Guest Post: Learning to Read, American-Style
Learning to Read, American Style
by Jaime Jones
My daughter brought home a list of "Instant Words" from her Kindergarten teacher yesterday. An unassuming four pages of the 500 most common words in English, ranked in frequency order. You know: "the, of, and, to, in, is, that" and so on. Innocent enough, right? Not quite. I read throug the first 100 words, thinking proudly about how well my Kindergartener can read. Then the word "oil" popped out at me.
Oil: word number 88, among other benign words like "we, your, can, said, day, now, find, make" and such. It sticks out like a sore thumb. I've asked three other people to look at the list and pick out the word that doesn't belong and they all spotted it, too. These first hundred words make up about half of all printed material. But I can't think of one book I've read to my kids that has the word "oil" in it, so think about how frequently it must be printed in newspapers and adults' books. Is this crazy to anyone else?
Let's take a closer look at the rest of the list, shall we?
The word "boy" is number 141, "girl" is way down at 288.
"No" made the top 100, coming in at 77, but you don't find "yes" until the bottom of the fourth page at number 471, four words before "government."
Both "man" (124) and "men" (168) are there, but neither "woman" nor "women" made the top 500 at all.
"Take" (104) comes before "give" (114), but at least these two are close.
Thankfully, though, "tree" (215) comes before "building" (431). "Make" and "made" are both in the top 100, and "buy" isn't on the list. "Scientists" (438) is the only profession on the list, "Indian" (283) is the only nationality, and "English" (402) is the only language.
Public school is a system, it's true, but thankfully parenting isn't. Nothing excites me more than the potential of my girls. They were born into a crowded land, and will have to carry forward the legacy of our complicated history. But their reality is brand new, and that brings me the responsibility -- the opportunity -- to help them see what's most important in life. Words that aren't in the top 500, like compassion, respect, understanding, peace, and love.
And (ahem) women.
by Jaime Jones
My daughter brought home a list of "Instant Words" from her Kindergarten teacher yesterday. An unassuming four pages of the 500 most common words in English, ranked in frequency order. You know: "the, of, and, to, in, is, that" and so on. Innocent enough, right? Not quite. I read throug the first 100 words, thinking proudly about how well my Kindergartener can read. Then the word "oil" popped out at me.
Oil: word number 88, among other benign words like "we, your, can, said, day, now, find, make" and such. It sticks out like a sore thumb. I've asked three other people to look at the list and pick out the word that doesn't belong and they all spotted it, too. These first hundred words make up about half of all printed material. But I can't think of one book I've read to my kids that has the word "oil" in it, so think about how frequently it must be printed in newspapers and adults' books. Is this crazy to anyone else?
Let's take a closer look at the rest of the list, shall we?
The word "boy" is number 141, "girl" is way down at 288.
"No" made the top 100, coming in at 77, but you don't find "yes" until the bottom of the fourth page at number 471, four words before "government."
Both "man" (124) and "men" (168) are there, but neither "woman" nor "women" made the top 500 at all.
"Take" (104) comes before "give" (114), but at least these two are close.
Thankfully, though, "tree" (215) comes before "building" (431). "Make" and "made" are both in the top 100, and "buy" isn't on the list. "Scientists" (438) is the only profession on the list, "Indian" (283) is the only nationality, and "English" (402) is the only language.
Public school is a system, it's true, but thankfully parenting isn't. Nothing excites me more than the potential of my girls. They were born into a crowded land, and will have to carry forward the legacy of our complicated history. But their reality is brand new, and that brings me the responsibility -- the opportunity -- to help them see what's most important in life. Words that aren't in the top 500, like compassion, respect, understanding, peace, and love.
And (ahem) women.
Jaime Jones is a preschool teacher with a quirky knack for memorizing pop songs she heard once on the radio. She spends her free-time singing folksy tunes with people she loves, keeping her kids stylish with unconventional haircuts and handmade clothes, and making the best darn tortilla soup in the galaxy. She lives with her husband and two daughters in the rugged hills of northern California.
Learning to Read, American Style was written in 2009.
Learning to Read, American Style was written in 2009.
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