48.Name
Sounds, Not Things: The Underground HIstory of American Education by John
Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Name
Sounds, Not Things
So
how was the murder of American reading ability pulled off? I'll tell you in a
second, but come back first to classical
Greece where the stupendous invention of the alphabet by Phoenicians was initially understood. The
Phoenicians had an alphabetic language used
to keep accounts, but the Greeks
were the first to
guess correctly that revolutionary power
could be unleashed by transcending mere lists, using written language
for the permanent storage of analysis,
exhortation, visions, and other things. After a period of experiment the Greeks came up with a series of letters
to represent sounds of their language. Like the
Phoenicians, they recognized the value of naming each letter in a way
distinct from its sound value — as every
human being has a name distinct from his or her personality, as numbers have names for reference.
Naming sounds rather than things was the
breakthrough! While the number of things to
be pictured is impossibly large, the number of sounds is strictly
limited. In English, for example, most
people recognize only forty- four. 1
The problem, which American families once largely solved for themselves,
is this: in English, a Latin alphabet
has been imposed on a Germanic language with multiple non- Germanic borrowings, and it doesn't quite
fit. Our 44 sounds are spelled 400+ different
ways. That sounds horrible, but in reality in the hands of even a
mediocre teacher, it's only annoying; in
the hands of a good one, a thrilling challenge. Actually, 85 percent of the vast word stock of English can be read
with knowledge of only 70 of the phonograms.
A large number of the remaining irregularities seldom occur and can be
remastered on an as-needed basis.
Meanwhile a whole armory of mnemonic tricks like "If a 'c' I chance
to spy, place the 'e' before the
'i'" exists to get new readers over the common humps. Inexpensive dictionaries, spell-check
typewriters, computers, and other technology are readily available these days to silently
coach the fearful, but in my experience, that "fear" is neither warranted nor natural. Instead, it
is engendered. Call it good business practice. Also, communicating abstractions in picture
language is a subtlety requiring more time
and training to master than is available for most of us. Greeks now
could organize ambitious concepts
abstractly in written language, communicating accurately with each other over space and time much more readily
than their competitors.
According to Mitford Mathews: 2 The secret of their phenomenal advance was
in their conception of the nature of a word.
They reasoned that words were sounds or combinations of ascertainable
sounds, and they held inexorably to the
basic proposition that writing, properly executed, was a guide to sound, reading. A number of other good
treatments are available for the newcomer.
Learning sound-sight correspondences comes
first in an alphabetic language.
Competence with the entire package of sounds corresponding to alphabet
symbols comes quickly. After that
anything can be read and its meaning inquired after. The substantial speaking vocabulary kids bring to school (6,000
— 10,000 words) can now be read at once,
and understood.
When the Romans got the alphabet through
the Etruscans they lost the old letter names so
they invented new ones making them closer to the letter sounds. That was
a significant mistake which causes
confusion in novice readers even today. Through conquest the Latin alphabet spread to the languages of
Europe; Rome's later mutation into the
Universal Christian Church caused Latin, the language of church liturgy,
to flow into every nook and cranny of
the former empire.
The Latin alphabet was applied to the
English language by Christian missionaries in the seventh century. While it fused with spoken
English this was far from a perfect fit. There
were no single letters to stand for certain sounds. Scribes had to
scramble to combine letters to
approximate sounds that had no companion letter. This matching process was complicated over centuries by repeated
borrowings from other languages and by certain
massive sound shifts which still occupy scholars in trying to
explain.
Before the spread of printing in the
sixteenth century, not being able to read wasn't much of a big deal. There wasn't much to read. The
principal volume available was the Bible,
from which appropriate bits were read aloud by religious authorities
during worship and on ceremonial
occasions. Available texts were in Latin or Greek, but persistent attempts to provide translations was a practice
thought to contain much potential for schism. An official English Bible, the Authorized King
James Version, appeared in 1611, preempting
all competitors in a bold stroke which changed popular destiny.
Instantly, the Bible became a universal
textbook, offering insights both delicate and
powerful, a vibrant cast of characters, brilliant verbal pyrotechnics
and more to the humblest rascal who
could read. Talk about a revolutionary awakening for ordinary people! The Bible was it, thanks to the
dazzling range of models it provided in the areas of exegesis, drama, politics, psychology,
characterization, plus the formidable reading
skills it took to grapple with the Bible. A little more than three
decades after this translation, the
English king was deposed and beheaded. The connection was direct. Nothing would ever be the same again because
too many good readers had acquired the
proclivity of thinking for themselves.
The
magnificent enlargement of imagination and voice that the Bible's
exceptional catalogue of language and
ideas made available awakened in ordinary people a powerful desire to read in order to read the Holy Book
without a priest's mediation. Strenuous
efforts were made to discourage this, but the Puritan Revolution and
Cromwell's interregnum sent literacy
surging. Nowhere was it so accelerated as in the British colonies in North America, a place already
far removed from the royal voice.
Printing technology emerged. Like the
computer in our own day, it was quickly
incorporated into every corner of daily life. But there were still
frequent jailings, whippings, and
confiscations for seditious reading as people of substance came to realize how dangerous literacy could be.
Reading offered many delights. Cravings to
satisfy curiosity about this Shakespeare
fellow or to dabble in the musings of Lord Bacon or John Locke were now
not difficult to satisfy. Spelling and
layout were made consistent. Before long, prices of books dropped. All this activity intensified pressure on
illiterate individuals to become literate. The net result of printing (and Protestantism, which
urged communicants to go directly to the
Word, eliminating the priestly middleman), stimulated the spread of
roving teachers and small proprietary
and church schools. A profession arose to satisfy demand for a popular way to understand what uses to make of books,
and from this a demand to understand
many things.
5.
'The "problem" with English phonics has been wildly exaggerated,
sometimes by sincere people but most
often by those who make a living as guides through the supposed perils
of learning to read. These latter
constitute a vast commercial empire with linkages among state education
departments, foundations, publishers,
authors of school readers, press, magazines, education journals, university
departments of education, professional
organizations, teachers, reading specialists, local administrators, local
school boards, various politicians who
facilitate the process and the U.S. offices of education, defense and
labor. 2 Mitford Mathews, Teaching to
Read Historically Considered (1966). A brief, intelligent history of
reading A number of other good
treatments are available for the newcomer.
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