Opinion
Reading & Literacy Opinion

When the ‘Science of Reading’ Goes Too Far

How we assess reading shapes how we teach reading
By Jessica Hahn & Mia Hood — July 29, 2022 5 min read
A young child opens a world of literacy in a book
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Picture a 3rd grade classroom. A teacher and a child sit side by side, open booklets before them both. The teacher starts a timer. The girl begins to read: “Goldfish make good pets. They are easy to take care of and do not cost much to feed. Goldfish are fun to watch while they are swimming.”

“Now tell me as much as you can about the story you just read. Ready, begin,” the teacher says, starting the timer again.

The girl quickly scans the passage. “Um, he has a pet goldfish. It’s easy to take care of. He likes to watch it swim. It’s a good pet.”

See Also

BRIC ARCHIVE
Getty
Curriculum Opinion What the New Reading Wars Get Wrong
Mia Hood, September 10, 2019
5 min read

The teacher tallies each word the child says related to the passage, determines that she has provided three meaningfully sequenced details that capture a main idea, and circles a score, the highest one there is: 4.

The teacher restarts the timer and repeats the process with two more passages.

The teacher in this scene is testing the child’s reading using Acadience, one of several literacy screeners the New York City Department of Education has mandated elementary schools administer three times a year. And the child, according to the manual in the teacher’s lap, has just demonstrated excellent reading comprehension.

The department’s mandate was no doubt influenced by the ascendant “science of reading” movement. Its proponents advocate for greater focus on phonics instruction—structured lessons that teach the connections between letters and sounds—in kindergarten through 2nd grade. They recommend screeners like Acadience because they generate useful data on children’s phonics knowledge in these early grades. However, in New York, these screeners are also being used in upper elementary grades, where they offer teachers very little of what they actually need: a nuanced and accurate picture of students’ comprehension abilities.

While “science of reading” proponents see comprehension as the ultimate goal of reading, they don’t prioritize it as a goal or focus of reading instruction. They argue that, as long as readers come to texts with strong decoding skills and a broad knowledge base, comprehension is all but assured. Therefore, the thinking goes, instruction should focus on developing students’ phonics knowledge (which is the foundation of decoding) as well as broad topical knowledge.

A reading assessment can’t be valid if the kind of reading it requires doesn’t match the kind of reading we need to do in real life.

The two of us—a teacher-educator specializing in literacy and a veteran elementary school teacher—argue instead that teachers must actively support students’ comprehension. This means two things. First, we must teach comprehension as a multidimensional experience. We want children to comprehend what’s happening literally in the text (who did what when), but we also want them to be able to analyze how parts of the text (literary devices, figurative language, structural choices) work together to develop ideas. And we want them to interpret the purpose and significance of the text in relation to their lives and to society.

Second, supporting students’ comprehension means nurturing what’s called active self-regulation—the ability to monitor our understanding and adjust our reading when something doesn’t make sense. Readers can do this by simply rereading, by strategically focusing their attention, or by intentionally searching for information to fill in gaps in understanding.

Any tool we use to assess reading must generate information about these two aspects of reading comprehension. In Jessica’s 3rd grade classroom, the Acadience screener did not. Jessica didn’t get a sense of students’ understanding of how characters change, what an author is teaching us, or how details support main ideas, nor did she ascertain students’ ability to evaluate an author’s perspective or analyze how literary devices add meaning to the text. In other words, the assessment didn’t show her whether or not children were engaged in the kind of thinking that enables deep comprehension in realistic reading situations.

This screener took over two weeks to administer. Multiplied by three administrations a year, that’s six weeks’ worth of lost reading instruction. All she had to show for this investment of time was simple numerical scores based on the words children said in their retell.

The idea of a simple score—the idea that we can quantify reading ability at all—might feel reassuring to educators yearning to tie their teaching to something solid. But screeners like Acadience offer only an illusion of scientific objectivity. After all, a reading assessment can’t be valid if the kind of reading it requires doesn’t match the kind of reading we need to do in real life.

More importantly, how we assess reading shapes how we teach reading. If assessment tools require children to say a certain number of words about a disconnected set of trivial passages, then teachers will be inclined to emphasize recall and disinclined to support children in selecting complex, relevant texts to read.

Our approach to reading instruction is embedded in a broad set of instructional values—values ostensibly shared by New York City’s education department and many other districts across the country. In the summer of 2021, as the department mandated the literacy screener, it also released a “vison statement” for teaching reading that calls for an emphasis on “critical literacy”—instruction meant to “challenge students to be critical thinkers” and “foster critical consciousness.” The statement sees literacy applied to “culturally relevant curriculum.”

We believe, however, that the screener mandate and the vision statement are in conflict. The mandate undermines the indisputably worthy goals of the vision statement by giving short shrift to the support that students need in constructing meaning from diverse texts and then applying that learning to other pursuits.

What’s happening in New York City reflects a broader trend wherein teachers are expected to negotiate the contradictory pressures to teach reading in a culturally relevant way but assess reading in a way that strips it of all relevance.

What might a relevant assessment look like?

Picture a 3rd grade classroom. A teacher and a child sit side by side, open booklets before them both.

A teacher starts a stopwatch, not a timer. A girl reads a short text about sharks, while the teacher notes her decoding errors and tracks her fluency.

“What is the author’s view of sharks?” the teacher asks.

The child replies, “Well, the author wants us to think that sharks are dangerous. Look at this heading ‘You can run, but you can’t hide.’ That makes a scary feeling. But I disagree! People are probably more dangerous to sharks than sharks are to people. Sharks should be more scared of us.”

There is no numerical score, but the teacher notes that the child knows what’s happening literally in the text and is analyzing and evaluating it.

The child in this scene is reading the way we read in real life. We want our children to read with a critical lens, to not take the author’s opinions at face value. We want our children to empathize. And that kind of reading requires instruction and therefore assessments that are rich, meaning-based, and authentic.

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the August 31, 2022 edition of Education Week as When the ‘Science of Reading’ Goes Too Far

Events

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Reading & Literacy Opinion How We Can Turn the Page on This Failed Reading Strategy
We can’t raise new readers on just excerpts. It’s time to bring back whole books.
Carol Jago
3 min read
Image of a book with symbols of brain, ideas, time, conversation, connecting ideas.
Laura Baker/Education Week + Canva
Reading & Literacy Kindergartners' Math and Reading Scores Can Predict Their 3rd Grade Performance
But their academic trajectories aren't set in stone, and early intervention is key, researchers say.
3 min read
Estes Elementary School kindergarten students Evelyn Bolmer, front left; Jase Bellamy, back right; and Eric Guarneros, front right, listen as their teacher Faith Harralson assists Bolmer with a math equation, as they ride pedal desks at school in Owensboro, Ky., Jan. 19, 2016.
Estes Elementary School kindergarten students Evelyn Bolmer, front left; Jase Bellamy, back right; and Eric Guarneros, front right, listen as their teacher Faith Harralson assists Bolmer with a math equation, as they ride pedal desks at school in Owensboro, Ky., Jan. 19, 2016. New research shows students who start kindergarten behind in reading and math are unlikely to catch up by 3rd grade.
Jenny Sevcik/The Messenger-Inquirer via AP
Reading & Literacy Is It Time for Another National Reading Panel?
The panel's 2000 report on reading has influenced policy for years. Now, Congress is calling for an update.
7 min read
readingPanel
A copy of one of the National Reading Panel's work products is shown in this June 17, 2026 photo. The influential report, now more than 25 years old, has long served as a cornerstone of the “science of reading” movement, shaping state legislation, curriculum, and teacher professional development.
Marvin Joseph/Education Week
Reading & Literacy How Should Teachers Select Books for Young Readers? (Hint: It's Not Just Decodability)
Three new studies offer clues about what makes texts easier and harder for young students to read on their own.
5 min read
20250205 AMX US NEWS NEW DATABASE LOOK UP K5 1 PO
An educator at Holcomb Elementary School in Oregon City, Ore. works with students on phonics and phonemic awareness on Feb. 5, 2025. New studies point to the mix of factors teachers should consider when selecting texts for students.
Julia Silverman via TNS