The explanations already fall apart with phonetic words being written as they are pronounced. There are too many shifts in pronunciation and I don't mean dialects or regionalism. There is no such thing as "white English". Even that varies in North America, and pronunciation continues to shift.
There is such a thing as “white English”, as long as you don’t ask a white person what that means. White people generally don’t know they speak white (as they usually don’t experience what is known as the contrast effect.) In contrast, someone speaking English with a vernacular or foreign accent is aware of the difference because it sounds different from what they speak.
The argument about phonetically written words is not correct as virtually all books, journals, subtitles, etc. are written in English. There is no example of fonetikly ritten buks in this manner. Virtually all literature is written in standard English, which is the material students use as practice for reading.
‘f’ and “ph” have the same sounds, and are taught as such. Through use of genuine reading material, students will know how to spell phone as aposed (opposed) to fone.
But the biggest thing for me is the idea that there is an either or. We use all approaches, and part of one is also embedded in the other.
The following are quotes from
What Education Schools Aren’t Teaching about Reading and What Elementary Teachers Aren’t Learning.“The accumulated scientific findings of nearly 60 years of research gained the nation’s attention with the release of a number of significant reviews and compendia of the research beginning in 1990, but most notably the National Reading Panel report in 2000. The findings call for explicit, systematic teaching of phonemic awareness and phonics, guided oral reading to improve fluency, direct and indirect vocabulary building, and exposure to a variety of reading comprehension strategies.”
“By the 1980s, the scientific evidence was strong enough to debunk many of the assumptions underpinning whole language but also to challenge the ascendancy of phonics. Persuading school boards, educators, and textbook publishers to adopt the full set of scientific findings—many of whom had strong allegiances to either phonics or whole language, but whole language in particular—would prove to be inordinately difficult... The political tide did appear to turn when test scores in school districts using whole language curricula plummeted.“
It is very true, IMO, that teachers are not scientifically literate. This severe lack of knowledge and understanding of how science is conducted allows the perpetuation of naive assumptions and makes it easier, for the teacher, to teach the way they were taught and assert that “it worked for me and look how I turned out” or to adopt scientific evidence to pre-existing ideas. To this day, virtually all teachers coming out of a teacher preparation program that uses “evidence-based research” think using the multi-sensory, multiple modality approach is correct when the evidence contradicts this. This is a direct consequence of the faulty interpretation of the scientific evidence, both by teachers and by the same researchers who conducted the experiments. But also, the lack of understanding of the scientific process by teachers has the consequence that they dismiss scientific evidence and continue to use preexisting teaching practices.
My own opinion about the whole language vs. phonics approach is this: both work. However, one takes way too much time than is available in a given school year and usually requires students to be a native speaker in the language that it is taught. If the purpose of a teacher is to save time and have self-sufficient students, then the choice is very obvious.
Walsh, Kate, Deborah Glasser, and Danielle Dunne Wilcox.
What Education Schools Aren’t Teaching about Reading and What Elementary Teachers Aren’t Learning. National Council On Teacher Quality, May 2006.
https://www.nctq.org/nctq/images/nctq_reading_study_app.pdf