St. Louis Educators Learn What's Missing in How They Teach Science of Reading
The year COVID-19 shuttered classroom doors, St. Louis's Premier Charter School was acclimating not only to a new normal, but to a new way of teaching literacy.
The K-8 school and its 900 students shifted their curriculum in fall 2020 to include the science of reading — a switch many U.S. districts have made because of its positive results on literacy scores. But last year, with results remaining stagnant and low, Premier's administrators started to wonder what they were missing.
'We are not seeing the gains and the progress that our school should be making,' said Jessica Smyth, one of Premier's elementary principals. 'We just know that our kids are capable of so much more than what the outcomes are currently showing.'
So, in December, Smyth and educators from three other St. Louis schools traveled to Washington, D.C., to learn from Garrison Elementary. The school had implemented the science of reading before it gained popularity across the nation and has seen improved literacy scores as a result.
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The trip was part of a two-year program called the Emerson Early Literacy Challenge that launched last fall to help educators from the four St. Louis-area schools brainstorm ways to improve reading in the early grades. Atlas Public School and Premier Charter School in St. Louis, Commons Lane Primary School in the Ferguson-Florissant School District and Barbara C. Jordan Elementary in the School District of University City share a $1 million grant for the work.
Efforts to improve St. Louis reading scores have been ramping up since last year, when the local NAACP chapter launched a literacy campaign and later filed a federal complaint against the city and county school districts because of disparities in reading proficiency for students of color.
Leaders of the Emerson challenge say the biggest problem in improving St. Louis's reading proficiency rates — which were at 20% for third graders in the city and 46% for third graders across the county in 2024 — is how the science of reading is implemented.
There are key elements besides using curriculum based on the science of reading that are needed to create substantial academic progress, said Ian Buchanan, a steering committee member for the Emerson challenge. For example, Garrison has more teachers in the classroom, efficient employee schedules and intensive tutoring sessions that allow its staff to increase their focus on literacy.
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'We can have all of the curriculum resources. We can have rock star teachers,' he said. 'We can have all of that, but there are some foundational pieces that need to be in place.'
Smyth said that even before Premier was chosen for the Emerson program, administrators had eliminated outdated instruction strategies like guided reading, which encourages students to use context clues to guess what a word could be instead of sounding it out.
The strategy is a major part of balanced literacy, an approach that has been deemed ineffective for struggling readers by cognitive scientists. Its lack of emphasis on phonics can cause students to fall behind as they encounter harder text in later grades.
While using a curriculum based on the science of reading was a step in the right direction, Premier's administrators still weren't happy with the school's third grade reading scores: About 28% ranked as proficient on state reading tests last year, down from 33% in 2018.
'While we see some really strong instruction that aligns with the science of reading in some classrooms, it's not necessarily consistent among all classrooms,' Smyth said.
Premier is still training teachers in how to teach lessons based on the science of reading, Smyth said.
Garrison Elementary School began changing its reading instruction in 2018-19. Just a year before, only 13% of the school's 250 students were meeting or exceeding expectations for reading on the District of Columbia Comprehensive Assessments of Progress in Education.
In 2023-24, that number rose to 43%.
Teacher training and explicit phonics instruction are crucial to gaining results like that, but schools also have to focus on staffing, class schedules and literacy screening tests, said Katharine Noonan, an English language arts instructional coach who helped implement the science of reading at Garrison.
The school already used DIBELS, a screening tool that evaluated students' literacy skills and identified learning disabilities like dyslexia. Noonan said teachers were coached to use the screener more effectively by catching gaps in reading proficiency early and ensuring struggling students received the most intervention.
'(It's) putting your best teachers in front of the kids that need the most help, and really prioritizing teacher-driven instruction,' Noonan said.
Garrison administrators had to rethink staffing and traditional class schedules, Noonan said. Rather than giving students the same amount of time with their teachers and pulling children who needed extra help out of the classroom to work with a reading specialist, staffing and schedules were restructured for those who were the furthest behind.
'That means, if I have 20 kids in my kindergarten class and I have three children who are behind — our screening data has showed us that they have gaps — then they see the (specialist) possibly every day, maybe even two adults a day, as a way to provide those interventions inside of the classroom,' Noonan said. 'It does require a lot of creativity around staffing and schedules, because you have to sort of think, who are my available adults?'
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Smyth said she and the other visiting St. Louis educators watched Garrison's reading specialists conduct small-group lessons inside classrooms. The school 'had some really great models in place, like classrooms that had two teachers in their rooms during all intervention blocks, which is wonderful. But then we got to ask questions like, 'Who were those people? How do you have the staffing? How do you have the funding for the staffing to get these models to work?' ' Smyth said.
Noonan said Garrison uses federal Title I funding to provide enough staffing for interventions, but schools can also use instructional aides and parent volunteers.
Buchanan said Garrison Elementary was chosen because it has similar student demographics to the St. Louis schools in the Emerson challenge. Even if it has more resources, Buchanan said, he thinks that what Garrison has accomplished can be replicated in St. Louis.
Leaders of each selected school received $20,000 at the beginning of the academic year to brainstorm strategies and craft plans to improve early literacy. They can get up to $250,000 during the 2025-26 school year to implement those plans.
'It was an excellent visit, because we were able to see in real time what teaching and learning looks like and to understand why they have been making gains,' Buchanan said. 'We have a better feel for what it takes, where we are and what we need to do.'
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New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
NYC's free summer meal program offers halal food, without listing kosher options
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Chicago Tribune
4 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
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Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Garien Gatewood said there are a variety of reasons for the sustained drop in crime, but highlighted a deeper collaborative effort by CPD officers and leadership, city residents, community violence intervention groups and the city's business community, as well as state and county offices. 'I genuinely think it is everybody being on the same page (and) actually working together and being focused on the ultimate goal of driving safety in the city,' Gatewood said. 'There's a lot of lives that are being impacted. There's a lot of trauma there. There's a lot of communities that are grieving, and we need to be able to support them there.' Neighborhoods that have historically felt the brunt of the city's problem with gun violence such as Englewood, North Lawndale and South Shore have seen some of the sharpest annual declines in shootings, CPD figures show. Not all parts of the city have felt progress, though. 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Allen sighed and looked at the ceiling. 'It could have been worse,' she said. Not quite a week after the shooting, she said Izayah was up and around, back to his video games and talking on the phone. He'd wanted to take a spin on a hoverboard, but his dad and aunt had told him not yet. He won't need physical therapy or surgery, Allen said. But he had been set to start a summer school program Monday, to get him ready for sixth grade, and now that will have to wait, Allen said. He needed to go back to the hospital for an X-ray on the first day of the program. He can't be in water until his wound closes, so he won't be able to jump in the pool. Allen doesn't want her kids back in Franklin Park anyway. She was worried for her kids' safety before this, she said — sitting out on the porch whenever they were outside, tracking their locations on her phone and calling when she doesn't know where they are. Now, like many others who endure violence near their homes, she is looking to move as soon as she can. 'I'm not going to sit there on that block and raise my kids,' she said. 'It's sad and it's ridiculous. He is a child.' Ashley Perez, a victim advocate through the North Lawndale-based social service organization UCAN, was helping Allen get started on the process of moving, getting access to state funds for victims of crime and the barrage of logistics that families can face when a loved one is shot. Still, she said that while the past few weeks have brought the typical spike in violence that comes with the summer, the level of violence has been 'nothing compared to last year' for her. 'When you're doing the work, you can tell,' she said. 'There was a time when it was nonstop shootings back to back.' The dip in crime is not limited to gun violence. CPD figures show double-digit percentage decreases so far this year in robberies, aggravated batteries, burglaries and motor vehicle thefts. CPD officers and detectives are busier so far this year, too. Department records show officers have effected about 17,500 arrests through mid-June — a 9% increase over 2024. Meanwhile, officers have recovered nearly 5,400 guns in 2025, keeping with long-standing monthly averages, and the department's murder clearance rate is 81% as of late June, according to a department spokesperson. Figures provided by county officials show the population of Cook County Jail has nearly returned to levels it saw before the COVID-19 pandemic, about 5,500 people. County data, however, shows that a greater share of inmates now face weapons and violent crime charges, while fewer detainees are held for nonviolent narcotics offenses. That shift has also helped to stanch Chicago shootings, Snelling said, adding that the working relationship between CPD and the Cook County state's attorney's office is 'excellent.' 'Am I under the belief that we should lock everyone up and throw away the key? Absolutely not,' Snelling said. 'I do believe, however, that those who go out every single day with the intent of doing harm to other human beings have to be held, especially when we know that they're more likely to commit another violent crime.' 'I believe that these crime numbers should tell you that when we are arresting these violent offenders and holding these violent offenders (in jail pending trial), it's less likely that they get the opportunity to re-offend,' he said.

11 hours ago
California energy regulator recommends pause on plan to penalize excess oil profits
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