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Tag: Early Literacy

  • A quicker climb up the literacy mountain: Why rigor and efficiency matter in early reading

    Key points:

    In early literacy, the goal is simple but urgent: Help students become independent readers and writers. Every instructional decision we make either moves them closer to that goal or keeps them circling the mountain instead of climbing it. As literacy researcher Timothy Shanahan reminds us, “If a mountain is high, we should help children to climb that mountain. With appropriate supports and scaffolds it can be done.”

    As an early literacy coach specializing in pre-K to grade five, I work with teachers and districts to accelerate access so all students can become independent, empowered readers. I focus on the most efficient, research-supported strategies to help children learn to read with confidence.

    Unfortunately, many traditional literacy approaches treat third grade as the finish line for learning to read, leaving too many students stranded on the mountainside.

    The phonics code introduced in K-2 doesn’t disappear as texts become more complex. In fact, upper grade reading places even greater demands on decoding as vocabulary grows longer and more morphologically complex. While many teachers want to support students through this shift, they often lack the training, tools, and time needed to continue explicit instruction in word recognition.

    The danger of a slow rollout

    Time is of the essence. One longitudinal study found that first graders who are behind in reading have an 88 percent chance of still being behind in fourth grade. This pattern reflects what researchers call the Matthew Effect: Students who fall behind early tend to fall further behind over time unless instruction accelerates their progress.

    This is why students who are catching up still need regular opportunities to engage with grade-level text. Students need rigor paired with intentional scaffolding–not simplified reading assignments that limit access to the language, ideas, and vocabulary found in complex texts.

    There is a common belief that, after enough reading lessons, a switch will flip and reading will simply click. But learning to read is far more nuanced. While phonics instruction is typically organized across a K-2 scope and sequence, students who miss or only partially master early skills often carry those gaps forward. By third or fourth grade, these unresolved gaps can block access to grade-level text.

    A brain-based, research-aligned approach

    At any age, when students understand the logic behind the code, reading stops feeling random. They begin noticing patterns, decoding unfamiliar words, and approaching text with genuine confidence.

    English is a morphophonemic language, which means our spelling system represents both morphology (meaning) and phonology (sound). When instruction reflects this, everything changes for students. That’s why I advocate for teaching how sounds, spelling patterns, and meaning work together, rather than relying on rote memorization or delaying access to key phonics patterns. It’s also important to introduce morphology and etymology early, giving students access to the meaningful building blocks of complex words.

    Here’s what this brain-based approach looks like in practice. While working in a district implementing a systematic, research-aligned literacy framework, I began tutoring a student at the very end of second grade. He had little confidence in his reading ability and regularly said things like, “I’m a terrible reader.”

    To accelerate his literacy development, I focused on three priorities: identifying his precise gaps, closing them efficiently, and ensuring he could access grade-level text with support.

    To understand where he was struggling, the first step was administering a universal literacy screener, Acadience Reading. His results showed he was well below benchmark in oral reading fluency for his grade. 

    From there, I administered a phonics diagnostic to pinpoint his specific needs. I used the Intervention Placement Test from UFLI Foundations, which placed him at a lesson within the program’s scope and sequence and clarified exactly which skills still required explicit instruction. I then began targeted, systematic phonics instruction using UFLI Foundations.

    But assessment and phonics instruction alone weren’t enough. Decodable texts are essential, but they must be paired with supported access to grade-level text. Because this student was moving into third grade, I selected grade-level texts from ReadWorks around a topic he was interested in.

    To accelerate his progress beyond the limits of a traditional scope and sequence, I integrated Secret Stories–an ESSA Tier 1 supplemental phonics resource with an average effect size of 1.62 that helps students quickly learn and apply complex phonics patterns through brief, brain-based stories.

    I used Secret Stories within UFLI phonics lessons to teach tricky patterns, and outside of phonics instruction to unlock words in grade-level texts he was not “supposed” to be able to read yet. Because most Secret Stories take under 30 seconds to teach, they can be embedded anywhere in the day. For example, when the calendar shows the month of August, teachers might pause to review why AU makes the “aww” sound. Once learned, those explanations become tools kids can immediately apply during reading, writing, and content instruction. 

    To further prepare him for these grade-level texts, I pre-taught key vocabulary and explicitly introduced relevant morphemes–prefixes, suffixes and root words. I also used The Writing Revolution, a book with resources for teaching writing and sentence syntax, and Brainspring, a morphology resource my district had just started using for third grade and up to teach new prefixes, suffixes, and roots.

    Putting this set of literacy “mountain-climbing gear” in place took intentional effort, and I worried it might be too much. Instead, he leaned in. With the right supports and someone beside him, he embraced the challenge and began to see himself as a capable reader. The rigor didn’t overwhelm him. It gave him confidence.

    Achieving the peak of independence

    Many older students face the same struggles as the second-grader I supported. They never fully mastered the early phonics sequence, and those gaps accumulate over time. By the time they encounter texts filled with multisyllabic words, unfamiliar morphemes, dense syntax, and academic vocabulary, reading can feel overwhelming.

    But when those patterns are reintroduced through clear, brain-based explanations, older learners often catch on quickly. Words that once felt confusing begin to make sense. They experience the same “aha” moments as younger learners with an even deeper sense of relief and empowerment–and without feeling remediated. For students who felt stuck below grade level for years, this shift is transformative.

    Today, that same student, now halfway through third grade, is confidently reading grade-level text, with a renewed sense of competence and joy. In just eight months, his oral reading fluency moved from ‘well below benchmark’ to ‘at benchmark.’

    Each successful mountain climber is a reminder that the end goal of literacy instruction isn’t mastery of isolated skills like phonemic awareness or sight words. In isolation, these skills move students sideways or, as Shanahan describes, “walk students around the mountain rather than up it.” Instead, the goal is upward progress, toward independent reading and writing. Every instructional decision, assessment, program and resource we choose should point students efficiently up the mountain, helping them reach the peak with confidence and purpose.

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    Leah Ruesink, Early Literacy Coach

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  • IXL Approved by Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education as a State-Approved Supplemental Literacy Solution for Grades K-5

    IXL Approved by Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education as a State-Approved Supplemental Literacy Solution for Grades K-5

    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. /PRNewswire/ —  IXL, the award-winning personalized learning platform used by 16 million students, has been named a High Quality Evidence-Based Instructional Material for Early Literacy by the   Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE). Adding   IXL Language Arts to the list ensures that eligible local education agencies across the state can request reimbursement for purchasing the platform to enhance early literacy instruction. IXL is currently used by 20 percent of students in Missouri, accounting for more than 210,000 students. 

    Cover every concept with effective literacy instruction
    Literacy rates among the nation’s youngest learners remain below pre-pandemic levels, and limited instructional time and larger class sizes make it difficult for educators to boost achievement. To close knowledge gaps and support every student, IXL equips Missouri educators with its award-winning PK-5 ELA curriculum, which personalizes learning and is grounded in the Science of Reading methodology.

    IXL covers all the areas needed to teach language arts, containing more than 2,400 skills spanning reading comprehension, grammar, vocabulary and more. The platform’s curriculum for grades PK-2 is  designed according to research-based best practices for effective early literacy instruction and focuses on systematic, structured phonemic awareness and phonics instruction. It guides students from simple to complex skills, adapting to individual student needs and offering explicit instruction with real-time feedback. Schools can also leverage  IXL’s Learn to Read and  Reading Intervention skill plans that align perfectly to popular textbooks so educators can steadily and methodically narrow reading gaps.

    Build student confidence with embedded supports
    A wealth of instructional resources supports students and encourages them to self-remediate during independent or small-group practice. More than 2,800  video tutorials match one-to-one with each IXL skill, guiding learners through the building blocks of reading, writing and grammar. These videos make it easy to incorporate the Science of Reading’s methodology into instruction so children learn the relationships between written letters and spoken sounds. Additionally, students receive immediate corrective feedback after every missed question, enabling them to quickly understand their mistakes and progress.

    Get reliable data to meet reading goals
    Early elementary school years are crucial for building foundational skills that shape a child’s education. To support this development, teachers need insights to see exactly where learning gaps exist, targeted resources to close them and tools to help students tackle new challenges. Supported by years of validity research, the nationally-normed  IXL Diagnostic is a precise indicator of student achievement and a strong predictor of performance on standardized assessments. The adaptive assessment pinpoints each learner’s proficiency to the nearest tenth of a grade along the entire ELA spectrum, showing educators exactly what students know and what they can do to improve. It then generates personalized action plans that help students eliminate their trouble spots, and grow their reading and writing skills. Action plans link to specific language arts and reading skills, and give teachers a simple way to differentiate instruction and fill knowledge gaps.

    An award-winning platform backed by evidence
    Educators deserve the gold-standard of educational technology that is proven by research and data to enable the highest performance from every student. Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)  Tier 1 and Tier 2 research shows undisputed favorable outcomes for schools implementing IXL. Additionally, studies across 70,000 schools in 49 states show that  IXL leads to higher test scores, with schools scoring as much as 17 percentile points higher on language arts on state assessments.

    Recognized for its quality and rigor, IXL holds the Digital Promise Research-Based Design Product Certification and has twice been honored by the SIIA CODiE Awards as the Best Solution for Foundational (K-8) English Language Arts.

    About IXL
    Currently used by 16 million students and in 96 of the top 100 U.S. school districts, IXL is an all-inclusive educational platform that provides a comprehensive PK-12 curriculum and instructional resources, actionable analytics and a state-of-the-art assessment suite. Available in 57 languages, IXL’s end-to-end teaching and learning solution supports personalized instruction in math, English language arts, science, social studies and Spanish. With more than 150 billion questions asked and answered around the world, IXL is helping schools and parents successfully boost student achievement. The IXL Learning  family of products also includes  Rosetta StoneDictionary.comThesaurus.comTPTSpanishDictionary.cominglés.comFrenchDictionary.comWyzantVocabulary.comABCyaEducation.com and  Carson Dellosa Education. To learn more about IXL, visit  www.ixl.comfacebook.com/IXL and  x.com/IXLLearning.

    eSchool News Staff
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    ESchool News Staff

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  • The Science of Reading in a Nutshell

    The Science of Reading in a Nutshell

    4 actionable lessons teachers can use today

    By Allison Leedie, M.Ed,  partnerships manager at Khan Academy Kids and former teacher and literacy coach

    Planning time is limited, the copier is jammed, and a classroom observation is imminent. Sound familiar? Me too. 

    As a former teacher and literacy coach, I know that sometimes what is most helpful are actionable lessons and activities you can deploy right now with little preparation but tons of engagement. 

    Search no further! Below are four activities you can use today to support best practices in the science of reading, no matter what stage of literacy development your learners are engaged in

    Pre-Literacy

    For our very youngest students, actual reading and writing may be a ways off. Pre-literacy is the period of time before a child can read or write on their own. Children start developing pre-literacy skills as soon as they are born, and there is a body of research that shows a solid pre-literacy foundation will lead to long-term success both in and out of school. 

    Pre-literacy can include:

    • Narrative skills
    • Vocabulary development
    • Print Awareness
    • Print Motivation
    • Letter knowledge
    Use it today:

    This video of Reya talking about the parts of a book is an excellent example of how Khan Kids reinforces the pre-literacy skills your students are developing. You can show this video and then have students handle books to identify different print features mentioned in the video.

    Explore more:

    The Khan Academy Kids app has activities for children as young as 2 years old and includes many pre-literacy activities. In the Library, make sure you’ve set the dropdown menu to select Kindergarten or Pre-K. In the Videos tab, check out the Early Reading and Language collection. This will also give you models for pre-literacy skills to call upon during whole or small-group instruction.

    Phonics

    Phonics is the connection between letters and the sounds that they make. Phonics instruction covers many different skills and often takes years to master. It’s typical for a child to begin their phonics journey between the ages of 3 and 5 and keep working on these skills well into 3rd grade. During this process, students will learn:

    • The sounds each letter makes
    • How to identify and say the beginning, middle, and end sounds of words
    • How to identify and say short and long vowel sounds 
    • The sounds pairs of letters can make together (“sh” or “th” for example)
    • How to decode words (how to break a word into parts and say each part)
    • How to blend words (how to put separate sounds together to read a word smoothly)
    Use it today:

    Check out this video, where we learn about the letter S from our friend Ollo. You can share this video with your students and then practice finding the letter S in books, around the classroom, or in friends’ names.

    This video of Kodi talking about beginning sounds is an example of how your students will be introduced to different elements of phonics, such as phonemes (individual sounds), in our app. You can share this video and then play a similar game with students with items “locked” in a box until they can isolate the beginning sound.

    Explore more:

    Download the free Khan Academy Kids app and explore the Letters tab. Here you’ll find lessons and practice activities on every upper and lower case letter, as well as isolated letter sounds and beginning, middle, and ending sounds. You can easily differentiate letter practice by assigning certain letters to individual students. 

    Because phonics practice can span such a long period of time in your student’s lives, it’s important to follow a sequence to make sure they’re building skills in a helpful order. Check out the Reading Foundational Skills practice in the Reading tab of the Library. You can adjust the grade level to find easier or more challenging phonics activities at each level.

    Fluency

    When a child begins to move into the world of independent reading, there are several skills and strategies we can use to help them become happy, confident readers. 

    After a student has the building blocks of reading, the main focus shifts to developing a child’s fluency as they begin to read independently. A fluent reader will have an easier time understanding what they read and is more likely to enjoy reading. To help students develop fluency, you can provide practice with sight words and decodable texts.

    Use it today:

    As a class, watch this video on the sight word “come.” Then practice writing that word using the Create tab in the Khan Kids app. Students can also play other sight word games inside the app to help strengthen their automaticity and accuracy when reading a sight word.

    Explore more:

    Khan Academy Kids has decodable texts throughout our library. In the Books tab, scroll down to the Early Readers section of the Library. These stories are written using only sight words and words a young reader should be able to sound out. First, have them listen to the story read aloud by selecting the “Read to Me” button. Next, have them read the same story, this time choosing “Read by Myself.” Have your students read the book aloud and repeat the reading until they sound fluent. Be sure to stop or go back to listening to the book if they start to feel frustrated. For older learners, you can try this same process using the 1st and 2nd Grade Early Readers in the Library. These books are also decodable, but they will have more difficult phonics patterns. 

    Comprehension

    Good readers don’t just say words aloud—they form a picture in their mind of the story, making a mental movie to help them imagine the events as they happen. Readers who are good at comprehending also think beyond the story. They make connections to what they already know, make inferences and predictions, and think about the story after they are done reading. Students have been developing comprehension skills since birth but now must combine this knowledge with their independent reading abilities.

    Use it now:

    Khan Academy Kids has an entire series of lessons dedicated to explicit comprehension practice. For example, you could watch this video about making inferences about characters. Then, pick a story to read aloud together as a class. Use an anchor chart to list clues you notice about the characters. 

    Explore more:

    Reading and thinking about what you read are the best ways to build comprehension skills. Luckily, Khan Academy Kids has over 400 books built right into our app! You can see all the books in one place by going to the Books tab in the Library. Here, your students can either have the book read aloud to them or read it on their own.

    Another way to view our books is by clicking on the Reading tab in the Library. When students select a book in the Reading tab, they will be asked supporting comprehension questions as they read. This can be really helpful as they work on developing their mental movie and comprehension skills. Encourage students to pause and answer the question aloud before turning the page.

    Find out more

    If you’re using Khan Academy Kids for the first time in your classroom, we’ve got plenty of resources to get you started here.  

    If you’re an administrator looking to bring high-quality literacy practice to your school or district, get in touch with us here

    We’re excited to support your students as they enter the magical world of reading!

    Allison Leedie

    Source link

  • The Science of Reading in a Nutshell

    The Science of Reading in a Nutshell

    4 actionable lessons teachers can use today

    By Allison Leedie, M.Ed,  partnerships manager at Khan Academy Kids and former teacher and literacy coach

    Planning time is limited, the copier is jammed, and a classroom observation is imminent. Sound familiar? Me too. 

    As a former teacher and literacy coach, I know that sometimes what is most helpful are actionable lessons and activities you can deploy right now with little preparation but tons of engagement. 

    Search no further! Below are four activities you can use today to support best practices in the science of reading, no matter what stage of literacy development your learners are engaged in

    Pre-Literacy

    For our very youngest students, actual reading and writing may be a ways off. Pre-literacy is the period of time before a child can read or write on their own. Children start developing pre-literacy skills as soon as they are born, and there is a body of research that shows a solid pre-literacy foundation will lead to long-term success both in and out of school. 

    Pre-literacy can include:

    • Narrative skills
    • Vocabulary development
    • Print Awareness
    • Print Motivation
    • Letter knowledge
    Use it today:

    This video of Reya talking about the parts of a book is an excellent example of how Khan Kids reinforces the pre-literacy skills your students are developing. You can show this video and then have students handle books to identify different print features mentioned in the video.

    Explore more:

    The Khan Academy Kids app has activities for children as young as 2 years old and includes many pre-literacy activities. In the Library, make sure you’ve set the dropdown menu to select Kindergarten or Pre-K. In the Videos tab, check out the Early Reading and Language collection. This will also give you models for pre-literacy skills to call upon during whole or small-group instruction.

    Phonics

    Phonics is the connection between letters and the sounds that they make. Phonics instruction covers many different skills and often takes years to master. It’s typical for a child to begin their phonics journey between the ages of 3 and 5 and keep working on these skills well into 3rd grade. During this process, students will learn:

    • The sounds each letter makes
    • How to identify and say the beginning, middle, and end sounds of words
    • How to identify and say short and long vowel sounds 
    • The sounds pairs of letters can make together (“sh” or “th” for example)
    • How to decode words (how to break a word into parts and say each part)
    • How to blend words (how to put separate sounds together to read a word smoothly)
    Use it today:

    Check out this video, where we learn about the letter S from our friend Ollo. You can share this video with your students and then practice finding the letter S in books, around the classroom, or in friends’ names.

    This video of Kodi talking about beginning sounds is an example of how your students will be introduced to different elements of phonics, such as phonemes (individual sounds), in our app. You can share this video and then play a similar game with students with items “locked” in a box until they can isolate the beginning sound.

    Explore more:

    Download the free Khan Academy Kids app and explore the Letters tab. Here you’ll find lessons and practice activities on every upper and lower case letter, as well as isolated letter sounds and beginning, middle, and ending sounds. You can easily differentiate letter practice by assigning certain letters to individual students. 

    Because phonics practice can span such a long period of time in your student’s lives, it’s important to follow a sequence to make sure they’re building skills in a helpful order. Check out the Reading Foundational Skills practice in the Reading tab of the Library. You can adjust the grade level to find easier or more challenging phonics activities at each level.

    Fluency

    When a child begins to move into the world of independent reading, there are several skills and strategies we can use to help them become happy, confident readers. 

    After a student has the building blocks of reading, the main focus shifts to developing a child’s fluency as they begin to read independently. A fluent reader will have an easier time understanding what they read and is more likely to enjoy reading. To help students develop fluency, you can provide practice with sight words and decodable texts.

    Use it today:

    As a class, watch this video on the sight word “come.” Then practice writing that word using the Create tab in the Khan Kids app. Students can also play other sight word games inside the app to help strengthen their automaticity and accuracy when reading a sight word.

    Explore more:

    Khan Academy Kids has decodable texts throughout our library. In the Books tab, scroll down to the Early Readers section of the Library. These stories are written using only sight words and words a young reader should be able to sound out. First, have them listen to the story read aloud by selecting the “Read to Me” button. Next, have them read the same story, this time choosing “Read by Myself.” Have your students read the book aloud and repeat the reading until they sound fluent. Be sure to stop or go back to listening to the book if they start to feel frustrated. For older learners, you can try this same process using the 1st and 2nd Grade Early Readers in the Library. These books are also decodable, but they will have more difficult phonics patterns. 

    Comprehension

    Good readers don’t just say words aloud—they form a picture in their mind of the story, making a mental movie to help them imagine the events as they happen. Readers who are good at comprehending also think beyond the story. They make connections to what they already know, make inferences and predictions, and think about the story after they are done reading. Students have been developing comprehension skills since birth but now must combine this knowledge with their independent reading abilities.

    Use it now:

    Khan Academy Kids has an entire series of lessons dedicated to explicit comprehension practice. For example, you could watch this video about making inferences about characters. Then, pick a story to read aloud together as a class. Use an anchor chart to list clues you notice about the characters. 

    Explore more:

    Reading and thinking about what you read are the best ways to build comprehension skills. Luckily, Khan Academy Kids has over 400 books built right into our app! You can see all the books in one place by going to the Books tab in the Library. Here, your students can either have the book read aloud to them or read it on their own.

    Another way to view our books is by clicking on the Reading tab in the Library. When students select a book in the Reading tab, they will be asked supporting comprehension questions as they read. This can be really helpful as they work on developing their mental movie and comprehension skills. Encourage students to pause and answer the question aloud before turning the page.

    Find out more

    If you’re using Khan Academy Kids for the first time in your classroom, we’ve got plenty of resources to get you started here.  

    If you’re an administrator looking to bring high-quality literacy practice to your school or district, get in touch with us here

    We’re excited to support your students as they enter the magical world of reading!

    Allison Leedie

    Source link

  • Future Forward Literacy awarded U.S. Department of Education grant to expand and enhance service to 6,000 new students

    Future Forward Literacy awarded U.S. Department of Education grant to expand and enhance service to 6,000 new students

    Federal support drives substantial expansion of national K-3 intervention for struggling readers, awarding over $14 million to the proven program

    Press Release


    Dec 14, 2021

    Early literacy nonprofit Future Forward (a program of Education Analytics) successfully transitions into the next stage of nationwide expansion with its third award in 10 years from the U.S. Department of Education‘s “Education Innovation and Research” (EIR) program.

    Future Forward is a literacy intervention for students in kindergarten through grade-three that delivers research-based one-on-one tutoring and family engagement for children, families, schools, and districts across the nation. “We are elated to continue this proven program and to share it with so many more students,” said Future Forward Executive Director Kate Bauer-Jones. “Our entire team across the country is excited to strengthen service to thousands of children, families, and communities with this award, while continuing contributions to a growing field of research on effective literacy interventions.”

    The highest scoring of three “Expansion-phase Competition Grantees,” this is the largest single award for Future Forward to date, with $14,534,774 invested to enhance service to over 6,000 children & families.

    Education Analytics CEO Andrew Rice said, “We appreciate the Department of Education recognizing just how impactful their investment has been and can continue to be if we sustain and expand the Future Forward Literacy program. My colleague Kate Bauer-Jones and her teammates are successfully scaling an evidence-based, student-centered, technology-enabled early literacy and family engagement intervention that is needed now more than ever.”

    In all, $182 million in new awards were granted to 30 school districts, institutions, and nonprofits as part of the EIR program. U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in announcing the awards, “Especially as students, educators, and school communities continue to heal and recover from the pandemic, we must invest in programs that are innovative and backed by evidence of what works to ensure that our education system can fully and effectively address the academic and social-emotional needs of our children. These grants will help to offer rich opportunities to accelerate students’ learning and nurture their development. I look forward to seeing how Education Innovation and Research Grants help take promising practices to scale.” 

    The EIR program helps the field design, scale, and validate programs with the potential to solve education’s most pressing problems. Twenty-six of the 30 grantees specifically aim to implement programming that will respond to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic or promote equity in student access to high-quality educational resources and opportunities. A list of selected grantees is available at: https://oese.ed.gov/offices/office-of-discretionary-grants-support-services/innovation-early-learning/education-innovation-and-research-eir/awards.

    Future Forward is a program of Education Analytics, Inc. Visit FutureForwardLiteracy.org.

    Media contact: Jesse@Landis.Media // 727-547-3294

    Source: Future Forward Literacy

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