INTRODUCTION
State education leaders across the country are rightly prioritizing efforts to improve elementary student reading outcomes. However, too often these initiatives do not focus enough on the key component to strong implementation and long-term sustainability: effective teachers. Only when state leaders implement a literacy strategy that prioritizes teacher effectiveness will states achieve a teacher workforce that can strengthen student literacy year after year. This report outlines five policy actions states can take to ensure a well-prepared teacher workforce that can implement and sustain the science of reading in classrooms across the country.
The Challenge
There are 1.3 million children who enter fourth grade each year unable to read at a basic level—that’s nearly 40% of all fourth graders across the country.1 These students may not be able to identify details from a text, sequence events from a story, and—in some cases—may not be able to read the words themselves.2 The rate of students who cannot read at a basic level by fourth grade climbs even higher for students of color, those with learning differences, and those who grow up in low-income households, perpetuating disparate life outcomes.3
These alarming statistics can be largely attributed to inequities in access to effective reading instruction. Reading skills influence students’ likelihood to graduate high school,4 their career trajectories,5 and their lifetime earnings.6
The Opportunity
Elementary teacher effectiveness is the cornerstone to improving students’ ability to read. In fact, estimates suggest that with effective reading instruction, more than 90% of students would learn to read—meaning that every year nearly 1 million additional students would enter fourth grade as skilled readers.7
Recognizing the power of strong reading instruction to improve academic and life outcomes for children, 32 states passed laws or implemented new policies related to evidence-based reading instruction between 2013 and July 2023.8 While this momentum is encouraging, nearly every state could take further steps to adopt policies and practices that attend to implementation and sustainability. More specifically, states must consider how elementary teachers are trained and supported to carry out the science of reading.
States that have seen elementary students’ literacy rates increase have done so with a long-term commitment to improving teacher effectiveness. They not only changed reading instruction by bolstering teachers’ knowledge and skills through initial adoption of strong, aligned, coherent policies, but they coupled these policies with ongoing support and financial resources.
State leaders can act now to improve reading instruction through smart policy focused on preparing teachers in the science of reading, supporting them as they implement it, and dedicating long-term resources.
In This Report
In this report, we focus on five policy actions state leaders can take to strengthen elementary teachers’ ability to teach reading based on decades of scientific research. For each of the five policy actions, we identify a set of indicators that show whether a state is strategically and coherently implementing each policy action. The indicators are presented under each policy action to provide explicit guidance for state education leaders, policymakers, and advocates.
Using these indicators, we analyzed the extent to which all 50 states and D.C. are implementing the five policy actions across the country. Based on the evidence and lessons learned from states, we provide recommendations to support strong implementation for each policy action. We highlight promising practices that can yield improved student learning and greater support to teachers.
The policy actions highlighted focus specifically on building elementary teachers’ capacity to teach reading. The report does not encompass all evidence-based policies and practices that can help improve student outcomes9 as part of a state’s comprehensive approach.10