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Diane McGuinness

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Diane McGuinness (February 20, 1933 – May 13, 2022) was an American cognitive psychologist who wrote extensively on sex differences, education, learning disabilities, and early reading instruction.[1]

McGuinness was born in 1933, in Pasadena, California. She attended Occidental College and received a B.A. in 1954. In the late 1960s she worked as a secondary school music teacher in the U.K. In the early seventies she received a Bachelor of Science at Birkbeck College (with first class honours, 1971), and a PhD in cognitive psychology at University College London in 1974.

Over the course of a long academic career, she taught at many institutions, including UC Santa Cruz, Stanford University, and the University of South Florida. Prior to her death in May of 2022, she was Emeritus Professor of Psychology at the University of South Florida.

McGuinness published over 100 papers, chapters, and books on a number of subjects in the field of psychology.

McGuinness was an outspoken critic of whole language instruction but also of phonics as it is traditionally taught in the United States. She promoted an approach to early reading instruction known as synthetic phonics or linguistic phonics, in which the starting point for instruction is the 40 or so phonemes of English.[2] In synthetic phonics instruction, each sound (or phoneme) is introduced initially with a single "basic code" spelling, which is usually the most common spelling for that sound. For example, the /f/ sound might be introduced with the 'f' spelling (or grapheme). Additional "spelling alternatives" for this sound -- e.g., 'ff' as in stuff, 'ph' as in graph, 'gh' as in rough -- will generally be introduced later. In synthetic phonics, students are taught to read by blending all of the sounds in the word, and the focus is on single sounds, not onsets and rimes or other multi-sound units. Whole-word recognition and "sight word" instruction are generally discouraged, as are multi-cuing strategies and contextual guessing. Students are encouraged to read by blending sounds and to spell with their basic-code spellings while they are learning spelling alternatives. Generally, a heavy emphasis is placed on showing the students mostly words they can read with their current code knowledge -- that is, using materials that are "decodable" in relation to what has been taught previously.

McGuinness's book Why Our Children Can't Read contains a comprehensive analysis of the English writing system, its sounds and spellings. This has been useful for synthetic phonics instructors teaching English vowel sounds, because many English vowels can be spelled several different ways. For example, the /ee/ sound can be spelled 'ee' as in see, 'ea' as in sea, 'y' as in funny, e as in me, 'ie' as in cookie, 'i' as in ski, 'ey' as in key, etc. McGuinness popularized the term "spelling alternatives" to describe the various ways of writing a sound. She also introduced the term "code overlap" to describe a spelling (or grapheme) that can stand for more than one sound (or phoneme). For example, the spelling 'ow' can stand for the /ou/ sound as in the word now, or for the /oe/ sound as in the word snow.

McGuinness's views on reading instruction have been influential (but also controversial) in the UK, and have led to the development of a number of synthetic phonics programs. Two established programs that use a generally synthetic phonics approach of the sort advocated by McGuinness are Jolly Phonics (originally developed in Australia) and SRS (Sound Reading System). There are certainly others. Historically, the Reading Reform Foundation of the UK (https://rrf.org.uk/) has been a major proponent of synthetic phonics and the ideas of McGuinness.

In the United States, synthetic phonics is not nearly as well known. However, there are a few synthetic phonics programs. One is Phono-Grafix, a program of synthetic phonics instruction that was developed by McGuinness's daughter-in-law, Carmen McGuinness and has been used for many years in schools and clinics. Another program that features synthetic phonics instruction is the Core Knowledge Language Arts Program.

McGuinness stirred up controversy with her views on dyslexia and teaching letter names. She argued that dyslexia is not a biological condition but a socially created problem that results from a complex spelling code combined with ineffective teaching methods. She argued against teaching the letter names in the early phases of reading instruction on the grounds that letter names can confuse students. What is really important, McGuinness maintained, is that students be taught the sound values and the relationships that obtain between sounds and letters.

McGuinness died on May 13, 2022, at the age of 89.[3]

Written works

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References

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  1. ^ "MIT Press". Archived from the original on 2011-06-04. Retrieved 2010-02-22.
  2. ^ New York Times, October 12, 1997
  3. ^ "Diane McGuinness - Sound Reading System - Oxford". Sound Reading System. Retrieved 2024-10-27.
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  • A more detailed account of her career can be found here. [2]
  • Notice of her death and a discussion of some of her ideas regarding reading instructuon can be found on this website: [3] Sound Reading Systen
  • A synopsis of McGuinness' views on reading instruction can be found in the following article: A Prototype for Teaching the English Alphabet Code Reading Reform Foundation Newsletter (49)

Scholarly reviews of McGuinness' recent books: