comprehension – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Mon, 18 May 2026 19:41:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png comprehension – 社区黑料 32 32 Report: Nearly One-Third of Teachers Still Use 鈥楧iscredited鈥 Reading Methods /article/report-nearly-one-third-of-teachers-still-use-discredited-reading-methods/ Tue, 19 May 2026 12:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1032563 While reform around reading instruction continues to gain momentum, about a third of teachers are using  鈥渄iscredited鈥 methods to teach kids how to read and aren鈥檛 fully committed to the science of reading, a new report found.

In a survey of more than 1,200 K-3 educators in the fall of 2025, researchers at the Fordham Institute, an education reform nonprofit, found 30% of teachers don鈥檛 鈥渇avor phonics,鈥 a major pillar in the science of reading that teaches students how letters represent sounds and how to blend those sounds together.

The number of teachers 鈥渓ess informed and committed鈥 to the science of reading is even greater in high poverty schools, according to the .

鈥淒espite everything that has been said and written in the past few years, nearly a third of teachers still put phonics and cueing on equal footing,鈥 the report said, also finding 鈥減rogress that has been made in some teachers in high-poverty, majority-nonwhite schools are still, on average, less informed about and committed to basic principles of the [science of reading] than teachers in whiter and/or more affluent settings.鈥

About half of all surveyed K-3 teachers said they teach with a 鈥渟tructured approach鈥 which includes a mix of  鈥渋nstruction in phonics, decoding, and related skills,鈥 the report said, adding nearly one in three teachers use a 鈥渂alanced approach,鈥 where students are asked to figure out unfamiliar words through context clues or pictures 鈥 a practice known as cueing, which has been banned in some states. 

Thirty percent of teachers reported favoring both phonics and cueing for reading instruction and 2% said they preferred cueing over phonics, according to the report.

The report also found teacher belief and use of the science of reading is between nine to 15 percentage points lower in low-income schools compared to those in higher-resourced schools.

Source: From the Teacher鈥檚 Desk: A Science of Reading Progress Report, Thomas B. Fordham Institute

Researchers recognized schools have experienced 鈥渟ignificant , , and even 鈥,鈥欌 around the best way to teach kids to read for decades, which in part accounts for teacher hesitancy and/or inexperience with parts of the science of reading. 

As of late March, 42 states, and Washington D.C. have implemented laws around the science of reading, according to . But even with these initiatives, some teachers expressed concerns that the 鈥減endulum swings too far to one side and we need balance.鈥

鈥淲hile I support our current emphasis on phonics, I worry that kids are going to lose out with less comprehension and vocabulary instruction,鈥 one teacher said in the report, with another adding 鈥渢he pendulum swings like political winds. Let us teach. Please!鈥 

Others felt the shift toward the science of reading has led to 鈥渇ar more non-fiction texts鈥 at the 鈥渆xpense of rich literature鈥 and that 鈥済uided reading 鈥 is out, phonics-based small groups are in.鈥

For educators more positive about the science of reading, said the growing emphasis around phonics has 鈥渄rastically changed how quickly students are able to learn to read,鈥 according to the report. 

鈥淭hey are happier learners because they aren鈥檛 as frustrated with reading,鈥 one teacher said. Another added: 鈥渢he shift to the science of reading has been huge 鈥 and has profound effects on teaching kids to read.鈥

The science of reading is rooted in : phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension, but most of the conversation around the evidence-based approach has centered on phonics.

Hesitancy around the science of reading is concerning to researchers, said David Griffith, one of the report鈥檚 co-authors.

鈥淎lmost every literate person I’ve ever met remembers getting phonics,鈥 Griffith said. 鈥淭here is abundant evidence that phonics is successful, and what the research shows is that you need to know how to decode words in order to learn how to read. 鈥 If kids don’t learn to do this, then they won’t learn to read, and if they don’t learn to read, they won’t learn much else.鈥 

Griffith acknowledged teacher concerns about the trade-off of incorporating more phonics-based instruction and feeling students would miss out on comprehension, 鈥渂ut I would push back鈥  that there is some sort of balance that we need to strike in terms of helping kids learn to decode,鈥 he said. 鈥淜ids need to learn to decode, and then once they’ve done that, there are many other things that we can start doing.鈥

Griffith also argued having more non-fiction texts in K-3 could level the playing field for students who may not have exposure to certain background knowledge or vocabulary that would make them successful early readers. Lacking this kind of curriculum and instruction has created disparities and affected skills like finding the main idea or inferring for many children, he said.

鈥淎 weak reader who knows about baseball will outperform a strong reader who doesn’t know anything about baseball,鈥 Griffith said. 鈥淵our ability to draw inferences is entirely dependent on whether you understand what the passage is talking about and whether you have the right vocabulary.鈥

The report found more than 40% of teachers hadn鈥檛 鈥渇ully internalized the importance of knowledge and vocabulary to reading 肠辞尘辫谤别丑别苍蝉颈辞苍.鈥

The report found teacher knowledge around the science of reading is inconsistent.

Griffith said 鈥渢he chaotic information environment that the typical teacher is subject to,鈥 has been the biggest thing hindering implementation now.

鈥淎n older teacher tells you one thing. Your curriculum tells you something else,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou read an article online written by some think tank and it tells you a third thing. Teachers want to do the right thing, 鈥 [but there鈥檚 a] lack of clarity 鈥 about points that really should be clear.鈥

Teachers in higher-resourced schools scored slightly higher than average in their science of reading knowledge and commitment (in the 54th percentile), while those in low-resourced schools scored below average in the 44th percentile.

The report called it a 鈥渟ubstantial difference that will have dire consequences for poor students should it persist,鈥 that shows 鈥渢he fragmented nature of curriculum adoption and the complexity of translating exposure to science of reading鈥揳ligned training into better practice.鈥

Griffith added that teacher turnover in those environments likely play a role.

鈥淭eaching is just harder in high-poverty schools. There is less time to think, there’s less time to do research on the science of reading or anything else. There is probably not a long tradition of veteran teachers building strong curricula over multiple years,鈥 he said.

Across the country, most K-3 teachers have received some type of professional development in the science of reading, the report also found. Those who have completed those courses have a better understanding of the evidence-based approach than those who rely on what they were taught in higher education and teacher preparation programs. 

Even though most educators receive professional development, researchers said teachers鈥 knowledge of the science of reading declined as the grade level increased, with kindergarten teachers 鈥渆xhibiting the deepest knowledge and third-grade teachers exhibiting the least understanding.鈥

鈥淭hese differences may reflect the fact that science of reading鈥揳ligned trainings and curricula often disproportionately target kindergarten, where a focus on decoding is particularly crucial. Still, given the number of third graders who are still struggling with decoding 鈥 and the continuing need to build knowledge and vocabulary in higher grades 鈥 the mediocre performance of teachers in higher grade levels is grounds for concern,鈥 the report said.

Other findings from the report included how 93% of teachers use multiple reading curricula, some which still use practices like cueing. And that many teachers reported 鈥渓imited insight into the needs of English learners and students with dyslexia.鈥

鈥淚f we could somehow improve the quality of pre-service preparation, we would really be making progress, because it is hard to change the practices of teachers who have been teaching for 15 to 20 years,鈥 Griffith said. 鈥淚t would be enormously helpful if teachers got the right message at the start of their careers.鈥

Fordham researchers called for colleges of education to require instruction aligned to the science of reading.

The report also found teachers in states with reading-aligned licensure tests had a deeper understanding of the evidence-based reading model, which became another recommendation for better implementation. Other suggestions included mandates around K-3 teacher training to be completed within their first three years in the classroom and a push for states to establish approved curriculum lists.

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