69传媒

Special Report
69传媒 & Literacy

Ala. 69传媒 Intervention Stands Test of Time

By Stephen Sawchuk 鈥 May 11, 2015 12 min read
Kindergartners Jaylen Rivers, Jalisha Lee, and KenmaJ Shell, left to right, practice literacy skills with their teacher, Diane Daniel, at Southside Primary School in Selma, Ala. Educators credit teacher professional development for the state鈥檚 reading gains.
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Diane Daniel鈥檚 classroom here at Southside Primary School is a steady hum of productive activity.

Some of her kindergartners are playing word games on computers; others are chatting as they complete an exercise on the reading rug, and a handful are busily writing, some already using full sentences that incorporate words about trains鈥"engine,鈥 鈥減assenger"鈥攖hat Ms. Daniel has hung up on one of her corkboards.

The teacher herself is in a small group, reading a short book out loud with her pupils. As they take turns reading, she intervenes occasionally, helping them sound out a word here and there, at other points pushing her young charges to think beyond the page鈥攖o make inferences based on context and to reason out what might happen next in the story.

鈥淚 will take that little book and have a thousand questions for them before they finish,鈥 Ms. Daniel said.

Ms. Daniel鈥檚 evident skill in reading instruction, which enables her to cater to pupils鈥 varied learning needs, speaks directly to the central aim of the Alabama 69传媒 Initiative. The program, launched 17 years ago in response to poor literacy scores, aspires to give all the state鈥檚 students an equal opportunity to learn the fundamentals of reading and writing.

In particular, the ARI aims to help students of color from disadvantaged families, like most at this K-2 school in Dallas County. As if to remind visitors of the state鈥檚 history of inequality, Southside Primary sits minutes from the Edmund Pettus Bridge, the site of a brutal 1965 attack on civil rights marchers.

Unlike many early-reading efforts, the ARI is not a prescribed curriculum package or pedagogical framework. At heart, it is a statewide professional-development initiative that uses specially selected and trained teachers, deemed building coaches, to imbue research-based reading instruction in classrooms across the state.

Alabama officials credit the initiative with dramatically boosting state scores in 4th grade reading on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, often called 鈥渢he nation鈥檚 report card.鈥 From 2002 to 2011, Alabama鈥檚 4th graders鈥 scores went from well below par to statistically indistinguishable from the national average on the NAEP reading scale, where they have stayed since. Racial achievement gaps in the scores have also narrowed.

鈥淎labama has made a huge commitment to literacy, and we feel that we鈥檝e gotten a return on our investment,鈥 said Judy Stone, an Alabama education department official who serves as the state鈥檚 ARI coordinator.

From a research perspective, it鈥檚 difficult to link increases in NAEP scores to any one policy or instructional change. But anecdotally, the ARI鈥檚 supporters say the initiative has systematically reshaped teacher practice in the early grades in a way that has had a clear impact on pupils鈥 reading development.

Today, the ARI continues to offer lessons on literacy instruction, even as it faces its biggest challenges yet: heavier demands on the coaches, who are now also working in the upper grades, coupled with a period of financial belt-tightening.

Coaching Teachers

Teachers are the engine of the Alabama 69传媒 Initiative. More than 95 percent of the program鈥檚 current $48 million annual budget is spent to pay for some 750 coaches, all former classroom educators, who work in schools and have day-to-day contact with reading teachers. They鈥檙e charged with observing teachers and modeling lessons, providing feedback, and devising plans to improve each teacher鈥檚 instructional effectiveness.

In addition to the building-level coaches are the 68 regional coaches, who debrief the building coaches and craft larger-scale intervention plans as necessary.

On a day-to-day basis, the ARI is best described as a collaborative exercise in solving instructional problems in reading classrooms.

When they observe, the coaches aren鈥檛 principally focused on how teachers deliver their content. Instead, they track how the students are faring, including by monitoring their levels of engagement in class activities, their verbal interactions with peers, and their work products.

One day after spring break last school year, for example, Southside鈥檚 building coach, Christy Mathiews, determined after a morning鈥檚 walk-through that she鈥檇 like to see better student engagement in the 1st grade classes.

Alabama鈥檚 69传媒 Gains

On the National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, 鈥堿labama鈥檚 4th grade students鈥 reading performance rose from well below average to statistically indistinguishable from the national average by 2011 and it has stayed there since. That means its students have outperformed those in other states with similarly high rates of child poverty, including California, Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, and New Mexico.

Alabama鈥檚 black and Hispanic 4th graders have caught up with their national counterparts as well.

State test-score data from Dallas County, where Southside Primary School is located, showed strong gains as well, particularly among black students.

Alabama Grade 4 NAEP 69传媒 Scores

BRIC ARCHIVE

Percent of Dallas County Grade 4 69传媒 鈥楨xceeding Expectations鈥 on the Alabama 69传媒 Test

BRIC ARCHIVE

Sources: NAEP; Alabama Department of Education

In a debriefing session, the regional coach for the district, Allison Kelley, gave her some advice on addressing the problem. 鈥淧ick a small number of classes to visit the rest of the week and collect data about how many are in whole group versus small group,鈥 Ms. Kelley said. Small groups are an important part of early literacy in Alabama, since they help facilitate techniques such as conversations, 鈥渢urn and talk,鈥 and paired reading, all ways of ensuring all students remain engaged with language and on task.

Ms. Kelley then shared her own observation. Perusing pupils鈥 notebooks in one 1st grade classroom, she saw evidence of student writing, but not a lot of feedback on that writing from the teacher.

鈥淚 think you may want to have that conversation with all of [the teachers],鈥 she told Ms. Mathiews.

Ms. Mathiews will use the evidence they鈥檝e discussed when meeting with each teacher鈥攁 technique that makes what can be delicate conversations about instruction more objective and, therefore, supportive rather than punitive.

As the coaches visit classrooms, they will sometimes briefly step in alongside the classroom teacher to provide a pedagogical refresher. During a separate walk-through at Reeltown High School, a K-12 school in rural Tallapoosa County, Vickie Chappelle, one of 11 ARI regional directors, watched as one 1st grade teacher conducted a read-aloud with the children in her small group.

A page or two in, Ms. Chappelle asked the pupils: 鈥淐an you change your voices a little more when you read?鈥 She demonstrated, the timbre of her voice rising at the end of an interrogative sentence. Soon, five little voices eagerly chirped along with her. (69传媒 with expression, experts say, is an important aspect of fluency instruction that builds children鈥檚 awareness of syntax.)

Even small issues warrant coaches鈥 attention. During its walk-though, the ARI team visiting Reeltown noted that several teachers reviewing initial sound-letter correspondence inserted an 鈥渦h鈥 sound known as a 鈥渟chwa鈥 in sounding out words beginning with a hard consonant鈥攁n artifact of the Southern drawl. It鈥檚 a seemingly nitpicky detail, but for a struggling reader, that extra sound can get in the way of later language development, causing him or her to spell 鈥渃at鈥 as 鈥渃u-at,鈥 for instance.

The ARI team conferred briefly, and ultimately, decided that it鈥檚 a topic for the school鈥檚 building coach, Regina Porter, to address at the school鈥檚 next grade-level meeting.

Borrowing From Football

The ARI started in 1998 partly out of the sheer force of will of Katherine Mitchell, a former Alabama education department official who is still spoken of in glowing terms by ARI staff.

With state officials from the governor on down desperate to improve the state鈥檚 reading scores, Ms. Mitchell cobbled together $1.5 million in initial support for a new instructional initiative from both conservative philanthropies and the Alabama Education Association, among others鈥攅nough to finance implementation in 16 initial schools.

Possessed with a politician鈥檚 knack for generating appeal, Ms. Mitchell carefully avoided the term 鈥渓iteracy鈥 in favor of the more approachable 鈥渞eading鈥 in naming the program. And to describe the role of the teacher trainers, she selected a term dear to Alabamans鈥 hearts鈥攐ne that has since become nearly ubiquitous in K-12 education.

鈥淔rankly, I chose 鈥榗oach鈥 because Alabama is a football state,鈥 said Ms. Mitchell, now retired, from her Atlanta home. 鈥淚 think it is the key. These teachers have got an advocate for them in the building.鈥

Lawmakers from both political parties threw their support behind the program, and for the 1999-2000 school year, the legislature set aside funds to begin expanding it statewide.

The ARI predates the influential 2000 National 69传媒 Panel report, but its foundational elements are similar. They include systematic and explicit instruction in phonics and phonemic awareness, alongside vocabulary and comprehension.

The early days of the ARI were rocky, Ms. Mitchell acknowledged. With schools still reeling from the 鈥渞eading wars鈥 over the appropriate balance of instruction in word-level alphabetics with less systematic, so-called whole-language approaches, she found just one professor among the state鈥檚 teacher colleges who had a background in phonics. And because of variations in curricular quality鈥擜labama permits districts to choose their textbooks鈥攔eading coaches dragged suitcases of their own materials to their schools.

Teachers were initially resistant, demanding to know why they were being observed. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 tell you how many days I came home crying,鈥 said Ms. Kelley, the Dallas County regional coach.

Today, coaching still isn鈥檛 uniformly embraced, but it has gained currency with the state鈥檚 teaching force, partly because all the building coaches have teaching experience, usually many years of it.

Southside鈥檚 Ms. Daniel said the program has been invaluable to her. When she entered teaching, kindergarten literacy rarely went further than ensuring pupils could recognize all 26 letters of the alphabet by the end of the year.

Nearly every technique she uses now to teach more advanced reading and writing skills was honed through the ARI鈥檚 coaching system.

鈥淚 get to look at the children鈥檚 strengths and weaknesses, and I鈥檓 driven by that,鈥 Ms. Daniel said.

If the ARI remains obscure outside the state, that may be partly because its features have been extensively copied elsewhere.

After Alabama began using reading coaches, many other states followed suit, with varying degrees of success, under the $1 billion-a-year federal 69传媒 First program. Alabama was also among the first states to use a 90-minute reading block in K-3 schools and to require use of a tool to gauge growth in students鈥 decoding skills and oral fluency.

Evolving Focus

Even today, the program鈥檚 structure remains influential. An early evaluator of the ARI for the state education department, Ed Moscovitch, now runs the Bay State 69传媒 Institute, a nonprofit that uses a similar teacher-coaching model to improve reading in 44 schools in Massachusetts. When holding meetings to discuss student data, for instance, principals and coaches both celebrate the gains of students who have improved and strategize to help those who are still struggling.

鈥淭he approach we take to the meetings comes right out of their script,鈥 Mr. Moscovitch said of the ARI. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 be successful changing adult behavior if you鈥檙e looking down on teachers. You have to get them to trust you, to like you, and to have confidence in you.鈥

Alabama鈥檚 consistency of approach seems to be one factor in the ARI鈥檚 success, even as attention to reading in other states has varied or waned. The ARI鈥檚 staff has maintained the program鈥檚 core features, while working to keep its curriculum current and responsive to lessons learned.

There鈥檚 a general consensus, for example, that external pressure initially caused some schools to focus too heavily on discrete skills such as oral fluency. Local newspapers had a habit of printing schools鈥 performance on the Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills, or DIBELS, the progress-monitoring tool that until recently all schools in the state were required to use.

鈥淲e focused a lot on the system of print,鈥 said Timothy Cobb, a regional coach in Tallapoosa County. 鈥淏ut we didn鈥檛 spend as much time on the system of language and the system of meaning.鈥

Nowadays, DIBELS鈥攚hich had come under criticism for its focus on such skills as nonsense-word fluency鈥攊s no longer mandated, and some schools have adopted monitoring tools with more-sophisticated comprehension measures. Program materials are incorporating insights from literacy scholars like E.D. Hirsch that emphasize the importance of content-rich reading materials to build students鈥 background knowledge and comprehension.

Take vocabulary instruction, which at one point was taught largely in isolation.

鈥淲e used to throw words on the board, and kids would study them,鈥 said Daphne McClendon, a coach in the 11,000-student Elmore district. 鈥淏ut the vocabulary needs to be relevant to what they鈥檙e talking about, so it鈥檚 not a random list of words they need to know for a test.鈥

The ARI has also become the state鈥檚 front-line approach to providing professional development on the Alabama College & Career-Ready Standards for English/language arts, its version of the Common Core State Standards. In recent months, the ARI coaches have worked with teachers on key elements of the standards, including text complexity, evidence-based writing, and focusing on greater content rigor.

Meeting New Standards

鈥淭eachers in the lower grades tend to simplify, so that students can understand the concept,鈥 said Ms. Stone of the state education department, 鈥渂ut that doesn鈥檛 pay off for us if they don鈥檛 acquire the language to talk about those concepts.鈥

As the ARI begins to approach its 20th year, its supporters are doing some soul-searching about where the initiative needs to go next.

Partially in response to the demand of the new academic standards, the state education department, in 2012-13, expanded the reading coaches鈥 work to include secondary grades as well. There are some benefits to the new arrangement, Alabama officials say. Since the coaches are working across subject areas in secondary schools, it gives currency to the idea enshrined in the new academic standards that literacy development at the secondary level is the responsibility of all teachers, not just those teaching English/language arts.

But there are legitimate worries, too, about whether expanding the initiative鈥檚 scope risks overtaxing the instructional coaches.

鈥淚鈥檒l be honest with you: It can be overwhelming. When I was in K-3, I could get in there, and I knew my babies,鈥 said Ms. Porter, the building coach at Reeltown. Coaching secondary-level teachers requires a different approach, she said: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 go in and pretend in any way to be an expert in their content, but I do work on how to incorporate small groups and boost student engagement.鈥

The demand on the coaches is increasing even as resources are scarcer. Funded at a height of $64 million in fiscal 2008, the program was scaled back after the state was badly hit in the Great Recession. Each building once had its own reading coach; most now are split among schools.

State officials underscore that they are grateful to the state legislature for a continued appropriation for the ARI, but acknowledge that a fresh infusion could help balance the weight of all the new responsibilities. And they鈥檙e on tenterhooks waiting for the results of the most recent administration of the reading NAEP to appear this fall. In the 2013 administration, Alabama鈥檚 4th grade scores dropped slightly鈥攏ot enough to be statistically significant, but enough to be concerning. This fall鈥檚 results will be closely watched.

As Ms. Mitchell notes, literacy is a moving target: There will always be next year鈥檚 entering class, many of whom will need sustained support.

鈥淲e are not at the national average with wealth in our state, or with students鈥 experiences, or with exposure to language,鈥 Ms. Mitchell noted. 鈥淚t is very hard work.鈥

Alabama Grade 4 NAEP 69传媒 Scores | Create infographics

State Test-Score Trends in Dallas County | Create infographics

Coverage of 鈥渄eeper learning鈥 that will prepare students with the skills and knowledge needed to succeed in a rapidly changing world is supported in part by a grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, at . Education Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.
A version of this article appeared in the May 13, 2015 edition of Education Week as Alabama Coaches Up Literacy Lessons

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