The #1 foundational skill for the Science of Reading

The first of five: Phonemic and phonological awareness

Phonemic awareness and phonological awareness—together, they’re the first of the five foundational reading skills articulated by the Science of Reading

The two are intertwined, but not interchangeable. Even though they combine to form one skill, they have distinct meanings and play different roles in helping children become proficient readers.

 In the first of this five-part series on foundational skills, we’ll look at where the path to literacy begins—and why it all starts with sounds. 

What the Science of Reading tells us about the brain

First, an essential reminder: Our brains are not hard-wired for reading. They do not intrinsically know that marks on a page are designed to represent sounds, or meaning. That’s why reading must be taught, explicitly and systematically. 

But when we teach reading using what science tells us, the brain wires itself to start recognizing those letters, syllables, and words.  

“Reading comes through building new neural pathways,” says Alice Wiggins, vice president of instructional design and products at UnboundEd and our guest on Season 3, Episode 2 of Science of Reading: The Podcast. “That’s what happens,” she says, “when we’re taught to read.”  

Why it starts with sound

The Simple View of Reading establishes that if you can’t decode the symbols (letters and combinations of letters) that make up a sentence, you can’t read it—even if you know the language in which it’s written.

And when it comes to spoken language, those symbols were created to capture sounds. 

“Teaching kids that letters represent the sounds in speech has the most potent logic, because written language was invented to represent speech,” says Dr. Louisa Moats, an expert on how children learn to read and our guest on Season 3, Episode 3 of Science of Reading: The Podcast. “We don’t learn to talk from reading. We already know how to talk. We have to learn this system that is mapped onto speech.”

Phonemic awareness and phonological awareness form the building blocks for understanding the relationship between sounds and letters, paving the way for successful reading acquisition.

To understand how important they are, look no further than the Reading Rope, a visual representation of the key skills involved in reading. The strands of the rope represent various interconnected components, including phonological awareness, phonicsvocabularyfluency, and comprehension.

Phonological awareness and phonemic awareness are positioned as the foundational strands.

To understand why, we’ll need to get more specific.

What is phonemic awareness?

Phonemes are the smallest units of sound that make up words. Phonemic awareness refers to the ability to identify and manipulate individual sounds (phonemes) in spoken words.

Phonemic awareness plays a vital role in the early stages of reading. By recognizing and manipulating individual sounds within spoken words, kids come to understand how sounds combine to form words.

This ability to segment and blend sounds lays the foundation for phonics, and the ability to decode and read unfamiliar words.

What is phonological awareness?

Phonological awareness encompasses a range of skills that go beyond manipulating individual phonemes. It includes abilities such as recognizing and manipulating larger units of sound, such as syllables, rhymes, onset and rime, and even entire words. It involves tasks like clapping out the syllables in a word, identifying words that rhyme, recognizing words with the same initial sound, and blending or segmenting words into syllables.

This awareness of larger sound units enhances readers’ ability to identify and manipulate individual phonemes. That, in turn, sets the stage for word recognition and decoding.

Phonology and equity

Alice Wiggins notes that just as reading skills start with sound, so does equity. It’s important to acknowledge that students speak and are exposed to a wide variety of pronunciations of English letters and words.

“Being explicit and systematic attends to those differences for all students,” she says. 

More ways to learn

Explore our Science of Reading toolkit for dual language learners.

Subscribe to Science of Reading the Podcast for the latest insights from researchers and practitioners in early reading.

The importance of decoding in effective phonics instruction

Early readers are like CIA analysts, using what they know about symbols and patterns to decipher unfamiliar texts and messages. And one of their most important code-cracking tools? Phonics.

In reading, phonics and decoding are closely intertwined. And the Science of Reading confirms that strong decoding skills help students sound out and decipher unfamiliar words, opening up new levels of reading and learning. 

What’s the definition of “phonics”?

Phonics is a method for understanding the relationship between letters (graphemes) and the sounds (phonemes) they represent in words. It’s a crucial skill that helps students decode and read words accurately. The Science of Reading recognizes phonics as one of the five foundational reading skills—along with phonological awareness, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension—that contribute to reading proficiency. 

Phonics instruction focuses on teaching students the systematic and explicit rules and patterns of letter-sound correspondences. It typically begins with teaching the basic letter-sound correspondences, such as the sounds associated with individual letters or letter combinations (e.g., “a” as in apple, “sh” as in shell). 

As students progress, they learn more complex patterns and rules, such as vowel digraphs (two vowels together producing a single sound, like “ea” in beach) and consonant blends (two or more consonants together, like “bl” in black).

Decoding in reading

Decoding is a key part of phonics instruction—and a vital skill that helps students unlock meaning. It’s what students are doing when they use phonics skills to sound out words, breaking them down into individual phonemes or letter sounds. 

By understanding the relationship between letters and sounds, students can apply their knowledge to decode new words. For example, knowing that the letter “s” represents the /s/ sound allows students to decode words like sit or sun based on their knowledge of phonics.

(A note on encoding vs. decoding: While decoding focuses on translating written words into spoken language, encoding refers to the ability to convert spoken language into written words.)

Why is decoding important—especially when combined with phonics?

Decoding skills are fundamental because they bridge the gap between recognizing individual letters and understanding the meaning of words. Phonics instruction is most important when it teaches and reinforces decoding skills. 

Together, the two accomplish a lot:

  • Building word recognition: Decoding skills enable students to recognize words accurately and independently. By applying phonics knowledge, students can decode unfamiliar words, expanding their word-recognition abilities.
  • Enhancing reading comprehension: Decoding is an essential component of reading comprehension. When students can decode words effectively, they can focus on understanding the text, making connections, and engaging in critical thinking. 
  • Boosting independence: Decoding skills help students tackle unfamiliar words on their own without having to rely as much on context or memorization. 

Phonics and decoding activities 

To reinforce decoding skills, educators can incorporate various phonics and decoding activities. These might include word blending exercises, word family practice, phonics games, or guided reading sessions. 

Phonics instruction gives students the tools to recognize and understand the relationship between letters and sounds. Decoding skills allow them to apply this knowledge to reading words accurately and independently. When educators explicitly teach phonics and reinforce decoding skills, they set students up to engage with the unfamiliar, expand their vocabularies, and become confident and curious readers. 

More Amplify and Science of Reading resources

Science of Reading, A Primer: Part One
Science of Reading: Your guide to making the shift
Science of Reading: The Podcast “Deconstructing the Rope: Decoding with Louisa Moats”
Foundational skills instruction in Boost Reading

How comprehension fits into effective literacy instruction

Many of us grew up doing a classroom activity called “reading comprehension,” in which we would read a short text about, let’s say, sea turtles, then answer multiple-choice questions designed to demonstrate how much of that reading we comprehended. The next time, the reading might’ve been about the history of jazz.

Nothing against sea turtles or Dizzy Gillespie, but our approach to reading comprehension has evolved—and that’s thanks to the Science of Reading.

Let’s take a look at what we know now about how comprehension works and how to make it part of the best possible literacy instruction.

The role of comprehension in literacy instruction

Comprehension is one of the five foundational skills in reading and one of the two key components of the Simple View of Reading.

This framework lays out the two fundamental skills required for reading with comprehension:

  1. Decoding—the ability to recognize written words
  2. Language comprehension—understanding what words mean

In other words, reading proficiency is a product of word recognition and language comprehension.

The Reading Rope layers complexity onto this view, providing a visual metaphor of reading as a complex skill combining decoding skillslanguage comprehensionbackground knowledgevocabulary, and more.

In this context, comprehension refers to the ability to understand and make meaning from written text. It involves not only accurately decoding and recognizing words, but also grasping the deeper meaning, intent, and implications of the text.

Product vs. process: The missing link in comprehension

Historically, comprehension instruction focused on the products of comprehension, rather than on the process. Students could demonstrate that they understood what they just read about sea turtles, but how did students understand it? What were their brains actually doing at the time? Answering those questions can help us better support students.

To do that, let’s look at the students who are not the best comprehenders—even though they have solid word recognition, vocabulary, and background knowledge. What’s missing?

After you read a piece of text, you’ll probably not recall its precise wording, but generally, you’ll remember the general idea. Doing so requires building a structure in your mind that researchers now call a “mental model.” The process of building a mental model is a sort of micro-comprehension.

Weak comprehenders build weak models. So when asked to analyze a character or make a prediction, their answers are not as strong as those of more advanced comprehenders.

We now know that students need four critical skills to improve their mental modeling/micro-comprehension—and thus their overall comprehension.

  1. Interpreting the usage of anaphoras (like she, him, them).
  2. Understanding the use of markers to signal ways that the text fits together — connectives (like sothoughwhenever), structure cues, and directions.
  3. Supplying gap-filling inferences. (Writers often make assumptions about what can be left unstated, and weaker readers who fail to make these gap-filling inferences wind up with gaps in their mental models.)
  4. Monitoring comprehension as they read. (When something doesn’t make sense, strong readers stop, re-read, and try to figure it out, while weaker readers just keep going, failing to notice that they don’t understand.)

How background knowledge helps language comprehension

The Science of Reading demonstrates the importance of systematic and explicit phonics instruction.

But students do not have to learn phonics or decoding before knowledge comes into the equation.

“The background knowledge that children bring to a text is also a contributor to language comprehension,” says Sonia Cabell, associate professor at Florida State University’s School of Teacher Education, on Science of Reading: The Podcast. Background knowledge serves as the scaffolding upon which readers build connections between new information and what they already know. Students with average reading ability and some background knowledge of a topic will generally comprehend a text on that topic as well as stronger readers who lack that knowledge.

What we know about knowledge and comprehension should inform instruction. “I think most, if not every, theory of reading comprehension implicates knowledge,” says Cabell. “But that hasn’t necessarily been translated into all of our instructional approaches.”

So, a central question is: How can we help build background knowledge—and thus comprehension?

Broadly, we can work to use literacy curricula that intentionally and systematically builds knowledge as they go.

We can also be “intentional throughout our day in building children’s knowledge,” says Cabell, offering the example of choosing books to read aloud. She suggests we ask not just “‘Do they have the background knowledge to understand something,’ but rather ‘Can what I’m reading aloud to them build background knowledge?’”

Cabell also suggests being a little ambitious in your read-alouds: “Read aloud books a couple of grade levels above where [students are] reading right now, so that they’ll be able to engage with rich academic language.”

Comprehension instruction in the classroom

So, what does this type of comprehension instruction look like? Let’s explore a few science-informed examples:

  1. Systematically build the knowledge that will become background knowledge. Use a curriculum grounded in topics that build on one another. “When related concepts and vocabulary show up in texts, students are more likely to retain information and acquire new knowledge,” even into the next grades, education and literacy experts Barbara Davidson and David Liben say. “Knowledge sticks best when it has associated knowledge to attach to.”
  2. Present instruction that engages deeply with content. Research shows that students—and teachers, too—actually find this content-priority approach more rewarding than, in Davidson and Liben’s words “jumping around from topic to topic in order to practice some comprehension strategy or skill.”
  3. Support students in acquiring vocabulary related to content.  Presenting key words and concepts prior to reading equips students to comprehend the text more deeply. Spending more time on each topic helps students learn more topic-related words and more general academic vocabulary they’ll encounter in other texts.
  4. Use comprehension strategies in service of the content. While building knowledge systematically, teachers can use proven strategies—such as “chunking” and creating graphic organizers—to develop students’ skills for understanding other texts.
  5. Use discussions and writing to help students learn content. Invite students to share their interpretations, supporting them in articulating their thoughts and connecting with peers’ perspectives.
  6. Help students forge connections. Help students draw connections among lessons and units—and to their own experiences—as they grow their knowledge together.

Comprehension goes beyond reading the words on a page. It involves actively engaging with the text, connecting ideas, drawing inferences, and relating the content to one’s own knowledge and experiences. By making sure students have the skills and knowledge they need to comprehend a text, we can help them comprehend the world.

More to explore

The missing link in reading comprehension: Orange paper

Science of Reading: The Podcast—Research, comprehension, and content-rich literacy instruction

The missing link in reading comprehension: Infographic 

The importance of vocabulary in effective literacy instruction

When you learn to read, you don’t learn just to pronounce words—you learn to understand them, and how they work together to convey meaning. In fact, it almost goes without saying that vocabulary is an essential, non-negotiable building block of literacy. 

But there’s actually a lot to say about vocabulary. And in the context of literacy instruction, it’s about much more than memorizing and amassing words and definitions. 

If there’s one word we need to better understand to explore the importance of vocabulary, it’s…vocabulary. So let’s explore the word’s full definition, as well as how it fits into best practices in literacy instruction.

Why is teaching vocabulary important? 

Vocabulary is one of the five foundational skills in reading and a key strand in the Reading Rope. As a word, it refers to the collection of words that we understand and use in language. 

Vocabulary includes both the words we recognize and comprehend when reading or listening (receptive vocabulary) and the words we can use accurately and effectively when speaking or writing (expressive vocabulary)

But our vocabulary isn’t just a list of words and their definitions. “Words are interrelated,” says Nancy Hennessey, former president of the International Dyslexia Association, on Science of Reading: The Podcast. “We’re storing words in networks of meaning.”

Entwined in those networks is background knowledge. We can memorize words in a vacuum, but they’re not really part of our vocabulary until and unless they’re grounded in what we know.

“Background knowledge and vocabulary are the main support beams in the comprehension house,” says Hennessey. 

How to teach vocabulary as students grow

First, it’s important to note that tactics and emphasis can and should shift as readers develop skills. As Hennessey notes, we can measure vocabulary in terms of both breadth and depth. These elements play distinct yet complementary roles in literacy development.

Vocabulary breadth refers to the sheer number of words a reader knows and recognizes. A broad vocabulary enables readers to understand a wide range of texts and communicate effectively in various contexts.

In the early stages of reading development, educators might emphasize increasing vocabulary breadth—exposing readers to diverse texts, books, conversations, and experiences. In this way, new readers start building a foundation of familiar words that they can understand and use.

As students learn more, instruction can shift from breadth to depth. Here’s where educators dig into the intricacies of word meanings—exploring synonyms, antonyms, contexts, and connotations. A deep vocabulary allows readers to grasp subtle nuances in language and engage in more sophisticated forms of expression and comprehension.

Vocabulary activities and instruction

Hennessey has developed a four-pronged approach to vocabulary instruction, grounded in the Science of Reading. The four prongs are:

  1. Intentional instruction: explicitly teaching the meaning of specific words.
  2. “Incidental-on-purpose” instruction: helping students understand new words as they come up.
  3. Intentional teaching of independent word learning strategies: giving students tools to help them determine the meaning of words on their own (e.g., using morphology, context clues, or even glossaries).
  4. Development of “word consciousness”: getting students interested in how words work to convey meaning, uses of figurative language, etc. 

“These approaches are based on the fact that we know we need to explicitly teach words,” Hennessey says, “but we also need to continue developing vocabulary through oral experience and reading, because we can’t teach all the words that our students need to know.”

In the context of literacy development, vocabulary instruction is not rote memorization of lists of words. And, according to Hennessey, that’s not the way kids relate to it either. Students bring natural interest and curiosity to exploring figurative language, playing with palindromes, and finding and learning what she calls “$20 words.” 

When we integrate these activities into incidental or incidental-on-purpose instruction, Hennessey says, “we can embed this excitement and understanding of how words play such an important role in our lives.”

More to explore 

The importance of reading fluency in effective literacy instruction

There’s a difference between the ability to sound out words on a page and the ability to truly understand their meaning. That difference? Reading fluency. 

Fluency is one of the five foundational reading skills. (The other four, as you likely know, are  phonological awareness, phonics, vocabulary, and comprehension.) Fluency connects readers not just to words, but to emotions and expressions, characters and connotations. And it’s also where reading really starts to foster joy. 

In this post, we’ll explore what fluency is, why it matters, and how to successfully incorporate it into your literacy instruction. 

Defining fluency

The International Literacy Association defines reading fluency as “reasonably accurate reading, at an appropriate rate, with suitable expression, that leads to accurate and deep comprehension and motivation to read.” 

In other words, fluency is not just reading fast. And it goes beyond merely decoding words, to developing a deep understanding of what they’re trying to say. Fluency allows readers to connect ideas, recognize patterns, and infer meanings. 

“I call fluency the bridge to comprehension,” says Kent State literary education professor Tim Rasinski, discussing the topic on Amplify’s Science of Reading: The Podcast

Why fluency in reading matters

Rasinski is also director of Kent State’s award-winning reading clinic, and in his podcast episode, he describes encountering students as old as grade 5 who have decoding skills, but not fluency. “[These students] can sound words out, but if you were to hear them read orally, it would be slow, laborious reading in a monotone,” he says. According to Rasinski, these students aren’t getting “much joy and satisfaction, or even comprehension” from their reading. 

While oral expression in reading is not the ultimate goal, it is an indicator. “The way you read orally reflects the way you read silently,” Rasinski says. “Most of us would say when we read silently we ‘hear’ ourselves with our internal voice.” 

When readers develop fluency, they also develop: 

  • Comprehension. As decoding becomes more effortless, readers can focus on understanding meaning. Fluent readers recognize words automatically, allowing them to dedicate cognitive resources to complex sentence structures and connections among ideas. They grasp both main points and nuances. All told, they get what they’re reading. 
  • Confidence. Fluent readers are more likely to feel accomplished, proud, and motivated with regards to their reading abilities. And it’s a virtuous cycle: As their confidence grows, they’re more likely to engage in and enjoy reading—and continue to improve. 
  • Vocabulary. Fluency plays a significant role in vocabulary acquisition and language development. Fluent readers encounter a larger variety of words in context. This exposure enhances their language and communication skills across academic topics and life experiences. 
  • Academic success. Fluency helps students read to learn. As students advance through school, fluency becomes increasingly important for comprehension and analysis of more advanced and content-rich texts.
  • Emotional connection. Fluency enables readers to connect with the characters, emotions, experiences, and implications in a given text. That’s what makes reading immersive and enjoyable—in the moment and for a lifetime. 

The fluency journey: learning and assessment

The Science of Reading tells us that foundational reading skills must be taught explicitly and systematically, and fluency is no exception. Developing reading fluency is a gradual process that requires consistent practice and exposure to different types of texts. There are several stages and skills that support the development of reading fluency. 

  • Fluency starts with accuracy in decoding. As students practice and improve their phonics skills, they can accurately recognize and decode more and more words. This helps them move from laborious reading toward more efficient reading.
  • Speed comes as a result of accuracy. As students become more accurate in decoding, they can read words more quickly. Accuracy helps reduce the time it takes to identify and process each word, allowing for a smoother and faster reading experience.
  • Fluency practice helps with automaticity. And the more students develop both accuracy and speed, the more they develop automaticity. 

As you may know, there’s a tool called Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) that reading professionals use as a quick-read thermometer of sorts to measure reading speed and accuracy. It’s a simple assessment, measuring how many words a student reads correctly in an unpracticed passage. It’s considered one of the best indicators of a student’s reading progress. 

“It works! It has validity. It gives us good, useful information,” says researcher, educational consultant, and author Dr. Jan Hasbrouck on Science of Reading: The Podcast. That’s why it’s widely used—but, she adds, it’s also widely misunderstood. 

It is a reliable and helpful measure of fluency in terms of reading rate and accuracy, she says. At the same time, “It was unfortunate to put the label ‘fluency’ on it,” she says. “We reading teachers think of fluency as something much more multifaceted and complex that at minimum includes prosody, or expression. It is accuracy, rate, expression, metacognition, background knowledge—it’s all of this stuff that really experienced reading teachers think of as fluency.” 

Fluency best practices for literary instruction

Automaticity frees up cognitive space for comprehension, but fluency isn’t just about reading fast—it’s also about making meaning, which is where prosody comes in. 

Prosody refers to the rhythm, intonation, and expression used by someone reading aloud. 

But it’s not just for the natural performers in the classroom. Prosody can be influenced. How do we help students develop that external, and internal, prosodic voice? 

Through targeted read-aloud practice. By explicitly teaching students about prosody and providing systematic practice opportunities, educators can nurture fluency and comprehension simultaneously—a connection to overall reading success that is well-supported by evidence-based research. 

Some fluency strategies include: 

  • Reader’s Theater in the classroom: Students don’t have to be skilled actors to take on roles and read from scripts. Theater activities allow them to practice recognition and expressions of drama and emotion as they bring the lines to life. 
  • Assisted reading: When students read aloud simultaneously with a more fluent reader, they practice their own skills while also hearing someone else make meaning of the same text. This can also take the form of choral reading, i.e., students reading aloud as a group, focusing on using appropriate intonation and expression. Reading together allows them to practice prosody in a supportive and collaborative environment.
  • Consistent reinforcement and rewards: Rasinski works with students on snippets of text, first with prosody modeled by teachers, then practiced alone and together (repeated reading), then performed for each other or even parents or other adults who offer praise. This regular practice helps boost the confidence and motivation that assists students in developing fluency. “We want children to experience reading success every single day,” says Rasinski. 

More to explore

Creating change that lasts when implementing the Science of Reading: Phase 1

The latest National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) data shows that students’ reading scores are slipping, with 37% of students in grade 4 performing below the NAEP Basic level in reading in 2022.

Fortunately, we have the research and tools to work to reverse this trend—and more and more educators are using them. Using the Science of Reading, we unlock greater potential to restore those scores and support literacy development for this generation and the next.

But changes that big won’t happen overnight, or by themselves.

“The Science of Reading represents a really big shift in what folks are doing,” says Sara Thornton, a reading interventionist with Denver Public Schools in Colorado. “It’s a shift at the teacher level, it’s a shift at the school level, and it’s a shift at the district level. It takes a whole system.” Fortunately, we’re here to help! Over a series of three blog posts, we’ll guide you through the why, how, and what needed to make the shift and bring the Science of Reading into your school or district.

The Science of Reading: Impact of change

Humans are not hard-wired to learn to read. Reading must be taught, explicitly and systematically. A large and always-growing body of evidence proves it, and guides us in how to do it. That’s the Science of Reading.

Our friends at The Reading League say that instruction based on the Science of Reading “will elevate and transform every community, every nation, through the power of literacy.”

Broadly speaking, that’s why 32 states since 2013 have passed laws or implemented new policies related to evidence-based reading instruction. In those states and more, districts are making the shift to give students the literacy instruction they need to reach their full reading potential.

This shift involves cultural and practical changes from district offices down to individual classrooms and teachers. It requires time, effort, and a thoughtful step-by-step process.

Making the shift: The first phase

The first phase of the process is arguably the most important. Those in the field often like to call it Exploration. It’s where you gather the information needed to build buy-in among your stakeholders. That’s what will form the foundation for success.

The three key drivers of educational change are processpractice, and people. So let’s break the Exploration phase down into these categories:

Process:

  1. Identify key issues. Analyze data and gather feedback to assess the challenges and opportunities in your district. Document what you learn, then decide how you’ll communicate your observations to various stakeholders.
  2. Develop a plan. Prioritize the key areas for short-term action, moving the others into a 2- to 3-year plan to strengthen literacy practices and results.

Practice:

  1. Provide stakeholders with resources. Curate a collection of digital resources—such as articles, research papers, and videos—that explain the Science of Reading. Organize them for easy access and sharing.
  2. Gather information. Design a survey or gather anecdotal information about your staff’s understanding and openness to the Science of Reading. Include questions that identify knowledge gaps and gauge receptiveness to change.
  3. Develop a shared vision. Collaborate with district stakeholders to craft a vision for desired literacy practices that reflects the goals, values, and aspirations of all.

People:

  1. Engage a broad range of stakeholders. Identify and involve diverse stakeholders— teachers, administrators, parents, and community members—in all aspects of the change process. Establish clear channels of communication to engage and solicit input from all.
  2. Socialize the literacy vision. Communicate the vision through meetings, workshops, and digital platforms. Encourage dialogue and feedback to foster understanding and ownership.
  3. Share resources. Identify key articles or videos that highlight the need for change and the power of evidence-based instruction. Distribute the resources and encourage stakeholders to engage with them.

Checking your progress

These questions will help you assess this phase of the larger project and decide when you’re ready to move forward.

  • Have we identified our unique issues based on data analysis and feedback?
  • Did we establish a shared vision?
  • Did we establish a plan for short-term and longer-term priorities?
  • What literacy practices do we explicitly want to address?
  • Do we have the resources and training we need?
  • Have we engaged the stakeholders we need?

When you’ve checked all the boxes, you’re ready to move on. And if you need more information as you go, we’re here for you!

More to explore

Managing the change that matters most

5 shifts for true Science of Reading instruction

Science of Reading change management principles

Science of Reading Change Management Playbook

Science of Reading: The Symposium

The science of teaching reading encompasses decades of research and a body of literature that could likely fill its own library.

That’s why we called in the experts to get the info you need to break it all down, set yourself up for change management, and navigate a successful shift to the Science of Reading in your school.

In other words, welcome to a recap of our recent Science of Reading: The Symposium virtual event! Here, we’ll offer some of the key takeaways, including:

  • What teachers should know about the Science of Reading.
  • Why knowledge-building is critical and a matter of equity.
  • What to look for in a Science of Reading curriculum.
  • Where to continue Science of Reading professional development.
  • How to create an action plan that will drive change in your district.
  • Why making this shift can deliver life-changing results.

“We’re here to talk about how you as leaders are making the shift to high-quality instruction grounded in the Science of Reading, and all the wonderful things happening across the country and state, and where the work actually happens, in the classroom.”- Kymyona Burk, Ph.D., senior policy fellow at ExcelinEd

We hope you’ll be inspired to dig into all the recordings and resources we’ve gathered for you—and we hope to see you at the next symposium!

Session 1: Leading the Shift to High-Quality Literacy Instruction, with Kymyona Burk, Ph.D., senior policy fellow at ExcelinEd

According to NAPE, our lower-performing students struggle with reading more now than they did almost a decade ago. “This is everybody’s problem. We are all represented at the bottom, though perhaps disproportionately for some relative to our representation in the population,” said Kymyona Burk. “Nonetheless, we’re all there. This is not a Black or white issue, or a gender issue.  This is an issue where we can come together to solve this literacy crisis for all of our children.”

And we have to, according to Burk, who framed reading as an education and economic issue. “Children who are struggling readers become adults who are struggling readers,” she said. And this makes them less able to participate in the job market, and or even read with their kids, thus continuing the cycle.

The good news? We really can do this. “Illiteracy is one of the most solvable issues of our time,” Burk said.

How? Burk detailed the following necessary shifts:

  1. Build knowledge: What is the Science of Reading?
  2. Strengthen practice: This shift involves four phases of system change: (1) Initiating Action, (2) Organizing for Impact, (3) Early Execution, and (4) Sustaining Impact.
  3. Monitor progress: Refine as needed.

Burk also outlined best practices and provided examples of these shifts and changes, encouraging leaders to get into hands-on involvement and develop collaborative buy-in from the beginning.

Watch the entire presentation and explore additional resources.

Session 2: How Building Knowledge Narrows Gaps, with Natalie Wexler, author of The Knowledge Gap

What’s the main idea in the paragraph below?

Much depended on the two overnight batsmen. But this duo perished either side of lunch—the latter a little unfortunate to be adjudged leg-before—and with Andrew Symonds, too, being shown the dreaded finger off an inside edge, the inevitable beckoned, bar the pyrotechnics of Michael Clarke and the ninth wicket.

If you don’t know a lot about cricket, you might have a bit of a hard time with the answer!

That’s how speaker Natalie Wexler starts to illustrate that comprehension doesn’t work in a vacuum; it requires background knowledge.

In fact, she argued:

“A knowledge-building curriculum that begins in kindergarten and connects the various aspects of literacy, listening, speaking and writing can enable all students to reach their full potential.”- Natalie Wexler

She outlined these three key ways to get there:

  1. Organize classes not by reading level, but by topic. Once students have background knowledge about a topic, they can understand at a higher level.
  2. Spend plenty of time on social studies and science topics. These subjects have the potential to build vocabulary and knowledge that fuels comprehension.
  3. Have students write about what they’re learning. This boosts their retention and comprehension.

Watch the entire presentation and explore additional resources.

Session 3: How Teachers Shape Learning: Content-rich literacy instruction in the elementary grades, with Sonia Cabell, Ph.D., associate professor of education at Florida State University

Knowledge is fundamental to reading, and a content-rich curriculum helps build it.

But, according to presenter Sonia Cabell, it takes a teacher to bring it all together.

That includes recognizing and activating the knowledge students bring to the classroom. From Cabell’s presentation: “Every reader in your class possesses background knowledge that can be leveraged to advance reading…when teachers are strength-spotters rather than deficit detectors, they recognize the academic and cultural background knowledge that their students already possess”

Teachers also shape learning by helping transfer knowledge from a high-quality, content-rich curriculum to the real world. How? High-quality conversations, where students are active participants and teachers are responsive partners.

These may include interactive read-alouds and Strive-for-Five conversations, Cabell said. Starting with what children say, these take place over five turns, with the teacher responding in ways designed to stretch student talking, thinking, and reasoning, as well as other skills that underpin reading success.

You’ll find more specific, actionable approaches in Cabell’s presentation and accompanying resources.

Session 4: Making the Content Stick: Knowledge-building in the classroom, with Mitchell Brookins, Ph.D., education consultant and former school administrator

We’ve established the importance of background knowledge. But, as Brookins pointed out: “Students integrate their background knowledge in helpful, and sometimes unhelpful, ways.”

Consider this brief passage: “Jazz isn’t music merely. It’s a spirit that can express itself in almost anything. The true spirit of jazz is a joyous revolt from convention, custom, authority, boredom and even sorrow.”

One student might read “spirit” and think “ghost.” Another may read “revolt” and think “Civil War.” In short, your students may not be on the same page.

“In this moment, you have to ground yourself in evidence-based practices for comprehension instruction. Later reading comprehension is predicated on the ability to construct a coherent and integrated representation of meaning of the text.”- Mitchell Brookins, Ph.D.

In other words, the ability to construct a mental model. We need to help students build mental models, linking coherent knowledge with writing skills “so that children can lift the words off the page,” said Brookins

He offered a few specific ways to make that happen: creating visual organizers to collect and apply existing knowledge, identifying anchor words, deconstructing long sentences, and more.

“Some children may need three or four different activities to get the content to stick,” he said. “So when it comes to complex text instruction, there are multiple things you’re going to have to do to ensure that children leave with an accurate representation of the text.”

That level of effort can go a long way, and it must. “As educators, we have to agree that high illiteracy rates have to end,” Brookins said. “And as we turn the tide in our classrooms, our districts, and states, our children will understand, believe, internalize, and live out this truth, [that] literacy is liberty.”

Find more specific, actionable approaches in Brookins’s presentation and accompanying resources.

Session 5: Literacy Instruction Supporting English Language Learners, with Claude Goldenberg, Ph.D., professor of education at Stanford University

What do we know about how children learn to read when they know the reading language?

How is that process similar to—or different from—how children learn to read as they’re learning that language?

And should teachers teach differently in each case? How so?

Speaker Claude Goldenberg explored these questions and more in his session. Spoiler: “Kids who don’t know the language don’t have the phonology and the semantics already part of their knowledge systems,” he said. “They need to learn the sounds of the language. They need to learn the meanings of the words.”

Goldenberg’s bottom line? “The Science of Reading applies to language learning.”

He had the following guidance for teachers of multilingual/English learners:

  • Teach the five foundational skills explicitly: phonemic awareness, letter-sounds, decodingfluency, and comprehension.
  • Make sure content and instructions are clear and comprehensible.
  • Provide English language development instruction and opportunities that directly support the reading instruction.

Moving forward, Goldenberg said, “[Students] will need continued additional support as reading challenges get more complex, and foundations remain foundational.”

Dive into the brain science and lots more specifics in the presentation and slide deck.

Session 6: Equity 2.0: Rethinking the who, what, and how, with Kareem Weaver, co-founder and executive director of FULCRUM

This we know: Literacy and knowledge are civil rights. How do we make sure that all kids have access to this right?

In his session, Kareen Weaver argued that we have to add dimension to our current definition of equity, which often boils down to “fair and impartial.” But that’s mostly about how you treat someone, noted Weaver. “My understanding of equity is about outcomes,” he said. “We have to have results and outcomes for kids, and those who serve kids, as part of the equation.”

And this so-called “equity” isn’t helping if goals aren’t being reached. “Let’s say 50% of white kids are reading and 20% of Black kids are reading, that’s a 30% gap,” he explained. “But if 50% of Black kids were reading, I would still be yelling and shouting, because that’s not good. Excellence has to be the standard.”

Weaver proposed an expanded definition of equity—and described the path to get there. “Equity opens up freedom. Not just the freedom from oppression, but the freedom to do things,” he said.

The four key components of his approach:

  1. Access to knowledge matters.
  2. Literacy is the key to access.
  3. Consistency with all elements matters.
  4. Change management is critical.

“If you have those four things,” Weaver said, “now we’re talking about equity.”

Inspired? Intrigued to learn more? Watch the presentation and explore additional resources.

More ways to explore:

Learn more about making the shift to the Science of Reading

Watch Science of Reading: The Symposium

The Science of Reading Change Management Playbook

Adopting and implementing the right Science of Reading program: Phase 2

In Phase 1 of this series, we defined the Science of Reading and described its potential to deliver literacy transformation—in your classrooms and districts, and nationwide.

Change at that level requires hard work at your level, starting with what those in the field often call exploration.

In Phase 1, you established the rationale for changing to a Science of Reading curriculum and built buy-in from stakeholders.

Now, it’s time to think about Science of Reading programs: Which will best help your school or district transition to evidence-based practices that will drive results for students? This post will focus on Phase 2 of change management: selection, adoption, and initial implementation of Science of Reading resources.

Selecting the best Science of Reading curriculum for your schools

It’s easy for a program to claim alignment to the Science of Reading, but it’s up to you and your team to evaluate that program for true fidelity to the research. That’s how you’ll select only the most effective instruction that will ultimately make the greatest difference to your students.

When it comes to the Science of Reading, it’s not just about the “what,” but also the “how.” Many programs include phonics, but how they teach phonics is just as critical. True Science of Reading practices will focus on both word recognition and language comprehension at different rates depending on where students are in their learning trajectory. They will also include rich and intentionally sequenced knowledge building focused on a wide depth and breadth of content domains.

True Science of Reading programs will also adhere to these principles:

  • Science-based reading instruction is a matter of equity.
  • Learning to read proficiently in any language requires both word recognition and language comprehension.
  • Literacy instruction in each language must reflect its unique elements.
  • Reading in any language is not natural and must be taught systematically and explicitly.
  • Background knowledge and vocabulary are as critical to comprehension as decoding skills.
  • Foundational skills and instruction must be systematic, explicit, and engaging, using multiple modes and senses.
  • Universal screening and progress monitoring are critical to ensure all students receive the right instruction.
  • Science-based reading instruction reduces the need for intervention and allows students to move forward as capable, confident readers.

We recommend using this curriculum evaluation tool from our friends at The Reading League to guide you through this critical step.

Adopting a Science of Reading curriculum

Remember, the three key drivers of educational change are processpractice, and people. So let’s break the adoption phase down into these categories:

Process

  1. Establish an adoption committee: Select a diverse group of teachers and coaches in the district—including Science of Reading skeptics who may have a large influence in their school communities.
  2. Establish criteria for selection: Determine the key factors aligned to evidence-based practices and requirements for selecting materials.
  3. Review and shortlist materials: Gather resources that meet the established criteria. Conduct a review and evaluation process to create a shortlist of materials for further consideration.
  4. Involve the committee and stakeholders: Share the shortlisted materials with the adoption committee and other relevant stakeholders. Facilitate discussions, solicit feedback, and gather input.
  5. Make a purchase decision: Based on feedback and evaluation, decide which resources to purchase. Obtain necessary approvals and complete the procurement process.
  6. Prepare for material delivery: Order the materials from publishers. Coordinate with schools and relevant staff to ensure readiness for delivery and distribution.

Practice

  1. Conduct pilots in a few classrooms with the resources under evaluation.
  2. Monitor and evaluate teacher and student experiences.
  3. Collect data and results to inform the decision-making process.
  4. Report back to the adoption committee.

People

  1. Build understandings of the Science of Reading: Begin to educate and engage all stakeholders, including educators, administrators, and families, that are not part of the adoption committee, about the Science of Reading and why the shift is being made.
  2. Create a plan for training: Put together a plan to provide Science of Reading professional development opportunities, workshops, and resources.

Questions to answer at this stage:

  • Did we establish clear criteria for selecting materials that focus on evidence-based instructional practices?
  • Have we conducted a thorough review of the programs that will be evaluated?
  • Do the instructional materials that will be evaluated include practices or resources that do not align to the research behind how students learn to read?
  • How will we ensure all aspects of Science of Reading research are part of the resources being evaluated?
  • How will we provide professional learning opportunities to all stakeholders that support transition to evidence-based instructional practices?

Implementing a new Science of Reading program

Here’s where you put your newly adopted resource into practice. The key to this stage is to help teachers move away from ineffective legacy practices and start making the shifts to evidence-based practices. Individual change is a critical component of organizational change.

Here come the 3 Ps again:

Process: Build comprehensive training plans and materials for faculty and staff that will support implementation, including observation checklists and periodic training sessions. Develop explicit processes for collecting and interpreting data to monitor the fidelity of implementation. Create resources to support family engagement.

Practice: Develop understanding of the program material among stakeholder groups to ensure effective adoption of new literacy practices. Provide continuous professional learning opportunities and ongoing coaching.

People: Acknowledge that this stage will involve a range of emotions, including anxiety and frustration. Celebrate successes, recognize individual hard work of individuals, and highlight student growth. Establish communication channels to share positive stories with all stakeholders.

Questions to answer at this stage:

  • What continuous professional learning will be implemented, how and for whom?
  • How can we support educators in the first school year of implementation?
  • How will we monitor data to ensure the changes are creating positive outcomes for students?
  • What data will we collect to prioritize understanding adoption of new materials and evidence-based literacy practices?

When you’ve answered these questions, you’re ready to move on. And if you need more information as you go, we’re here for you!

More ways to explore:

Amplify Science of Reading

Science of Reading: Change management and resources

Accelerating learning in science with the Science of Reading

The Science of Reading: it’s not just for Language Arts.

As host Eric Cross and expert guest Susan Lambert discuss in this Science Connections webinar, the Science of Reading also provides a powerful foundation for science learning.

Here’s what they had to say about bringing evidence-based literacy strategies into the science classroom.

The role of literacy in science literacy

Strictly speaking, the Science of Reading refers to the vast body of research we now have—and put into practice—on the systematic, explicit, and cumulative instruction required for students to learn to read.

“There is a misconception that when we’re talking about the Science of Reading, we’re just talking about reading.”—Susan Lambert, Amplify’s Chief Academic Officer for Elementary Humanities

In fact, we’re talking about comprehensive literacy, which encompasses all the essential—and interdependent—components of literacy, including background knowledge, vocabulary, and both comprehension and expression.

In other words, it’s the listening, speaking, reading, and writing that scientists do in the real world—and that students do to engage with and connect to science learning. As we discussed in this post, developing students’ literacy in science helps them develop scientific literacy. And science literacy allows students to become critical thinkers, problem solvers, and strategic questioners—in science and beyond.

Integrating science and literacy in the classroom

What do these literacy strategies look like in practice? Eric puts them to use regularly—and here’s how you can, too.

  1. Use phenomena to activate and gauge prior knowledge. The more you know, the better you comprehend text and the faster you learn—so exploring familiar observable events (frying eggs, seeing your breath on a cold day) can engage students and accelerate their comprehension from the jump.
  2. Provide multilingual resources. “Being intentional about providing access to resources in the languages our students speak is critical,” said Eric. “The data shows that the more proficient students become in their native language, the more proficient they become in a new one.”
  3. Get students writing (and speaking, and editing). Eric has his students document their experiments and observations in (digital) notebooks and online portfolios. They also share with and present to each other, he said, “so they’re seeing other students’ writing styles and syntax and what details they include, and they can go back and update their own.” And, since it’s a year-long process, “by the time they’re done, they have this beautiful website that showcases their work.” (Amplify Science’s Student Investigation Notebooks also fit the bill!)
  4. Work across subjects. The Common Core recommends that, by 4th grade, 50% of texts read should be non-fiction. That’s why Eric coordinates with ELA teachers to read one text about metabolism, for example, each examining it through different lenses. “When you’re able to work together with another content teacher, it’s like magic,” he said. (And in elementary school, you’re the other content teacher!)
  5. Run science seminars. Students use evidence to explain their thinking. “For students who need extra support, you can have pre-written sentence frames so that they’re able to participate,” Eric said. “Even when they’re listening to other students speaking, that’s helping them develop language skills. You watch them be able to listen, speak, engage in debate, and disagree without being disagreeable, which we know as adults is a valuable skill.”

For more of Eric’s strategies, watch the webinar: Science Connections: Accelerating Learning in Science with the Science of Reading.

Even more to explore

Webinars:

Curriculum: Amplify Science

Amplify blog:

Managing the change that matters most: Implementing the Science of Reading with Integrity

Integrating literacy in the science classroom

“Science or literary instruction? You don’t have to choose!”

Introducing the 2024 Science of Reading Star Awards

There’s more than one way to name a star. You can honor someone you admire by symbolically attaching their name to a star in the night sky…or you can nominate a teacher you admire or a district lighting the way for students for Amplify’s third annual Science of Reading Star Awards!

As we like to say, it takes a constellation of people to help children learn to read—from district leadership to student families, and from inside the classroom to out there the real world. It also takes science—specifically, the science of teaching reading. And it takes leaders who can successfully lead their district in the shift to a curriculum grounded in the Science of Reading, educators who thoughtfully connect students and their families to the impact of the Science of Reading, and teachers who artfully use evidence-based reading instruction to light the way for their students.

We want to celebrate all of these Science of Reading stars!

That’s why we created the Science of Reading Star Awards. Read on for more information about them, including how to nominate someone (or an entire school or district) for the awards. (And if you’re already ready to nominate a star, go right ahead!)

Honoring stellar educators, leaders, schools, and districts in the Science of Reading

We launched this awards program in 2021—a year when schools, educators, and students were still working to bounce back from pandemic challenges and into a new normal. Even then, educators drove change, leading their school communities on a journey to the Science of Reading.

Our awards program honors educators who advocate for and champion the Science of Reading in their classrooms, schools, and districts. They generate buy-in. They inspire their peers and students. They successfully bring research-based materials, phonics instruction, and foundational literacy skills into their approaches—and have remarkable gains to show for it.

These award-worthy educators can include/have included:

  • Teachers who’ve connected with their students and served as role models for their colleagues by applying the Science of Reading.
  • Principals or district leaders who’ve supervised a successful shift to the Science of Reading in many classrooms across several grades.
  • Schools or districts that are driving changes and seeing incredible results using the Science of Reading.

Meet (and learn from) some of our previous winners!

Javonna L. Mack, Lead Content Teacher, Caddo Parish Schools, LA

Award: Changemaker

How did it feel to be selected as a Star Award finalist?

I was and am still over-the-moon excited about being selected as an Amplify Changemaker Star Award finalist. I was very humbled by becoming the winner. It is an amazing feeling of accomplishment when you receive awards. It has become a hallmark of the hard work I have done in my district to support our push in the Science of Reading.

Do you have any advice for educators submitting to the Science of Reading Star Awards for the first time?

Make sure to tell your story. Be clear and concise. Remember to be reflective of all the ways that you have supported your district. I advise that you speak with your peers and gain feedback as to the ways that you have impacted the work they do. Detail your support. Be unique and track and celebrate your achievements.

Shennoy Barnett, Kindergarten Teacher, Johnston County Public Schools, NC

Award: Data Dynamo

How did it feel to be selected as a Star Award finalist?

It was an amazing feeling even to be considered as a semi-finalist, and an even greater one to be selected as a winner, given that it was my first year using the tool.

Do you have any advice for educators submitting to the Science of Reading Star Awards for the first time?

Your hard work and dedication with your students through [the] Science of Reading will tell your story. Even if you are not selected as a finalist, you are still a winner as you are using an amazing tool and touching the lives of your students.

Anila Nayak, Instructional Coach, Intervention Teacher, Los Angeles Unified School District, CA

Award: Science of Reading Superstar Teacher

How did it feel to be selected as a Star Award finalist?

I felt exhilarated at first and later responsible for sharing my learning about how best to teach children to read. It certainly made me more energized to work harder and continue to improve my practice. The award validated my efforts and steered my obsession to become an efficient and knowledgeable reading teacher.

Do you have any advice for educators submitting to the Science of Reading Star Awards for the first time?

Write your compelling narrative about the impact you make each day in the lives of young readers who need you most. You have the tools to reach students who may be struggling but just have not been reached yet. Tell about how you evolved into an expert despite challenges and how learning about the best ways to teach is an absolutely rich experience. After all, you are impacting so many students through your work. Show your pride, because you are doing important work. The Awards journey opens you up to a community of experts and makes you feel a part of new horizons; you get to listen to many experts and read about the new knowledge that is impacting our understanding of how literacy grows.

You can meet all of our 2023 winners here. Their stories and perspectives may help you discover how you can drive change in your classroom, school, and district with the Science of Reading!

Nominate a Science of Reading star!

Inspired? Now think of the educators in your world—especially those devoted to literacy. Do you know someone who has transformed their classroom and empowered their students with the Science of Reading? (And yes, this person might be you!) How about a school or district that has established strong evidence-based practices and seen incredible results? We also have new categories this year to honor both the traditional and less traditional Science of Reading champions!

Submit your nomination for the 2024 Science of Reading Star Awards by Feb. 15!

All award winners will receive:

The grand prize winner in the District and School categories will receive a regional event hosted by Amplify. The grand prize winner in the Individual category will be given full conference registration and associated travel costs to NCTE in Boston, in Nov. 2024.

Learn more:

Change management home page

2023 Science of Reading Star Award finalists

2023 Science of Reading Star Award winners

Science of Reading home page