Sold a Story - 10: The Details

Episode Date: April 11, 2024

Some of the teachers, students, parents and researchers we met in Sold a Story talk about the impact the podcast has had on their lives and in schools — and share some of their hopes and co...ncerns about the “science of reading” movement. Portraits: Zoe and Lee Gaul, Christine Cronin, Reid LyonEmail us: soldastory@apmreports.orgVideo: Mark Seidenberg at YaleArticle: Seidenberg on translating the scienceArticle: Lyon’s most important findingsRead: Transcript of this episodeDonate: Support APM ReportsMore: soldastory.orgDive deeper into Sold a Story with a multi-part email series from host Emily Hanford. We’ll also keep you up to date on new episodes. Sign up at soldastory.org/extracredit.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, it's Emily. Before this episode starts, I want to thank you for listening to Sold a Story. And I want to remind you that this podcast is coming to you from public media. We rely on support from you to continue doing this kind of rigorous, long-form investigative journalism. You can give now at soldastory.org slash donate. There's also a link in the show notes. Thank you. Now, onto the episode. I just think it's pretty cool to be in a podcast
Starting point is 00:00:33 because like everybody hears it and like, then it's just like, oh my God, that's me and did that. That's Zoe Gaul. We introduced you to her in our first episode. Did you listen to the podcast? Yeah, I did. That's Zoe Gaal. We introduced you to her in our first episode. Did you listen to the podcast? Yeah, I did. What was it like to hear about other kids who were struggling to learn how to read?
Starting point is 00:00:52 It was pretty cool. I mean, like, it's not cool that they were struggling how to learn to read, but like, you know. There are a lot of kids who struggle to learn how to read. And I think that hearing you and hearing the other kids who are on the podcast was really validating for those kids because they realized like they're not alone. I'm Emily Hanford, and this is Sold a Story, a podcast from APM Reports. In our previous episode, we heard what's been going on with the people and organizations at the center of our investigation. In this episode, we're going to tell you about some of the other people who are in the podcast.
Starting point is 00:01:39 Kids, parents, teachers, and scientists. What's happened to them since Soledad's story came out? What do they think about what's happened in response to the podcast? We're going to start with Zoe Gall. Zoe was in first grade when I went to New York City in the spring of 2021 to meet with her and her dad. They lived on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. They still live in the neighborhood in a new apartment.
Starting point is 00:02:07 And Zoe still goes to the same public school, where she's now in fourth grade. And how is fourth grade going so far? It's going pretty amazing. Two of my best friends are in my class this year. And then I have a really cool teacher. Cool teacher? What makes her cool? Uh, I don't know. She's just cool.
Starting point is 00:02:31 And Zoe says reading is going well. Do you feel like you're a good reader? Yeah, I do. I ask her if she'd be up for reading out loud again. You willing to do that? Mm-hmm. You have a do that? Mm-hmm. You have a book? Yes, I do.
Starting point is 00:02:48 She's got a brand new book, one she's never read before. Okay, so chapter one. Is that her? Stop pushing, I can't see. Roo! Frans, quiet, you're gonna ruin everything. A cab is coming, quick, hide. Fifteen-year-old Issa and 12-year-old Oliver
Starting point is 00:03:08 raced around to the side of the brownstone. Hurry, Hyacinth. Hyacinth, pretty impressive. She's a really good reader. This is Zoe's dad, Lee Gall. I think it speaks to the fact that certain things that we did together when I was teaching her my phonics curriculum that I cobbled together, they really stuck and they really helped her connect the dots on how to read despite the way they taught. Zoe's school will have to change the way it teaches reading. The school uses the Lucy Calkins reading curriculum. And as you heard in the last episode, all New York City public schools will have to
Starting point is 00:03:51 stop using that curriculum. They're supposed to be using something new by next school year. But when I did this interview with Lee last fall, he told me nothing had changed so far. It has not changed. The school knows about Soul to Story. The principal there let me know. She's like, I know about the podcast. But we didn't talk about it at all.
Starting point is 00:04:13 She just said she knew about it. And essentially, they basically were like, we disagree. I asked the principal for an interview, but she declined. Lee says it feels like the podcast is something no one is supposed to mention at school. He has talked to a few parents about it. But these are private moments. This is not somebody going and saying in front of the entire parent's association and teachers, bringing any of those things up that I know of.
Starting point is 00:04:43 It's one of those like, hey, by the way, that was really great. And a shh, like, oh, somebody's coming to, you know, it almost feels like that. When I first met Lee, he told me there were other parents at the school who were concerned about the reading instruction. Now, three years later, he says they've all left.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Really? Yeah. And what are they doing instead? Do you know? They go into either private or Catholic school. Yeah. And what are they doing instead? Do you know? They're going to either private or Catholic school. Yeah. Yeah. They're all gone. But of course, there's always tutoring for the kids who stay.
Starting point is 00:05:14 The other day when I was walking Zoe to school, there was a guy in the corner with a banner stand and he was the tutor doctor. And like, you know, in our neighborhood, I'm sure he got tons of business because what people do when they think that their child is struggling is they just spend money on a tutor because they have the extra income to be able to do that.
Starting point is 00:05:36 ["The New York Times"] Lee's glad that balanced literacy is on its way out of New York City public schools, and that Lucy Calkins is out as head of her teacher training institute. I asked him what he thought when he first heard that news. I have a lot of schadenfreude, you know, this real satisfaction, but it's too little, too late. I mean, damage has been done for so long. People are going to struggle their whole lives with not being able to read very well. For parents who believe their children did not get what they needed, watching Balanced Literacy fall has felt like a victory.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Missy Purcell remembers when she heard last year that her school district would be dropping the reading recovery program. It just felt so, I may have gone out to have cocktails if I'm being real honest. Missy's son Matthew was in reading recovery. You heard about Matthew in episode five. He struggled for years and didn't get the instruction he needed in public school.
Starting point is 00:06:43 So by the end of Soul to Story, he was in sixth grade at a private school that specialized in helping kids with dyslexia. And you said that after just one year in that school, he was almost up to grade level in reading and writing. So how is Matthew doing now? Oh, you just asking that question, I'm like already tearing up. So here we go. He is doing so great. First of all, I was told he would never be a fluent reader. He's a fluent reader. She says he's happy. He's got a
Starting point is 00:07:14 lot of friends. He's playing baseball and he's a confident student now. He has just, he's just blossomed and I could not be more proud. And I want that for every kid. I don't want my kid to be a unicorn. I do believe every kid can read. Every kid. It's doable. This is Sarah Gannon, another parent from Soul to Story, who ended up moving her child to a private school.
Starting point is 00:07:40 She said to me the other day, I just feel like people get me. And now all of a sudden you can see she doesn't think she's dumb anymore. Sarah Gannon was the reading specialist in episode three, who put her faith in Fountas and Pennell. I trusted that they're experts. I trusted that this is the way you teach reading. But when her own daughter couldn't read
Starting point is 00:08:03 and Sarah wasn't able to help her, she found the science of reading. But when her own daughter couldn't read and Sarah wasn't able to help her, she found the science of reading. And eventually, she quit her job because her district wasn't willing to change. She says some of her former colleagues, people she considered friends, are not interested in changing the way they teach kids to read,
Starting point is 00:08:21 and they don't want to talk about it with her anymore. And at the end of the day, you know, we've moved apart, and I think that's just unfortunately how it has to be. Sarah says Soledad's story has been hard for many teachers to hear. No one likes to be criticized, especially when it's as personal as teaching. Teaching is a very personal career because it involves children and it involves their lives. And if you feel like you're not doing something right and you potentially harm them, I think it's really hard because no one goes into teaching that I know of to
Starting point is 00:08:55 harm people. It's because you are a helper by nature. And most teachers I work with want to do it right. Sarah has a new job now, helping school districts that are changing the way they teach reading. She wants teachers and district leaders to learn how to be critical consumers of curriculum, to ask what is the research behind this, and to be able to evaluate that research. She says that's what was missing before. I think those of us who came from that movement of balanced literacy, where it was almost like blindly accepting what we do, I hope, I know for myself, have become a little bit more
Starting point is 00:09:34 thoughtful and critical and not just taking someone's word for it. This is what I was hoping our reporting would do. I was hoping it would get more people curious about the scientific research on reading. That people, especially teachers, would listen and want to know more. And I wanted people to understand that this is not just about whether schools teach phonics. It's about whether they teach that other idea, the idea that beginning readers don't have to sound out written words because there are other strategies they can use instead.
Starting point is 00:10:12 I wanted to show people why that idea is a problem and how it became so influential in early reading instruction. That was new information for people. This is Christine Cronin. You met her in episode three. She was the teacher in Boston who ultimately resisted that big effort by George W. Bush 20 years ago to get the science of reading into schools.
Starting point is 00:10:38 She resisted because she felt like she was being told what to do, and she didn't understand why. And she says she didn't understand why. And she says people need to know why. Especially in education, where people are often looking for the next shiny object, people become initiative weary. And when you told the whole story, there was a lot of information that people
Starting point is 00:11:03 didn't have access to without having heard you report on it that made it beyond just, oh, this is just the next new thing, to, wow, there was a flaw here all along that we weren't privy to at the time. And now we have that information, and now we can approach this shift not just as, oh gosh, it's a new, new thing, but oh, I really, I should learn more about this. I think that that's the difference that I think that it made. She's now in charge of professional development
Starting point is 00:11:34 for the Boston Public Schools, where she's working with a team to oversee a big change in reading instruction. The school system started doing this before Soledad's story, but she thinks some teachers who were resistant are more interested now because they heard the podcast or maybe they're just hearing people talking about the science of reading.
Starting point is 00:11:55 Those conversations are happening through social media. They're happening in sort of all levels of people's experiences as educators, and so they definitely are coming into learning experiences curious and open, I think, in a deeper way, if they maybe had not been before. And she says the scientific research is more accessible to teachers than it was 20 years ago
Starting point is 00:12:18 during Bush's Reading First program. There are now lots of books and articles and videos and podcasts that explain the research. And it's not the sort of mysterious thing that I felt like you could only get the knowledge from a few, you know, people who held it. And it's not just that the information is more widely available now. It's that teachers are sharing this information with each other. And it's just, it changes everything as far as how people feel connected to the work. And we didn't feel that way during the Reading First era. We felt like something was being done to us as opposed to being collaborators as part of
Starting point is 00:12:58 a movement. I do think it's different this time. This is Reed Lyon, the neuroscientist you met and sold a story who helped develop Reading First. What's changed is this tremendous hunger for information. It's the first time I've ever experienced people asking me, where can I find more information so I can really do this well? It's kind of blowing his mind. People who heretofore would have said, f*** off, you know, I know what I'm doing,
Starting point is 00:13:36 now say, I can't believe that I thought that. He's feeling hopeful that things are going to change for the better. But he also has concerns, because he says the science of reading has become a movement. What I'm fearful of, because I've seen it so many times, is movements sometimes gloss over detail. And here's the details are so critical. When we come back, we're going to talk about some of the details. Hey, it's Emily. Thanks for listening to Sold a Story. I want to tell you about a companion
Starting point is 00:14:19 email series we put together to help you dive deeper into this reporting. We're calling it Sold a Story Extra Credit. It's free to sign up and we'll deliver resources, reading recommendations, and more straight to your inbox. We'll also notify you of new episodes and important updates. Sign up at soldastory.org slash extra credit or follow the link in the show notes. Thank you. Hey, it's Emily. I have some exciting news to share. We now have a version of Sold a Story in Spanish.
Starting point is 00:14:56 I don't speak Spanish, so we hired an independent investigative journalist named Valeria Fernandez to be the host. It's an incredibly important story, and I think this is going to be extremely helpful to a lot of parents and families out there. Valeria brings a lot to this conversation because in addition to being a journalist, she's also a mom. Yes, I think that's why in addition to condensing, summarizing and translating Sol de Story into Spanish we also had a second episode where you and I talk about the special challenges that kids
Starting point is 00:15:29 face when they speak Spanish at home but are learning to read English in school, which is sort of the case of my kid. And that episode is also available in the Solda's Story in Español podcast feed. If you know parents or someone else who would benefit from listening to Solda's story in Spanish, please let them know. podcast feed. sources at that website too, all in Spanish. Again, the website is soldastory.es. In episode three of Sold a Story, you heard the former superintendent of public instruction in California, testifying before state lawmakers. I agree with the chair's comments.
Starting point is 00:16:29 There is no issue facing education that's more crucial right now than how and whether we teach our youngsters to read all of them. Bill Honig told lawmakers he'd made mistakes when he was superintendent because he didn't know enough about how children learned to read. But he said he'd learned from cognitive scientists, and he was optimistic that reading instruction would change.
Starting point is 00:16:53 I think we can turn this around very, very quickly. The field is ready. The teachers are ready. They know that there's a problem. They're willing to play ball. This was in 1996. And as you know, things didn't turn out the way Bill Honig hoped. That's why we made this podcast. We wanted to know why scientific research from decades ago still wasn't making its way into many schools. What we discovered is that there was an idea that was in the way.
Starting point is 00:17:27 An idea about how kids learn to read that was in conflict with what the research said. This idea was everywhere. It was embedded in books and curriculum materials and assessment systems and intervention programs that were being sold by many people and many publishing companies and most successfully by the people and the company we've been focusing on in this podcast. The idea is that kids don't need to be taught how to sound out written words because they can use other strategies to figure out what the words say.
Starting point is 00:18:07 strategies to figure out what the words say. This entire podcast has been about that one idea, and how that idea justified an approach to teaching reading that didn't include much phonics. That approach, often referred to as balanced literacy, is now being scrutinized by a lot of people. The science of reading movement and the laws in particular have had the effect of dislodging, not completely, but certainly pushing that approach off the pedestal and opening the door to doing different things. This is Mark Seidenberg, one of the cognitive scientists you heard and sold story. And like Reed Lyon, who you heard before the break, Mark is thrilled and kind of amazed that there's
Starting point is 00:18:50 such an interest right now in the science of reading. So we have all this antipathy to science in so many parts of the country and with regard to many issues. And in reading, you have all these people who are saying, we want to know more, we want to know more. And that's great. But like Reed, Mark is worried about the details. The details of how schools are translating the science of reading into practice. So we're going to talk about some of the details,
Starting point is 00:19:19 because the details matter here. I'm going to start with Mark and then bring in Reed, and I'm gonna offer some of my own thoughts too. Mark Seidenberg's concerns are mostly about how the science itself is being understood or misunderstood by teachers and curriculum developers. As you heard in episode eight, the science of reading isn't a program you buy
Starting point is 00:19:44 or a thing you do. It's a body of research. And this research has important implications for how schools teach reading. But Mark says only a few big ideas from the research literature seem to be getting through. And he thinks that's a problem. There are big parts of the literature people haven't gotten to for various reasons. And I would say the main one is the stuff we know about learning. The stuff we know about learning.
Starting point is 00:20:16 Let me back up a bit to explain what he's talking about. First of all, he sees many successes when it comes to how the science of reading is changing instruction in many schools. There's a lot of good news here. It has definitely focused attention on the need to teach kids basic reading skills like about print and about how print relates to language and how language relates to the world. And it did definitely increase awareness of a true fact, which is that kids need instruction in these areas, and that that's an important thing to do. This is a big deal. Lots of kids were struggling because they were being left to figure out
Starting point is 00:20:58 too many things on their own. I'm going to read a little bit of this story to you, and if I get stuck on a word, I want you to try to help me figure out what that word could be. This is that lesson you heard in episode one, where children were being taught to use the meaning of the story to guess a written word. Do you think that covered word could be the word miss? Because now that they're gone, maybe their parents will miss them? One of the big lessons from the scientific research is that schools need to explicitly teach beginning readers
Starting point is 00:21:32 how to sound out written words. Because kids who don't get off to a good start with decoding often end up with reading problems they may never get over. J this fourth grader trying to read in episode one? The balanced literacy approach, with its emphasis on teaching kids other strategies for identifying words, failed to provide many kids with the decoding instruction they needed. But Mark is concerned that in their enthusiasm to teach things they weren't before,
Starting point is 00:22:15 some schools may be going overboard. I think people had the idea that, look, we've been leaving too many kids behind, we've been doing a poor job, we know what the parts of reading are, and we will teach them. God damn it. And what he's seeing now,
Starting point is 00:22:32 when he visits schools, when he talks to teachers, when he reads what they're saying online, is that some schools may be teaching kids more than they need to know. I've seen first grade classrooms where phonological awareness is the big term that's on the wall, or teaching kids what diphthongs are.
Starting point is 00:22:52 The point is, children need to be taught how to read. They need to know how to identify the sounds in words. But they don't need to know that's phonological awareness. And they need to know that the letters O-I make the sound OI in coin, but they don't need to know that's a diphthong. I think there's a failure to distinguish what a teacher might need to know about how language works and how reading works and what the kid needs to learn. He's concerned that teachers now think they have to teach kids everything there is to know about how English spelling works, every spelling pattern, every exception, every rule.
Starting point is 00:23:30 And so you have the emergence of a view that really emphasizes explicitly teaching everything that goes into becoming a reader. There's not enough time in the school day to teach kids everything they need to know about how written language works. And more importantly, it's not necessary. There's another kind of learning. This other kind of learning has a name. Implicit learning or statistical learning. This kind of learning occurs without explicit instruction. Mark Seidenberg's research has shown that the brain has a remarkable ability to learn from the statistical regularities in language, such as the frequency of certain spelling
Starting point is 00:24:15 patterns in words. Explicit instruction is critical at first. Most kids don't just start picking this up. But research shows that a lot of what a good reader eventually knows about words and how they're spelled and what they mean is stuff they learned implicitly through reading. Mark says the goal of reading instruction
Starting point is 00:24:38 should not be to teach kids everything they need to know. It should be to teach them enough so that this implicit or statistical learning can kick in. You know, there's this idea of cracking the code where the light bulb goes on and the kid kind of goes, oh, that's how it works. Remember Kamari? You heard Kamari having a lightbulb moment in episode 2. Kamari got a lot of phonics instruction, not on things like what a diphthong is, but on how to sound out written words.
Starting point is 00:25:17 He needed extra help. But eventually, he was able to decode words with spelling patterns he hadn't been taught. That's implicit learning. That kind of learning depends on lots and lots of practice. And Mark Seidenberg is worried that schools may now be spending too much time on instruction and not giving kids enough time to read. Remember the cozy nooks? I mentioned them in episode 6. I said that people with good intentions wanted to get kids curled up with books as fast as
Starting point is 00:25:56 they could. They wanted to get kids to the good part, which is reading. So they taught beginning readers shortcuts, like look at the picture, think of a word that makes sense, in the hopes that eventually, kids would figure out how to read. That approach failed to recognize how difficult it is for many children
Starting point is 00:26:17 to learn how to decode words. But Mark Seidenberg wants everyone to be cognizant of the fact that time in a cozy nook curled up with a book is essential. You become a good reader by spending a lot of time reading. But there's that critical first step, learning how to decode, that can't be skipped or given short shrift. And here's the thing. Figuring out the amount of instruction that each child needs and making
Starting point is 00:26:48 sure each child gets that instruction, that's a complex task. And ReadLion is concerned that with all the new laws and policies and public awareness about the science of reading, schools and teachers are under pressure to do things quickly, and they might not have what they need to do things well. Whenever you're trying to put anything in place, you've got to have time to do it. You've got to have teachers who feel like they're being taken care of. You know, the nuts and bolts of helping people work together and feel supportive, as hokey as that sounds, is so critical.
Starting point is 00:27:29 He learned this the hard way, through his experience 20 years ago with reading first. He thought if educators learned about the research, instruction would change. I thought just saying the words would get it done. What he learned is that information is not enough. He says the key thing to think about is how do complex systems change? What's the best way to do that? And one of the lessons from reading first is that top-down policies are not necessarily effective when the goal is complex systems change.
Starting point is 00:28:06 That's why Reid has concerns about laws that are telling schools they have to do things, and they have to do them fast. Where my fear is, is it takes us away from the details I'm talking about and the love for learning the details back to a combative stance where you're blowing out a lot of epinephrine and norepinephrine and cortisol. That's the neuroscientist talking. He's referring to chemicals in our brain that get released when we're stressed. He wants to avoid this, to avoid the kind of fight that eventually took down reading first. And he is optimistic, because as he said earlier, he does think something is different this time.
Starting point is 00:28:53 There's a thoughtfulness about reading in the country today. There is an actual mature conversation. But there are intense debates going on right now on social media and among teachers and researchers about the details of how to teach kids to read and how to do it at scale. Because that's the task here, getting thousands of school districts
Starting point is 00:29:22 to make the right kinds of changes so that millions of kids can become better readers. It's a tall order. I'm worried that things will fall apart under pressure, the pressure of new laws and policies in particular. It's tricky. Policy has an important role to play here. Schools and teachers often need the resources that can come with policy, things like money for new training and materials.
Starting point is 00:29:47 And policy has a key role to play when it comes to accountability. Sometimes pressure is necessary to change the status quo. But what's happening now is that schools and districts are buying new curriculum and materials, sometimes because they have to. They're spending a lot of money committing to new products. and districts are buying new curriculum and materials, sometimes because they have to. They're spending a lot of money committing to new products. And there are a lot of questions to ask about these new products. What's the evidence they will lead to better results? This is one of the things Mark Seidenberg is really worried about. He's worried that schools
Starting point is 00:30:24 will commit to doing things in a certain way because they have bought a particular product that tells them to do it that way. If people decide that all we need to do is stick to the program here and everyone will read, I think that would be a really big mistake. And something that's troubling him is a kind of dogmatism that he's noticing in conversations these days around the science of reading. People expressing strong beliefs, joining teams, and becoming committed to new programs
Starting point is 00:30:54 and new authorities. One thing I see is there is this sort of authoritarian strain where people want to have someone they can rely on for guidance. It's like we need to have an authority who we can rely on to tell us what to do. And one of the problems with people like Lucy Calkins were, well, she took on that role and she was a flawed resource. Here's what I think. I think as a nation, we need to approach what's happening now as a work in progress,
Starting point is 00:31:28 keep learning new things, and be prepared to course correct if necessary. But this is hard to do in education because it's such a big system with so many parts and so many people and so much money involved and so much at stake. What I can see is that the Sold a Story podcast and our earlier reporting has helped to raise awareness about the body of research known as the science of reading. It's spurred a lot of action and reaction, and now it's kind of messy out there. And that means we're not done with this story.
Starting point is 00:32:04 There's a lot more to report on, and we're going to do that. We want to know what's working in schools as they are changing how they teach reading, and what's not working, and why. If you have a story you want to share, you can send us an email at soldastoryatapmreports.org. We'll put that email address in the show notes. You can also find links to an article and a talk by Mark Seidenberg about his concerns
Starting point is 00:32:34 with translating the science of reading into practice. And a recent piece by Reed Lyon on what he believes are the most important findings from the reading research, with tons of citations if you want to read more. To get new episodes of Sold a Story when they come out, stay subscribed to this podcast feed.
Starting point is 00:32:52 You can also sign up to get email alerts, go to our website, soldastory.org, and scroll down to where it says email notifications. This episode was produced by me with help from Christopher Peak. Our editors are Chris Julin and Curtis Gilbert. Mixing and sound design by Chris Julin and Emily Havik. Our theme music is by Wonderly. Final mastering of this episode was by Derek Ramirez. We had reporting help from Annika Best and fact-checking by Betsy Towner-Levigne. Special thanks to Emily Corwin, Chris Haxel, and Margaret Goldberg for listening to early versions of this episode and providing
Starting point is 00:33:31 feedback. Andy Cruz is our digital editor, Tom Sheck is our deputy managing editor, and our executive editor is Jane Helmke. Support for Sold a Story comes from the Oak Foundation, IBIS Group, and the Hollyhock Foundation. I'm Tonya Mosley. In 1987, my sister Anita vanished without a trace. Decades later, thanks to DNA, we found her. But that's only the beginning of the story. She Has a Name is a new audio documentary that explores the search for redemption, confronting trauma, and healing in the face of unimaginable loss. Subscribe now to Truth Be Told Presents,
Starting point is 00:34:14 She Has a Name, where every revelation brings us closer to the truth.

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