opinionliberal

Teachers Need a Reading Roadmap

Reading, PA, USASaturday, April 4, 2026

Only about one in three fourth‑graders can read well.
The gap is even wider for Black and Hispanic kids, with just 16% meeting the standard.

When children reach third grade, they stop learning how to read and start reading to learn.
If they cannot read, their future suffers—more school problems, higher dropout rates and long‑term job challenges.


The Root Problem

The issue isn’t the students; it’s how teachers are trained.
Many future educators finish school without learning the science of reading—how phonics, decoding and brain wiring work together. These evidence‑based practices were largely ignored in teacher programs until the 2010s, even though research and laws had already highlighted them.

As a result, teachers often try to fix reading problems after the fact, wasting time and resources.


A Better Approach

  1. Pre‑Classroom Preparation
    Universities must teach future teachers structured literacy, the proven method that focuses on phonics and decoding. Professors themselves should be trained in these techniques.
  1. Hands‑On Experience
    During student teaching, future teachers need to work in classrooms that already use structured literacy programs like Fundations or the University of Florida Literacy Institute. This gives them real experience with effective instruction.

Pennsylvania’s Steps Forward

  • Act 47: All schools must report how they use structured literacy by spring.
    The data should help universities place student teachers in districts that already follow these practices, reducing the learning curve for new teachers.

  • Licensure Exams:
    If schools expect teachers to use science‑based reading methods, the tests must check that knowledge. My own exam had no questions about structured literacy, so I could not prove I was ready to teach reading well. Future exams should include these topics and set clear timelines for updates.


The Goal

In short, Pennsylvania must align teacher training, classroom practice and licensing with the science of reading.
If new teachers arrive prepared, students will get a stronger start and the cycle of struggling readers can be broken.

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