Volume 31, Number 14 · September 27, 1984

Flunking the Schools

By Rudolf Flesch

In response to The Schools Flunk Out* (April 12, 1984)

To the Editors:

Andrew Hacker's review of eight books and reports on education [NYR, April 12] attributes the decline of SAT scores and the rising dropout rate to the fact that "America is not a classless society" and good students come from "middle-class households [that] share enough of the academic culture so that they adapt relatively easily to what is required in the classroom."

I disagree. Hacker quotes a principal who says, correctly, that many of our high school students "can hardly read and write." This is not something for which parents and homes should be blamed. Rather, it is due to the fact that our elementary schools have fallen down on the job. Some fifty years ago, with great fanfare, they switched from the alphabet and phonics to the wholly unscientific "look-and-say"—that is, word-guessing—method of teaching reading. By doing so, they destroyed the foundation of all future learning.

This may seem like a simplistic explanation of a vast and complex phenomenon, but it is based on mountains of solid scientific evidence.

Rudolf Flesch

Dobbs Ferry, New York


 email icon Email to a friend



Search the Review
Advanced search