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Adam's avatar

Somehow I'm surprised that "rhetoric" wasn't referenced in this article. The classic Trivium accounts for "oracy" as part of a balanced education.

As a related tangent, though, *completely apart from this article*, folks refuse to make historical cases these days. The Science of Reading folks won't address centuries of phonics from hornbooks to primers to readers. Nope. We gotta pretend phonics is new. Which is how the whole word folks call phonics a fad. Neither apparently knows or cares about the humble books which forged literacy from the Reformation through the early twentieth century.

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C Caton's avatar

“Virtually all children learn (to talk) without explicit instruction” isn’t accurate. Seven percent of children have developmental language disorder (DLD) - aka receptive/expressive language disorder - and it significantly affects their skill development in reading and writing (as well as speaking and listening).

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