Faulty Damper, I haven't been able to respond to your reply because of a huge work load that came up. About whole language approach. It is hard to tell whether your professor still taught reading at the primary grade after moving on to college teaching of teaching, how long she taught in the primary grade, and in what manner she implemented "whole language". I also found that first started to understand what my profs were on about when got into the field myself, and sometimes I'm still "getting it".
The idea that phonics is the way to teach instead of whatever whole language approach may mean, is wrong. Teaching the skill of reading has many sides. I have taught reading at the entry level in the primary grades, at which point I also consulted specialists for students with problems on top of having learning disability and language training. I then worked one-on-one privately, explored alternate education strategies, in particular the Waldorf method. I have also worked with other languages, both for learning and for teaching, and looked at reading from that angle.
Phonics is one aspect of reading. You learn to encode and decode sounds: cat, hat, sang vs. kit, hit, sing, song. Useless for though, through, thought, bough, tough. In the latter you recognize "ough" as a group (like seeing a CEG chord, or seeing any triad which you recognize as a chord before going further). Additionally in reading:
- being read to as a preschooler as well as building a vocabulary makes a difference
- reading out loud often
- working with the encoding process (writing)
- matters of rhythm, tracking
While students need to understand the letters of the alphabet and common patterns such as that "When two vowels go a-walking / The first one goes a-talking" for long vowels, there is more to it than that. Any approach that tries to be the only singular approach will fail. "Whole language", when it is a free-for-all where you try to "express yourself" by inventing your own spelling, is dumb. But when the idea is used creatively and flexibly to get at all sides of language learning, as part of what you do, it is fantastic. At teachers college we get tools: rough ideas. They are not meant to be applied in cookbook fashion.
Ok - to my chords which you likened to how you understand whole language approach. When I began recognizing chords as a unit, it was not a hit and miss type of thing. I had played for a while, deciphering the chords, and after a while perceived patterns. After a while you no longer go "k... a..... t, ka... ka.... t,, cat". You see "cat" as one unit instantly. CEG in closed position can be recognized instantly as the major chord that starts on C. It has a distinct appearance.
You also anticipate and associate. If it is in C major, and there is a chord with no accidentals in closed position looking like a snowman with the bottom note on C, then you know it must be C and that it must be major. In language reading we also anticipate.
I think that actual problem comes if music is taught in a way of shortcuts. If we are to feel our way in, play lots of music by following a recording while dancing along the score, don't learn our notes and chords, do tricks like "only intervals" --- then it is a problem. If those kinds of tricks are being taught as a first and only way to get at reading music, then I agree that it resembles the shallow caricature of "whole language approach" that cropped up here and there.