Sold a Story - Emily Hanford LIVE from Planet Word with Reid Lyon and Margaret Goldberg
Episode Date: December 9, 2025Early in her teaching career, Margaret Goldberg was skeptical of the science of reading. Today, she is working with neuroscientist Reid Lyon to bring it into more classrooms. Lyon and Goldb...erg joined Sold a Story host Emily Hanford for a live conversation about the challenges of translating research into practice. The event was part of the Eyes on Reading series at Planet Word, a museum in Washington, D.C., dedicated to words and language. Read: Transcript of this episodeSee: Slideshow from the event (cute pictures!)Watch: All Eyes on Reading videosConnect: Sold a Story discussion guidesSupport: Donate to APM Reports Email us: soldastory@apmreports.org Call us: (612) 888-7323Listener survey: Tell us about yourselfMore: soldastory.org Dive deeper into Sold a Story with a multi-part email series from host Emily Hanford. We’ll also keep you up to date on new episodes. Sign up at soldastory.org/extracredit.
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Hi, it's Emily.
Today, we're bringing you a special episode of Solda Story.
It's coming to you while we're hard at work on season two.
I'm at the National Archives in Maryland.
All right, I'm going to start calling some of these students from 2003.
And we're thinking we might find some answers in these boxes of documents.
I found something kind of interesting.
Are we recording the Zoom?
We want to just make sure that we understand what happened in the investigation.
What's that?
It's a microphone.
I'm listening to You Learn.
Season two is a whole new story about how learning works and why research about learning often doesn't make it into classrooms.
I think you're going to love it.
In the meantime, we wanted to share an event I hosted at Planet Word in Washington, D.C.
Planet Word is a museum all about words and language.
This fall, I sat down with two people who have been really important in my reporting on reading for years.
Margaret Goldberg first emailed me in June 2018.
She told me about her work as a literacy coach in California,
and the heartbreak of seeing so many students struggle to read.
You might remember Margaret if you've listened to my audio documentary at a loss for words.
which you can find in the Solda Story feed.
Margaret has become one of my most trusted advisors on all things literacy.
She is co-founder of the Right to Read Project,
and she also helped us create a series of discussion guides for Sola Story.
Reed Lion is a neuroscientist.
He used to be the chief of child development and behavior
at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
He was one of the architects of Reading First,
the massive federal effort to try to get the science of reading into schools 20 years ago.
You met him in episode two of Sola's story, and have heard from him many times since.
Read, Margaret, and I got together on stage at Planet Word to talk about what teachers and scientists can learn from each other.
We also discussed why past efforts to get the science of reading into schools didn't work, and what can be learned from that.
By the way, you'll hear one or two references to the slides we showed during our conversation.
If you want to see them for yourself, there's a link in the show notes.
Here's our discussion.
When I'm reporting, I always want to know people's origin stories.
Like, why do they do what they do?
And so, Reed, I want you to first tell us, like, how and why you became a neuroscientist
interested in reading.
Take us back to the beginning.
Well, in the beginning, I think a lot of my interest in reading was because I struggled with reading as a kid.
I hated school.
And, you know, it wasn't until later when I was trying to understand why that was that it dawned on me that it was a humiliating, an embarrassing circumstance.
So my goal from the third grade was to get through school, get the heck out.
I never thought about college.
My favorite subjects were chemistry and biology
because I like to dissect frogs.
But I could get my hands around that.
And so after high school, you know, there weren't very many options.
I graduated in 1966.
As many of you will recall, the war in Vietnam was heating up.
I knew I was going to be drafted.
So I thought the bright idea was that I would find training that was rigorous that would allow me to survive.
And so I became a paratrooper and a reconnaissance team member, and I spent 15 months in combat in Vietnam.
And, you know, that still didn't prompt me to go to college until
when I came home for my tour, I visited a couple of guys in the hospital who were on my team
and who had both sustained head injuries, different areas of the brain.
And again, I'm naive about all of this, but what really took me aback was that both of them had lost the ability to read.
But that really stimulated my brain and trying to be.
to understand, you know, how it is that the nervous system can function in ways that complex
things like reading and language actually take place. And so that was my beginning into brain
behavior relationships, the neuroscience of reading. Okay. And so you mentioned how you liked science
when you were younger because it was like hands on and you could dissect dead animals. But talk a little bit more
about why you became a scientist.
Like, what was it about science that was interested you
in terms of a way of knowing things?
Good mentorship.
I mean, as usual, good teachers, good teachers, researchers
who could explain to me in clear terms what science was about.
What I particularly enjoyed as a scientist
was knowing my job was to always prove myself wrong.
that is to falsify the hypothesis for those in the audience that are familiar with this kind of stuff
and I thought that was great I thought it was really a noble thing to try to find out if you're wrong or not
so my mentors and I learned to design studies and experiments to always figure out if A causes B
let's say if reading difficulties cause or if brain systems or difficulties therein cause reading
difficulties if x causes y there's a whole bunch of stuff that comes between x and y that
can also influence y and that complexity fascinated me unfortunately as we'll learn it didn't
help me understand that teacher saw that complexity all the time
Okay. Well, we'll come back to that. But now I want to turn to Margaret. So we know a little bit about Reade's backstory and about why he became a scientist. And I think that's so interesting. The interest in proving yourself wrong. But so Margaret, tell us a little bit about your origin story. What was your experience learning to read as a child?
So when I started kindergarten, it was not a good situation. I needed to learn how to sit still. I needed to learn how to wait my turn to talk.
stand in line. I had to form the letters correctly because I had an old school teacher who
wanted to make sure that I was school ready. And I hated it. I went into first grade and I had a
brand new teacher. It was her first year teaching. And I loved her. It was love at first sight.
And she had been trained in whole language. So she did not teach me what to do with the letters that I
had been taught to form. She did expose me to lots of good books. We did all sorts of
of fun activities, but it wasn't clicking for me. We got to write in journals, and our teacher
would write back to us, which was amazing. And I actually thought it was kind of a special
privilege that she would call me up to her desk to ask me to read out loud what I had written.
I didn't realize it was because what I had written made no sense. I thought I just got like one-on-one
time with the teacher. And I still have this journal, and I can see over the course of the year,
I became a more standard speller, more standard writer, despite the lack of instruction.
And I did eventually learn how to read by the end of first grade, which my parents were very relieved about.
But that other picture there, those are my first students.
There's a really cute photo up on the screen.
It's Margaret when she was a first grader.
She's curled up under a blanket pointing in a notebook that's propped against her bed frame,
while a pair of fuzzy creatures look on.
that's uh rusty and shaggy my guinea pigs and the time that i was teaching them i didn't know
how to read i was teaching them how to read and i didn't know how so it's like the those who can't do
teach guinea pigs but that's you can see the alphabet is there and i knew it was important
that they know the letters of the alphabet but i didn't actually know why um and i think
this will come into play a lot when i actually um talk a little bit later about what it was like to become
a teacher. Okay, so yeah, so Reed just told us why he wanted to be a scientist. So why did you
want to be a teacher? What was it about teaching that interested you all the way back then?
I just realized how big a difference having a teacher who you like and who likes you makes to the
learning process. So I remember I had a rough time in third grade too and I like came home and I was
complaining to my mom about the massive amount of worksheets that we had to do and how boring they were.
My mom was like, if you think you can do better, you probably should. And so I then, starting from third grade on, would sit in class and would watch the teacher and think to myself, like, is that a thing that I would do? If I were teacher, like, is that how I would approach this? And so I was critiquing teaching my whole career in school. And I knew that I wanted to do it and stick with it. Like, I knew that it wasn't going to be a thing that I was going to do for a couple years. I was going to do. I was going to do.
try to figure out a way to make a career out of it, despite the fact that 50% of teachers were
quitting in their first four years. So I think it was this fierce determination. Okay, so let's get
into reading a little bit more here. When you eventually became a teacher, what did you know about
how children learned to read when you started teaching? Oh, yeah. So I wanted to go to like the most
rigorous training program than I could. So I went to a two-year credentialing program that had a ton
of student teaching. It had a mission statement that completely aligned with what I wanted
to do. The developmental teacher education program at UC Berkeley was dedicated to improving
the quality of classroom learning by educating elementary teachers to create equitable classrooms
for linguistically and culturally diverse learners in urban settings. And I was like,
that is my calling. But actually, when we got there, we didn't learn how to teach reading at all.
sang a lot of songs. We got a lot of really good children's books. We debated like the colonialism
in where the wild things are. We literally knitted, like we learned how to do finger knitting and
stuff. And the idea was that we were going to make a really rich artistic classroom that was
going to allow kids to be able to bring their whole selves to school and to be inspired to learn
along with us. This was the, yeah. Oh gosh.
Wraida and I have talked about this.
This work of art was two years in the making,
my philosophy of education.
They made us revise it class after class.
What ended up coming out of it,
like I think you asked me at one time,
like, what does this mean?
And I was like, I don't know.
I had all the jargon in it, though.
I really did.
But when I look back at keywords and phrases,
it's clear to me that I knew nothing about how learning happens. I knew nothing about how
reading occurs. I knew nothing about what kind of instruction would actually make it possible for
kids to be able to realize their potential. Okay. And so let's talk a little bit about what you
knew about reading first at this point, because when you started as a teacher, reading first was
going on, right? Yeah. Interestingly, I didn't know anything about reading first, even though Oakland
Unified was the district right next door to where I was getting my credential. I only knew about
no child left behind. So I knew about NCLB. And in my teacher credentialing program, we called it
no child left a mind. And it was like the big governmental effort to take professionalism
away from teachers. And so the way that I saw it was that I was being taught in my credentialing
program, how to write my own rich lessons, how to create these units where kids were going to be able
to explore interesting concepts. I was being taught the importance of writing lesson plans that were
individualized for the children in my classroom. And my impression of No Child Left Behind was that it was
this program that was being brought into teachers. They were taking away books from kids. They were
taking away teacher autonomy and saying that we needed to follow a script. And it just felt like
like a demoralizing time to become a teacher.
And so even though I had intended to go into Oakland to teach,
I ended up deciding like that wasn't what I was trained to do.
So I went into a higher performing school district to wade it out
because they were not part of reading first.
And it wasn't until years later that I learned about reading first as a grant
that local school districts had applied for in they won,
money to be able to help teachers learn how to do the thing that I had wanted to learn
how to do. Interesting. Okay, so here's the architect of reading first. And so you or a scientist
who had become involved in policymaking, so you just heard what Margaret said, but what were you
hoping reading first was going to do? What was the goal? And here's a picture for you of you with the
bushes. So tell us a little bit about reading first and the hopes you had for it. Right. First, I want to
I'm sorry.
You know, it was all common sense to me.
By the early 90s, we had already developed a converging body of evidence.
We had a number, many studies replicating each other,
telling us how reading develops.
We had very good information about what gets in the way for kids who struggle.
and we had information coming in every day
about the conditions under which kids learn to read
and the types of instruction that's most beneficial to them.
So reading first was actually a little bit down the pike.
I'm at NIH, I'm a scientist.
So in 1992, 93, 94, I was called down to Capitol Hill
to brief different congressional members.
What was surprising is they got along.
They actually worked together.
And one of those individuals, Bill Goodling from Pennsylvania, was blown away.
He said, my state, there's 50% of the kids can't read.
And here I'm listening to this information from NIH, and something's off.
And he asked Bob Sweet and I.
Bob was one of his staffers, senior staffers.
wonderful, brilliant guy, to sit down and think about how we could travel that research into
practice. My bright idea was tie money to it. If states need money, then they can have the
money if, in fact, they use it to implement programs, professional development, and so on,
that had a scientific foundation.
What I called back then scientifically based reading research,
we were able to write that into the legislation.
And we knew if we did that way back then
that we could travel that concept in future legislation.
So I wrote the language for the National Reading Panel.
That led the way to reading first under the book.
Bush administration. And President Bush and his wife, not being a political person, I found to be
extraordinarily genuine and concerned about kids. And they provided myself with the wherewithal to try
to really develop scientifically based reading research. So it's simple. If you're going to be teaching
kids or training teachers base it on what we know works. It's that simple. No big deal.
If only. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, okay. So, and you were sort of surprised that teachers didn't love this.
I did. I thought that if we could explain, which I didn't do well, we could explain that we have
information that can make your job easier. That, you know, the kids that are struggling now,
Now, if they receive this kind of instruction and you guys get professional development
of a certain kind, well, I think you'll be relieved with that.
Uh-uh.
Okay, so you realized that, but you sort of thought it was going to be okay.
Do you want to, you told us a little bit why teachers didn't like it.
Do you want to respond at all to what he said?
Yeah, well, what's interesting is you're not wrong.
It was just more complicated than that.
So, like, for me, I took the training that I was given, and I went to a district where I would
have autonomy, and I created all my own lesson plans, and I did that path. But one of my friends
in my credentialing program went the other direction, and she was teaching in a school during
reading first at a time when they had this program so badly needed open court, because that's
what you want to do with second graders. Anyway, so she was teaching open court, and she admitted
to me years later that she felt kind of ashamed at how much she got from the curriculum that
it taught her the things that she hadn't been taught how to do in our teacher preparation program.
It gave her a series of steps to follow in a logical sequence and that she was doing it and her kids were learning.
And she didn't want to admit that because we had been trained to think that that's not what good teachers do.
And so she talked about how she was seeing me go home and stress out and trying to craft these lessons and do all this work.
And she's like, I just read the manual and then I showed up and I did it and it worked.
And it was years later when the program was dropped and she was teaching second grade that she realized the proficiency at our school had gone from two-thirds proficient to one-third and realizing how beneficial it had been to have like an organization to the instruction that was happening at her school.
But that was in some way shameful.
Like what we had been taught to believe was that that kind of instruction shouldn't work because the personalized instruction that only we could do knowing our students best.
would be the thing that would take root.
Okay, yeah, and I think that's interesting
because one of the things you've said to me many times
is that you actually felt like ultimately
the deepest resistance came from the colleges of education.
And I think what you're referring to
is sort of what you were taught to believe about teaching
that maybe came from the colleges of education.
So what was the resistance you got from the colleges of Ed?
Well, you know, I don't want to overgeneralize,
but most colleges of Ed felt that
their freedom would be taken away, how they were preparing their teachers.
And nobody wants to hear that they may have been doing the wrong thing.
You know, so I had compassion for people looking at possibly a new way of teaching, reading, and so on.
But what surprised me in science, people do get angry at each other.
There's no doubt about it.
In education, they get ballistic.
you know it surprised me
you know from pulp fiction that line
you know they get medieval on you
it is the truth
I mean I was called every name in the book
from the Lion King to the Fonacator
which
brings me back to the fact that they always
polarized
whole language versus Fon
And in all the research we've done, we've seen phonics as absolutely necessary, non-negotiable.
But it's only one part of many elements that teachers have to teach.
And this dichotomization of phonics versus whole language is where the college faculty really tried to beat us up with.
You know, you're kill and drill phonics, you're, you know, a redneck, you're, you're, you're, you're,
whatever it may be, and I was unable to explain well enough to say, you know, when kids are
learning to read, they have to know the alphabet, the sound structure, they have to have
vocabulary, they have to have reading fluency, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And that's what the National Reading Panel showed.
Reading is a multi-competential task.
You don't just teach one skill, particularly phonics, because it's general.
ability, it's an on-road. It gives you the on-road into more fluent reading and stuff.
So to answer your question, you know, I had people come up to me at conferences, and, you know,
the one thing that helped me is I said, well, at least they're not shooting at me.
And that's the way I was able to handle it, basically.
Okay, so reading first fell apart, long story, but by 2008, 2009, it was dead.
And so that was good news for you.
So then, so tell me like what, okay, so first, Margaret, when did you begin to take seriously this body of research?
Like, when did you decide to be like, oh, I'll take more of a peek at that?
After No Child Left Behind ended, and things were.
in my mind, we're kind of opening up where there was more freedom to be able to teach in the way that
you would want to teach in large urban districts. Oakland Unified dropped open court, and they were
starting a new initiative. And I wanted to be part of it because it was the kind of instruction that I knew.
So it was a balanced literacy initiative. I never had that word attached to it before, but I understood
the practices that were in it. And so I moved to that district, joined as a literacy coach, and as a reading
interventionist. And I remembered that I had wanted to work in a hard-to-saf school. So I decided to work
in Oakland's lowest performing school where there were two to three percent of students were
proficient in reading. And I was like kind of comforted myself. I told myself, like, I'm a good
teacher. Like, I know how to how to set things up in a way that will make this place a really
lovely spot for kids to learn to read and failed miserably. And, and, you know, and, and, you know,
And I remember at one point, I was doing all of these tests on students.
They were supposed to read level texts out loud to me so I could determine their reading level.
And they couldn't read.
And I just kept trying.
And at one point, I pulled a little girl to come and read with me.
And at some point, she was just like, it's really hard.
And I asked her, what's so hard about it?
And she said the words.
And I realized that was the thing I didn't know how to help her with.
And I had told myself through teacher credentialing and then through the first 10 years of my career that my first grade writing journal was evidence that something magic happens, that kids just sort of understand how to make sense of the letters on the page and learn how to pronounce those words.
Because it happened for me.
It happens for most people.
It must just unfold in this way that's natural.
And then I was looking at my school and I was like, it's not happening natural.
And there's something wrong here. So I'm a little embarrassed to admit that I ended up Googling, like, what percentage of kids can be taught how to read? Because I really didn't know. Like, I knew two to three percent wasn't reasonable, but like what was reasonable? What should I be shooting for? And I found this publication teaching reading is rocket science in which Dr. Louisa Mote said 95% of students can be taught to read at a level limited only by their listening.
name comprehension. And like 95% just flored me. That wasn't even what was happening at my
high performing school. So I knew I needed to try to figure something out. And I read the citations
at the bottom of the article. And I was like, okay, I'm downloading every single one of those
that I can find. I'll read those articles and then read the citations and those articles. And I was
trying to make sense of things. And I realized that the instruction that I had been doing was rooted in
whole language. And I hadn't realized that. Because we were teaching.
phoenix. We just weren't doing it in a systematic way. And I think now when I look back on it,
it was really hard to get that information. I kept hitting a lot of paywalls, like teachers don't
have access to scientific publications. There was no reading league at that time. There was no
sold a story at that time. There was no support for teachers and trying to make sense of it.
So I needed to try to sift through it on my own. And what was most helpful was being able to see
what was being described in the research in my students. I could see them like what was unfolding
in their reading was exactly what had been described by researchers as these stages of or phases
of development. Interesting. So how did the two of you meet? I was working on an article with
Claude Goldenberg and we were writing about like the conflict that was happening. And I
And at some point in time, I said to him, like, well, we don't want another reading first if the government gets involved.
And he was like, why not?
And at some point, it became very clear to me that I did not know what reading first was.
Because Claude was like, let's, what do you think about trying to get a hold of read?
We'll Zoom with him.
And you can ask him your questions and stuff.
And we can learn whether or not reading first is a thing that we would want to have replicated.
And I was kind of nervous, but I figured, sure, let's do it.
And I expected to be talked at, to be told all of the things that I didn't understand and why,
or for there to be frustration about this initiative that I had been so resistant to.
And that wasn't how the conversation unfolded at all.
What do you remember?
Well, I do remember Claude and Margaret calling, and Margaret.
had great questions, and I was listening hard to her and just noticing how conscientious,
how dedicated she was.
She really seriously wanted to know, for example, what reading first was about.
She wanted to know whether or not it was implemented well in some cases.
And I think I asked her, you know, what was it about reading first?
or in CLB, that was problematic for you.
And, you know, she kind of blew me away
because she said, you know, teachers were not involved
in any of the planning for any of these legislative initiatives.
They're the ones in the classrooms.
And I began to think, did I involve any teachers,
bring them into NIH, get their,
points of view, ask them what questions they would like to see answered. I didn't do that with
leaders, building level leaders, state superintendents, and I didn't do that with College of Ed
faculty. And so there was this very large lacuna between, you know, what I thought would help
teachers not having the wherewithal to know that I wasn't invested.
them at all and what we were trying to do.
And it comes back to something Margaret and I talk about all the time, and that is we don't
have a common language in education so that, you know, I am continually, and I think
Margaret is too, talking with people about how to read and how do you teach reading.
We're using a vocabulary based on science, but colleges of education.
still prepare teachers devoid of that knowledge.
And for any profession, and I think we'll talk about this later,
the one hallmark of problem solving in a profession
is a common professional language and shared knowledge.
How was Margaret supposed to share the knowledge
if I did not ask teachers to let me know what it was
that's difficult in their teaching, what would they like to see answered, and how in the world
will they take this research and implement it in chaotic environments in the real world?
I remember one of the things that I asked you was, was reading first actually all about
trying to get three-kewing out of our curriculum and out of our classroom instruction?
and you said yes.
And I was like, well, then why didn't you just tell us that?
And do you remember what you said?
Yeah, I think I said I didn't feel comfortable telling teachers that what they were doing was wrong,
that I thought once they heard about the research, then they would pick it up something like.
Yeah, and it was just this idea that you didn't tell us what we were doing wasn't working
because that would be disrespectful because you wanted to, you know, to have us come to this realization
and if we do something more effective, then we'll just let those old practices go. And I think
one of the things that was so striking to me about my perception of reading first and of no child
left behind was it's disrespect for teachers. And then to realize actually there was a lack of
clear messaging because of respect for teachers. So interesting, yeah. Yeah, I mean, as I think you know
what three queuing refers to, but that's sort of what's at the core of sold a story, is I think
it's so admirable and interesting that your assumption was if we put good information out
there, that will be taken up. And we won't have to tell people they're doing something wrong
because that will be disrespectful. And instead, all this barrage of information was seen as,
what are they doing? They're taking away of a professional identity and not willing to say,
oh, there was something inaccurate here at the core. And that was what I saw with help from
Margaret. And then I was like, well, we need to reveal that in this podcast because maybe if we can
reveal that, we can get to the good information. And I do think some of that's happening.
Although there still is this question, I think, of professional shared knowledge. And I still think
this is at the core of things that are still controversial and difficult. So I want to just talk
about a few terms. And then we'll talk a little bit about where we are now and then we'll turn it
over for questions. But one term that I see used a lot is explicit, explicit teaching, explicit
instruction. And I'm really curious, what is a teacher's view or what was your view? Like,
what does that mean to a teacher? What does it mean to a scientist? And where's the difference?
Well, so what it used to mean to me was that the ideal version of teaching is you give kids the
opportunity to discover things on their own. They are constructing their own knowledge through
their own experience in the classroom and outside in the world. And so in order to make that
constructivist view happen, the teacher needs to talk as little as possible. We were taught to
believe like the sage on the stage. I'm looking at where we are right now. It's like that's a bad thing.
And so what I had understood of explicit instruction is if you tell kids something directly,
If you say something like, if there's an E at the end of the word, the vowel often is long, that that was explicit instruction because it was telling kids something up front.
They weren't getting the opportunity to discover that on their own.
And what I had been trained in was like you want to minimize that telling as much as possible so that authentic learning can happen.
And I think one of the things you said to me too is it's like you give good clear directions and then you set the kids off to do their like,
make it very clear what they're supposed to do, and then they go do it.
Yes, yes.
So that was previously what I had thought explicit meant.
That is not actually.
Yeah, what did you mean by it?
Well, Joe Torgason at Florida State wrote a great line.
He said, explicit instruction is leaving nothing to chance.
Don't leave anything to chance, even if you think some things will be picked up automatically.
everything needs to be pinpointed for the youngster well-defined what you'd like the child to do the kind of responses that you would like the child to indicate what they're learning again it's kind of common sense to be able to teach and i this is teacher directed rather than child directed and the teacher is setting very clear steps for the young
youngster. And as they watch the child master or have difficulty with those steps, they come back
and reteach. And they're measuring every step of the way. Does the youngster understand? Are they
applying it to the next concept? If any one of you has ever taken algebra and been just overwhelmed
by the complexity of algebra, all my algebra teachers were holding.
language algebra teachers. I was lost. I would have loved explicit direct instruction.
So our studies, importantly, were showing that it was a no-brainer. In our clinical trials,
we were showing that direct systematic instruction, where the content is presented clearly
and in smaller segments, reviewed for proficiency, re-taught if necessary, and moved on.
Now, it sounds like a lockstep kind of thing, but it's really not that this is where we get into the
complexity of what a teacher has to do. And when you're looking at explicit instruction,
it's not that they go, here's A, here's B, here's C, here's D. It's that they're that they're
They teach all of the concepts and integrate as they go along.
You know, it's not rote or whatever.
It's clear.
You're making things clear for these youngsters.
But it's a lot more than just phonics, phonemic awareness, vocabulary, and all of that kind of stuff.
Check, check, check, it'll all come together.
Yeah, it doesn't happen.
So we'll talk a little bit about that.
Okay, so yeah, what I want to do is just give them an opportunity.
to tell you a little bit about what they each do in their life to try to do this now,
get research into practice, and then we're going to turn it over for your questions.
So Margaret, I mentioned, has this thing called The Right to Read Project.
So tell us a little bit about what it is and what you do.
So the idea is that if we can get researchers and teachers and activists together
to be able to figure out how to be of use to one another,
then we can continue moving things down the road in a better direction.
And so one of the things that I had gotten really,
interested in was I got pretty good at teaching foundational skills. A lot of evidence-based,
a lot of good tests, a lot of things that I knew how to do with explicit instruction. But the big
question for me, if we go back to the 95% of kids can be taught to read at a level limited only by
their language comprehensible, how do I make sure that upper limit is as high as possible? How do I
teach vocabulary? How do I teach writing? How do I teach academic discussion? All of those things.
So I've partnered with a researcher at a Massachusetts General Hospital, Tiffany Hogan.
And we have a research to practice partnership where, again, I realized something that I should have known about that I didn't, was this huge governmental investment in the Reading for Understanding initiative.
And I think Jimmy Kim had done that.
Yeah, he was our last speaker in the series. You can watch it on YouTube.
Yep. I knew all about the science of reading. I thought and somehow did not know about that.
So she was explaining to me about the research that they had conducted and that one of the results of it was actually a curriculum.
And so we started implementing that curriculum at my school.
And again, just as we're talking about where things fall apart, from her perspective as a researcher, was if we create really great lesson plans that allow kids to be able to learn language effectively, teachers are going to be clamoring for this.
We'll put it up on a website, open access for all teachers to find, and none of us found.
So, yes, so we're working on trying to implement evidence-based language and writing instruction.
Okay, and so, Reed, let's talk a little bit about what you're doing now.
Well, I've been trying to figure out, and I get a great deal for Margaret in figuring this out,
is what are the conditions that have to be in place to put,
effective programs in classrooms to teach kids to read.
The one word that pops up in my mind is it's complex.
It's extremely complex and we have to take in that reality.
Nothing really sticks well and implements well if the leadership in the district has a different language of instruction.
than his or her teachers.
Leaders and teachers, as we're designing new programs,
need to be trained together in many ways.
And Margaret has great examples of her principle.
In addition to leadership,
that leader has to be compassionate.
A lot of his teachers are going to feel bad
about having to change their programs.
so a leader has to know their stuff has to be technically astute has to have the deep knowledge
and has to have the common language with which to communicate with their teachers with their
parents and so on now all of this obviously says whoa we've got to prepare people differently
we've got to create awareness at higher ed levels and professional development
that drives home in this fact that any profession has this common language and collaborative
foundation, any of them. We don't as a profession.
Is we? Scientists or education? Education. Education. And that's what makes it difficult.
And, you know, the thing is that it's going to take a large,
amount of courage and stamina and brains to bring this around.
So if Emily says, do we know or Margaret already knows, what are the critical conditions,
we have a good handle on those.
But it will require the revamping of preparation of teachers, preparation of leaders.
It will require different emphases.
and it will require the building of a profession.
After a break, we'll be back to take questions from the audience.
Hey, Solda Story fans.
One of the things about making a podcast is that we don't actually know that much about our listeners.
We know there are a lot of you, but we're curious to know more about who you are, how you found the show, and how you're using it.
So we made a brief survey.
It would mean a lot to me if you would take a few minutes to fill it out.
And it will help the Solda Story team as we're putting together our second season.
Go to soldastory.org slash survey or click on the link in the show notes.
Now, here's the Q&A.
Our first question came from an attorney.
It was about reading instruction for middle and high school students who are still struggling.
I have a special education law firm.
and we tend to get clients that bring their children in middle school and high school
when they're no longer learning to read but they're reading to learn and the children are having
school refusal, school anxiety, depression and anxiety. Oftentimes the IEP teams do not want
to teach reading in middle school and high school. They don't have reading classes and so they
want to accommodate instead of teach.
Do you have a good evidence-based response for an IEP team that wants to accommodate
and instead of teaching to read?
Well, let's just take the first question.
Is there evidence-based information that looks at older kids, high school, junior high,
high school to read yes there's a substantial amount of information that older kids can master
all of the fundamental principles of learning how to read but then we are in an environment
that has to prioritize some things we're in environments where status quo has always said it's
much more important to focus on everybody receiving all the content
information that is in the state standards, for instance.
So Margaret knows more about this than I do.
I'll just say that the evidence, if we want older kids to learn to read or adults to learn
to read, we know how to do that.
I would just add to it that often what's coming as resistance is a lack of belief that
it's possible and not having somebody who's available to deliver those services.
and the oldest struggling readers that I've taught were in sixth grade.
And I remember at one point one of the kids was like,
ow, why didn't they just tell us this?
It's like, yeah.
It's just what the relief is when you realize like,
oh, some information was withheld from me,
maybe not on purpose.
Like people didn't know what to give it to me.
But now that I know it,
I can actually apply it and go through the laborious process
of trying to make sense of this code.
but you really have to have the champion teacher who wants to deliver that instruction
and is capable of doing it in order for the system to say, we'll allow the minutes for it.
I mean, you can really see the dilemma because the argument that they need access to the content
is a very good argument.
And so I think the question there becomes, as Margaret said, who's going to deliver their instruction
at what time of the day with what materials or program or something?
Is it going to be done well or is it going to be a waste of the kid's time?
I mean, you know, and so obviously I think what we know is that kids,
can learn to read and be taught to read,
that there's also a real priority
on making sure that all kids are in grade-level work,
and there are really good reasons for that.
But I was actually just interviewing someone the other day
who I was talking to about this,
and she's like, you know, if I have a fifth-grader who can't read,
I'm not actually going to put them in grade-level work yet
because it's unethical that they can't read,
and I'm going to teach them how to read first,
and then we're going to get them caught up in the grade-level work.
But it's just whether or not you can do that.
You know, I think many schools have failed at that.
So anyway, we need to go on to the next person who has the mic.
Okay.
Thank you so much.
This whole story is really fascinating me because where I work, mostly in developing countries,
we have proliferation of research-based practices, emerging practices,
and listening to what happened in the U.S. comes with fear and also anxiety,
and shock too, that it makes me think, like, maybe in the space where we work.
we may not successfully diagnose where the core problems may exist.
So I want to understand in respect, what was happening in the space
and what became the triggering point for people to start admit and see,
hey, something is not right.
Let's look at this all together.
I'm asking this because in places where I work, I think we may also go through the same problem.
the same problems.
Yeah, the evidence is out there, but is it being used?
Is it understood?
Yeah, I really understand the dynamics.
So how we can avoid the mistake that happened in this space elsewhere?
Great questions, by the way, everybody.
We know how to take care of that problem in ideal settings.
Early identification and early intervention is,
extremely important. Many schools don't have that. When assessments are done in whatever grade
and you're looking at tier one instruction, the types of instruction provided there must be aligned
with the instruction from any intervention, from any curriculum. Kids go from one way of understanding
certain concepts being taught another way in another classroom. That's what the science.
of reading tries to do is provide equity so kids get the same expert instruction and the right
content no matter what class or teacher they have and it does not have to be that way.
I do feel like we need to be clear on what the goal is because for a lot of teachers the goal
is I need to provide the best 180 days of instruction I can do on my own in my classroom with
my door closed and the kids who are in front of me.
And any teacher who's approaching it that way probably is doing that as the result of receiving training that has told them that that's the best thing to do.
But if we rethink our profession as being part of a coherent experience for kids, so if I'm a second grade teacher, I need to build on the instruction of Kinder and First and get them ready for third grade, then all of a sudden I need to be in alignment with my colleagues, which means my school needs to be in alignment.
And then my school has a lot of kids who come and go. We lose between 21 and 26 percent of our students each year. So that means we need all of the schools around us to have similar instructions so that if the kids coming or going, they don't lose any time. And so then you start looking at it as like we need a systems approach. And that's very different than each teacher taking care of their own business and their own small section of that piece. It's hard to convince teachers to be willing to take that broader perspective because we've been failed to.
by a dysfunctional system so many times
that we want to control just the parts that we can control.
And it's so overwhelming, because think of how big
you're in the state of California,
which is like its own country.
I mean, just think about just the levels here
of like trying to get teachers in a school
to do the same thing, a school district,
a state, a country,
given what's going on.
And that's impossible unless the...
Unless...
Unless...
Unless the leadership, the teachers, all the specialists are on the same page and understand what it takes to learn to read.
And they can explain it to you.
What goes wrong when some of these kids aren't learning to read and explain that to you?
And how can we prevent it and explain that to you and then how we can remediate it?
But I think partly at the core of your question is how do you convince you?
convince everyone that that is what we should be doing.
Be like, how do you get everyone to agree?
Like, we are going to agree to agree on how we are doing all of this so we can save time
with everyone, just the evidence being out there and people taking it up maybe or maybe
not or whatever.
Okay, I think we have time for one more question in the back.
Thank you for a wonderful conversation.
I'd love to hear how you both think about the balance or tension between standard
And personalization. So if you think of children's brains and classrooms and environments, there'll be some features that are common and some features that vary. Or is personalization a luxury given the real world tensions that you've just been talking about?
From the teacher's perspective, I think too often the push is fidelity to a program. And so you were supposed to do that program to fidelity and then somehow it stops there. And any teacher will tell you like that doesn't work for all kids. You need to be able to take.
tailor it a bit. But what we need to strive for is to be able to know the program so well that
we know what the essential ingredients are so that we can then tailor it for the kids who need
more. So more explicit instruction, more opportunities for practice, more support with
integration of the things that we're teaching. So I think one of the things that is important
is figuring out how we can use effective programs as the baseline. And then we're using our
professional judgment, to go beyond that to make sure that no kids slipped through the cracks.
But what's your perspective on it?
Right. I think if we have conditions in place where teachers have been provided the support
to look at each kid individually, to be able to assess in real time how that youngster is
responding to elements of the program, to then have the technical and professional
knowledge to adjust the instruction, as Margaret does and talks about, then I think you can
you know, be individualized for children, but also have the consistency built into scientifically
based instruction.
One of the things that struck me as we were looking at my embarrassing philosophy of
education was that it had a thing about like every child learns differently, and I think
that that's a misconception that a lot of teachers have where we think every child needs
individualized instruction when in fact we could do something that would help almost all kids and
then we need to individualize from there actually makes the teacher's job much easier when you
realize that human brains are more similar to each other than they are different and therefore
we don't have to create these tailored lesson plans to every single one of the kids for every single
thing. But I do think that that gets out a very central tension that's been there for a long time,
this idea that we need to personalize it for every kid.
And if you push back about that, you're somehow evil,
like you wouldn't want my child to have personalized instruction.
And I think a really important distinction here is every child is different.
They're different little human beings.
But their brains are more alike than they are not alike.
And it's an impossible task to think we are making teaching an impossible profession.
If you have 25 students and you have to individualize instruction for all of them,
that's not doable.
And it's not necessary.
To wrap up our conversation, I asked Reed and Margaret if they feel hopeful about the next chapter of teaching reading in America.
One of the things that's giving me hope is that individual states are taking the leadership in putting in place legislation, something that I was initially opposed to.
But I'm looking at states with that legislation, really taking advantage of the expertise.
of their teachers, of their own talents, and then of the science.
And, you know, what these states are realizing is that everything is in alignment.
From the legislature down, everything being recommended is understood at every level.
And I think that's why these states are really producing.
gains in reading.
I always am hesitant about states getting the wrong information
or people going back to this phonics balance literacy nonsense.
But you've got your five states where things are working,
but then there's a lot of states that have just passed a law
and maybe a lot of, like one of the things that's very clear from your answer is it's about
a lot more than passing a law.
There's a lot of other things that have to take place.
And as we learned from Kerry Wright in Mississippi,
they changed their law several times, and then you're in the state of California, which is a whole
story of its own. So what's your thought on where we are, Margaret? Are you hopeful? Sometimes
I'm really hopeful because I think to myself, like, we've already invested the first billion
dollars into this problem. We've actually learned a whole lot. There's a lot of institutional
wisdom, historical knowledge about what has worked and hasn't worked in previous initiatives.
So when I'm feeling optimistic, I look at that glass and I think it's pretty full.
And then there's other times when I think, like, I don't know how we're going to span this last
mile, if that's what you want to call it, without a deep commitment to science and without a deep
like focus on implementation.
And I worry that the cuts to science that are happening now, I worry about the, like,
fights that are going to happen with teachers unions getting riled up because I'll
autonomy is going to get taken away, that this political environment is so inflamed.
What I hope for is for us to be able to figure out we are almost there.
What is it going to take to get all the way there?
And it's going to take a whole lot of fiercely determined people to do that.
Thank you for coming out of retirement to try to help us with us.
We need you.
Yeah, Reed had retired from all of this because this is bruising work.
But he came back and here he is.
So thank you, and then mostly thank all of you.
There's more to come on Solda Story.
As I mentioned at the beginning of this episode,
we're working on season two right now.
It goes beyond reading and touches on a lot of things we've discussed in this episode.
Keep following Solda Story in your podcast app so you don't miss it.
This episode was recorded live at Planet Word, a museum in Washington, D.C.
It's part of the Eyes on Reading series.
There are a bunch of other events in this series, and there are videos available on the Planet Word YouTube channel.
You can also find links at solda story.org.
This episode was produced by Olivia Chilcote and edited by Curtis Gilbert.
Our digital editor is Andy Cruz, final mastering by Derek Ramirez.
Our theme music is by Wonderly.
Our executive editor is Jane Helmke.
Special thanks to Mark.
Margaret Goldberg and Reed Lion.
I'm Emily Hanford.
Leadership support for Solda Story comes from Hollyhawk Foundation and Oak Foundation.
Support also comes from Ivis Group, Esther A. and Joseph Klingenstein Fund,
Kenneth Raynan Foundation, Wendy and Stephen Gall,
and the listeners of American Public Media.
