The tin of words is a symbol of the innate conservatism of the infant teacher. When I was training as a teacher I studied plenty of different methods of teaching reading, but no one told me that I would need to start collecting two-ounce tobacco tins. I'm not suggesting that the 'inventor' of the Look and Say method, the late Fred Schonell , specified an old tobacco tin for the transportation of words to and from home, but when I started teaching they were to be found in most infant classrooms. Children in the real world learnt to read using a reading scheme and a tin of words. The system worked like this: using a graded scheme like Sheila McCullough's ' 1, 2, 3 and Away' featuring Roger Red-hat, Jennifer Yellow-hat et al teachers simply gave the children the new words from the next book to learn as flash cards at home. Next day, all being well, the child returned to school, read the book to the teacher, and took the new one away with a few more word...
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