After two decades researching the best methods for
teaching reading, BYU professor Grant Von Harrison became a noted
authority on the subject.
During the past year he had added a new
conclusion to his list:
"My analysis of the Book of Mormon convinced me
beyond a shadow of a doubt that it was intended to be a text for learning
to read. It provides children with extensive practice with every critical
subskill of reading. More so than other books and materials. To me, it
can't be by chance."Then he added,
"I've learned more about
reading instruction from my analysis of the Book of Mormon during this
time than through 20 years of research of reading in
general."His research involving using the Book of Mormon to
teach reading was prompted by studying the scriptures. He was reading
about Adam and his family in the book of Moses in the Pearl of Great
Price:
And a book of remembrance was kept, in the which was recorded,
in the language of Adam, for it was given unto as many as called upon God
to write by the spirit of inspiration. And by them their children were
taught to read and write, having a language which was pure and
undefiled. (Moses 6:5,6)
To Brother Harrison, that meant the
children in Adam's day were taught to read using the scriptures. Thinking
the same practice could be beneficial today, he launched his evaluation of
the Book of Mormon.
Through computer technology, he was able to
break the Book of Mormon down in several different ways for analysis. Then
he applied what he discovered to that which he already knew about the
teaching of reading.
One thing the computer analysis revealed was
that of the approximately 5600 words in the Book of Mormon, 1786 are
encountered only once and another 800 words are encountered only twice.
Brother Harrison said that ensures children can get phonetic reading
practice with nearly half the words not repeated often enough to be
memorized.
Learning to read consists of learning several
sub-skills, according to Brother Harrison, and the Book of Mormon provides
extensive practice with those sub-skills. He pointed out some of those
sub-skills and how the Book of Mormon helps them be taught.
There
are irregular words, words that are difficult to learn to pronounce
phonetically and have obscure meanings such as the, that, there and was.
There are about 80 of them, and children must be able to read them as
spontaneously as they read their own names. Brother Harrison said,
the
only way to do that is through frequency of encounter. Doing a computer
count on the Book of Mormon, I found those words are encountered hundreds
and hundreds of times. The Lord ensures the words rise to a level of
automaticity. Except for the common irregular words, only
about 10 percent of the words in the Book of Mormon are phonetically
irregular. That means there are plenty of words that provide practice
blending letter sounds to pronounce words phonetically.
Another
subskill of reading is learning the -ph- sound.
It is the most peculiar
sound in the English language, tied to two letters but not associated with
the letters' sounds in isolation. It is not only used in prophet but also
in many names.Practice with words that involve the silent e,
suffixes and syllabication are also encountered much more frequently in
the Book of Mormon than in most children's books, Brother Harrison
said.
When I went to the Book of Mormon, I found that the Lord
addressed everything except two things that I had discovered about
reading, and did it better.The two things not addressed in the
Book of Mormon are possessives and contractions. They are unique to modern
English, he pointed out.
But again, the Lord does so well teaching
reading that contractions and possessives aren't a problem for
children.Brother Harrison believes children from families that
read together are generally better readers at a younger age, but to get
the most benefit from the teaching attributes of the Book of Mormon,
children should also be tutored by their parents. He pointed out that
teachers in a group setting have little opportunity to work with
individual students on their specific problems.
Through
systematically tutoring a child from the time he or she is old enough to
learn to read, the child should be able to read the Book of Mormon
independently by age 8, he said. An added benefit of tutoring with the
Book of Mormon is the opportunity it gives the parent to teach principles
of the gospel and interject feelings about the book.
He also
stated,
If parents would get involved with children at a young age, the
association alone would be worth it. If children can read
the Book of Mormon fluently, they'll never have difficulty reading in the
context of school or the work place.It is also obvious,
according to Brother Harrison, that if the Book of Mormon is excellent for
teaching children to read, it is also an excellent resource for anyone at
any age who has difficulty reading.
The Book to tutor children from
ages 6-12 is called Teaching Your Children To Read Using the Book of
Mormon. It was published by the author and is a large 8 1/2 by 11 spiral
bound book. Copyright is 1994. The book is available from the BYU
bookstore.
from the website
http://www.objectlessons.us/vonharrison.htm