At the beginning of 2020, Shelly Emann felt like her district was on the right track with reading instruction.
In the Madison public schools in New Jersey, where Emann works as a K-8 instructional coach, teachers in kindergarten and 1st grade had just started using a program that taught students the building blocks of reading in a systematic progression: how to identify the different words in sounds, how to match those sounds to letters, and how to use that knowledge to decode new words.
Emann hoped that this new system would head off some of the reading difficulties she had seen in her nearly two decades as a 4th grade teacher, working with many students who didn鈥檛 know how to read through harder words with multiple syllables.
But then, COVID-19 hit. 鈥淭hat threw us for a loop,鈥 Emann said.
Getting wiggly 5- and 6-year-olds to sit through phonics lessons on Zoom that spring was a losing battle. And then last school year, pandemic-adjusted schedules didn鈥檛 always leave enough time for K-2 teachers to pull together small groups of students for additional support. This year, the district is expanding the new reading program to 3rd grade, too, but supply-chain issues delayed the delivery of materials for the first few months of the school year.
Madison is far from unique. Over the past two years, many students across the country spent less face-to-face time with their teachers during a critical period of their reading development: the first few years of elementary school, in which students learn how to read words.
National studies of student-test scores during the 2020-21 year found that these students weren鈥檛 doing as well as their peers in years past. And now, some teachers and reading specialists say that they鈥檙e seeing more 4th, 5th, and 6th graders with reading difficulties than they used to.
Still, Emann feels good about the progress Madison is making. The elementary principals have worked together to create an intervention block for all kids in grades K-5, and the district has hired additional reading interventionists.
Just as importantly, she feels like the pandemic has finally amplified the message she鈥檚 tried to convey to her colleagues for years: Many older students in grades 4 and up have gaps in their foundational reading skills, too鈥攁nd that limits their ability to access grade-level work.
Now, the teachers she works with want to talk more about finding and fixing foundational skills gaps, because they鈥檙e trying to address learning loss, Emann said.
The pandemic has intensified some students鈥 reading difficulties
Older students struggling with reading is not a phenomenon new to the pandemic. In 2019, before COVID disrupted schools, scores from the National Assessment of Educational Progress showed that only 66 percent of 4th graders and 73 percent of 8th graders were at or above a 鈥渂asic鈥 level of proficiency in the subject.
But the turmoil over the past two years has resurfaced questions about exactly how best to get students up to speed, and it鈥檚 directed funding toward academic recovery. The pandemic also hit at a pivotal time for reading instruction: When the virus started to shut down schools in the spring of 2020, many states and districts were in the middle of a years-long push to align early-reading classes more closely to research-based practice.
69传媒 well is a complex process, involving lots of different skills like recognizing and understanding vocabulary or monitoring comprehension. But the building blocks of reading ability, the foundational skills, involve decoding the printed letters on the page into spoken words. If students can鈥檛 read words and fluently connect them into sentences, they won鈥檛 be able to understand what they鈥檙e reading.
Decades of studies have shown that explicitly and systematically teaching students which sounds represent which letters鈥攖eaching them phonics鈥攊s the most effective way to get them reading words. This happens in students鈥 first years of school, usually kindergarten through 2nd or 3rd grade. But as reporting from Education Week and other outlets has demonstrated, many elementary-teacher-preparation programs don鈥檛 teach their students how to deliver that kind of instruction.
As a result, teachers say, some students move on to higher grade levels with gaps in their ability to read words. Research bears this out: Many older students who have comprehension difficulties .
This reality flies in the face of the maxim that students 鈥渓earn to read鈥 in K-3 and then switch to 鈥渞ead to learn鈥 in older grades. In fact, as this research demonstrates, the issue is less clear-cut. 69传媒 who didn鈥檛 get enough practice with word-level reading will continue to struggle as the demands of content knowledge and comprehension ramp up.
The pandemic has only compounded this issue, widening the gaps between students who can read fluently and students who can鈥檛, said Tiffany Hogan, a professor at the MGH Institute of Health Professions in Boston and the director of the institute鈥檚 Speech and Language Literacy Lab.
鈥淭eachers are having to differentiate instruction in a way that they never have before. It鈥檚 a really Herculean task,鈥 she said.
What foundational-skills gaps look like in older readers
Foundational-skills gaps can show up differently for older students from how they do for younger ones, said Jeanne Wanzek, a professor of special education at Vanderbilt University. 鈥淢aybe they don鈥檛 have gaps in phonics and word recognition that might be more common in K-2, but they struggle with reading multisyllabic words and they don鈥檛 really have a strategy for that,鈥 she said.
That is the case for Jenna Madden鈥檚 3rd graders.
鈥淢ost of my students are able to decode a one-syllable word, but they have trouble with the 2nd grade material, where they have to decode multisyllable words,鈥 said Madden, who teaches in Emann鈥檚 district in New Jersey. 鈥淎nd now in 3rd grade, we鈥檙e seeing not only two-syllable words but words with three or four syllables in grade-level text.鈥
It鈥檚 also likely that students will have mastered some parts of the K-2 curriculum but not others. 鈥淭here鈥檚 often splintered skills,鈥 Wanzek said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just more complex, in terms of where their strengths are.鈥
Struggles with word reading and comprehension feed into each other, she added: 69传媒 who skip a lot of words because they can鈥檛 decode them will have a harder time understanding the text, applying comprehension strategies, and storing new knowledge. As students progress through the grades and must read more academic texts, they have to rely on more background knowledge and vocabulary鈥攊nformation they may not have, Wanzek said, if they had trouble reading related content in earlier grades.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e struggling at 4th or 5th grade or higher, it鈥檚 not going to be as simple as if you鈥檙e in kindergarten,鈥 Wanzek said. 鈥淥ften, it鈥檚 multiple components that need to be addressed, and we see in the older grades that these .鈥
Older students with word-reading difficulties do need support for those skills, Wanzek said. But on also find that can improve students鈥 reading ability. For example, teachers can show students how to paraphrase what they鈥檝e read or draw inferences based on information in the text and prior knowledge.
Madden, the 3rd grade teacher, makes it a priority to teach students grade-level skills and content, even as she also attends to the building blocks of reading.
鈥淓ven though I have students who are reading below grade level, it鈥檚 still important to expose them to grade-level text,鈥 she said.
How to address foundational skills without neglecting grade-level work
How schools address older students鈥 word-reading difficulties depends on what skills children already have.
For students who have some phonics skills and can decode short words, one is word study. This involves teaching students how to identify different syllables within words and how to read through multisyllabic words, but it also includes morphology: the study of the smallest units of meaning within words.
Morphology instruction teaches how to break up words like 鈥渦ntouchable鈥 into parts: the prefix 鈥渦n-,鈥 the root 鈥渢ouch,鈥 and the suffix 鈥-able.鈥 And it teaches the meaning of those parts, which research has shown can .
For students who need support in reading fluency, researchers recommend having students read passages aloud, with monitoring and feedback from a teacher.
This kind of supplemental instruction can be done in a separate intervention block. But it isn鈥檛 always necessary to break out these skills from whole-class teaching, Wanzek said. 鈥淭he good news is that we actually do know from previous research that you can make incredible gains in reading with older grades鈥攁s well as younger grades鈥攂y focusing on classroom instruction.鈥
That is the approach that Bayside Middle School in Virginia Beach, Va., is taking. The school has woven morphology and fluency instruction into whole-class lessons, said Rene Martinez, the 6th grade literacy coach at Bayside.
69传媒 who need more support than what鈥檚 offered in core classes spend additional time working with reading specialists on a digital supplemental program that addresses foundational skills. And students who struggle with decoding one-syllable words or letter recognition get time in small groups with reading specialists and interventionists.
Teachers are having to differentiate instruction in a way that they never have before. It鈥檚 a really Herculean task.
Many students struggled with grade-level work before the pandemic, and the shift in practice in the district isn鈥檛 a response to COVID alone, Martinez said. But the disruptions of the past few years have exacerbated students鈥 needs, she added.
During the 2020-21 school year, Martinez started working with the district鈥檚 high school and elementary language-arts coordinators to figure out how the school could fill in foundational-skills gaps while still keeping middle schoolers on track to tackle high-school-level work. Together, they adapted a 6th grade curriculum to maintain focus on essential grade-level skills and content, while also allowing time for core instruction in morphology and fluency. This is the first year teachers are working with the new program.
Lorraine Hajjar-Conant, who teaches 6th grade English/language arts at Bayside, didn鈥檛 think students would like much of the small-group work, with its focus on reading aloud and breaking down words into parts. But so far, kids look forward to it, asking her in the mornings whether they鈥檒l get to do it that day. She鈥檚 seen some improvements in students鈥 comfort with reading aloud, too.
Even so, it鈥檚 a tricky balancing act to make time for fluency and word work while also teaching 6th grade skills, like identifying the causes and effects of events in informational texts, Hajjar-Conant said. Teachers try to integrate the two as much as possible鈥攆or example, asking questions about plot, characters, and theme while students are reading fiction for fluency practice, she said.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 great that we鈥檙e trying something different to see if we鈥檙e going to get a positive outcome,鈥 Hajjar-Conant said. She鈥檚 looking forward to next year, when the school will have data on whether these changes helped set students up for more success in 7th grade.
Experts anticipate a 鈥榩rotracted period of catch-up鈥
Even though these foundational gaps can underpin reading difficulties, there are barriers to addressing them in older grades.
鈥淚t was something that was completely new to all of us, because we鈥檙e not from an elementary background,鈥 said Hajjar-Conant. The school has started work this year to address students鈥 foundational-skills gaps, both in whole-group instruction and intervention.
鈥淚t was a lot of new vocabulary and a new way of learning information. It was definitely a struggle,鈥 Hajjar-Conant said, of the learning process for her and her fellow teachers.
Teachers in older grades may have to put in more legwork to use assessments that can diagnose foundational-skills gaps and materials that can support instruction in that area, Wanzek said. Most of the screeners and diagnostic tests that can identify word-reading issues are the domain of special education teachers, and they鈥檙e not generally used in older-elementary general education, she added.
It can also be harder to find age-appropriate materials, said Hailey Love, an assistant professor of special education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. 鈥淥ften when children are perceived as being behind, they鈥檙e subject to practices that are actually found to decrease motivation.鈥
Teachers might have students only read texts at their 鈥渓evel,鈥 which would be written for younger children. It鈥檚 important that students still get to engage with grade-level material and that they have the same choice in reading materials that other kids have, Love said.
And then, there鈥檚 the shift in mindset. Middle school teachers are used to spending their time teaching to middle school standards, not how to sound out words, Hajjar-Conant said.
鈥淭he way that our administrators are trying to put it is, it鈥檚 not something additional. We need these kids to read at a 6th grade level, so if we have to go back to 3rd grade skills, that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e going to do,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have time to address the standards, but we need to teach them how to read.鈥
Martinez, the literacy coach, acknowledges that change is a long process. Asking teachers to try new instructional methods poses an extra hurdle to jump in a year already fraught with COVID-related challenges.
鈥69传媒 are just humans, put together. And humans have limitations,鈥 said Hogan of the Speech and Language Literacy Lab. Her team works with school partners, and many of their literacy initiatives were 鈥渞ocked by COVID,鈥 she said. In some of these schools, teachers are also trying to support students through the traumas they鈥檝e experienced over the past few years, like losing parents to the virus.
For Hogan, the answer isn鈥檛 to abandon efforts but to acknowledge that they might take a more circuitous route than expected. 鈥淚 think that what needs to be kept in mind,鈥 she said, 鈥渋s that there鈥檚 going to be a more protracted period of catch-up than we anticipated.鈥