resources – Teachers Pay Teachers – The No-Nonsense Educator
 

[…] In my last post I examined the effectiveness of the website Pinterest as a source of teaching materials for phonics and reading. You can read this post here… […]
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Ellen Barr
 



I'm confused about the cut up sentence activity. Every week I do a unjumbled sentences task. The sentence is decodable with our focus sound of the week in it. Children unjumble it, copy it and draw a picture to match. I teach Foundation, so it's more of a learning about sentence structure task with a bit of comprehension. Is this OK? Or is this the kind of task you said was 'busy work'?

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Beatrice
 

Can't stop laughing at your  term "goldfish  activity" just imagining  setting up an independent learning station where the group just sits and looks at the goldfish tank for  10 minutes. Too funny!

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kim davis
 

GREAT title which really encapsulates it all. Many teachers would not understand these distinctions. Alss I cant stop laughing at the peg monsters peg activity. Thankyou Jocelyn!

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