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Reading & Literacy Series

Getting Reading Right

View Education Week’s latest coverage of reading and literacy.

Editor’s Note

The early years of reading instruction are critical—there’s little disagreement about that.

But how exactly should reading be taught during that time? That’s been the subject of an abundance of research over the last century—and as much debate.

In this series, “Getting Reading Right,” Education Week interrogated the cognitive science behind how kids acquire foundational reading skills, with a focus on the earliest elementary readers, in kindergarten through 2nd grade. Through reporting, explainers, opinion pieces, surveys, and multimedia features, we explored what teachers know about reading and where they learned it, as well as the challenges they face in bringing the research to fruition in K-2 classrooms.

—Liana Loewus, Assistant Managing Editor

Image of books on a library shelf.
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Reading & Literacy Interactive Phonics vs. Balanced Literacy: A Classroom Comparison
Want to know if a K-2 classroom is using explicit, systematic phonics or balanced literacy? Explore the main instructional differences.
Liana Loewus, October 2, 2019
1 min read
Reading & Literacy Explainer How Do Kids Learn to Read? What the Science Says
The debate rages but the science is clear: Teaching systematic phonics is the most reliable way to make sure that kids learn how to read.
Sarah Schwartz & Sarah D. Sparks, October 2, 2019
23 min read