Which Reading Model Would Best Guide Our School Improvement Efforts?

  • reading models Simple View of Reading Scarborough's Rope Active View of Reading
  • 29 April, 2023
  • 27 Comments

Teacher question:

I’m the lead reading coach in our school district. We want to present one of the reading models to our teachers and administrators to guide our efforts to improve reading achievement in the elementary and middle schools. Which of the models do you favor (e.g., simple view, Scarborough’s rope, active view)?

RELATED: If You Want Higher Reading Achievement, You’re Going to Have to Deal with the COVID Aftermath

Shanahan responds:

All those models have some value… and they all miss a key issue it seems to me. Let’s first take a quick tour of those models that you are trying to choose among and then let me suggest a more relevant model that I think you might want to consider, Shanahan’s Wheels of Reading Improvement.

Philip Gough and William Tunmer put forth the simple view as a hypothetical construct that could be tested in future research. The power of this model is in its simplicity. Its basic premises are that reading only has one special or unique set of skills – decoding, and that if you decode well enough to translate print to oral language (that is, if you can read text aloud), then your listening comprehension abilities should determine your degree of comprehension. In this model – which is expressed as a tidy multiplication problem – reading comprehension is a product of decoding and oral language comprehension. (The initial idea was for the model to act as an Occam’s razor of reading research; Phil was concerned that reading scholars were over-complicating our understanding of reading comprehension and he wanted proof that their contributions were really adding something).

Hollis Scarborough’s rope had a different genesis. Her model accepted the idea of those same two constellations of skills and abilities in reading. Hers wasn’t a model to be tested or a criterion for determining what matters, but a quick summary aimed at communicating what was then known about the reading process, in broad strokes. The rope sums up what scientists had determined to be component parts of decoding and comprehension. Accordingly, she expresses those two abilities as strands of rope that must be twisted together to become reading and it explicitly lists the skills and knowledge included in set. She also adds the helpful idea that the decoding skills need to be automatic (executable without conscious attention) and that comprehension is strategic (intentional).

The more-recently issued active view model is the work of Nell Duke and Kelly Cartwright. This one is a response to what they view as the now-outdated simple view. Consistent with that purpose, the active model is significantly denser and more complicated. They still include those two major constellations of abilities (word recognition and language comprehension) including expanded lists of component parts, à la Scarborough. Usefully, they connect these two constellations with a third, a set of bridge variables implicated in both word reading and comprehension, such as vocabulary knowledge and reading fluency. It also introduces a fourth group of abilities under the moniker of active self-regulation which includes executive function and motivation – and these processes govern the whole thing.

Each of these models can be useful. The spareness of the simple view is its major value. From it, it is easy to understand the centrality of both decoding and language comprehension in reading. The simple view should convince your faculty that substantial instructional attention is needed for both. Scarborough’s rope complicates things a bit of course, but only by identifying some of the abilities that are included in decoding and comprehension (and specifying the importance of automaticity and strategic processing). To teach reading it is necessary to operationalize decoding and comprehension so they can be taught. A bit more complicated, but still easy enough to understand. The active view is even more complicated; it requires a deeper dive into research findings to gain purchase on it. But it manages to add some useful variables omitted or only implied in the earlier models. It also better characterizes those bridge variables – knowing of their complex nature can be useful for teachers.

Just as I can point up the benefits of each of these, I can highlight their deficiencies (e.g., simple view misses those language skills that are unique or high specialized to written language, the rope leaves out important variables identified since the 1990s (e.g., executive function), and the active view includes some variables not yet well proven to play an important role in reading development (e.g., theory of mind).

Those concerns are bothersome, but only one shortcoming strikes me as being critical – and all these models suffer from that one. All three of these are models of reading, not of reading instruction or learning to read. They describe the process of reading, the abilities one must marshal to read. But they have little to say about what a school district or even a classroom teacher needs to do to raise reading achievement.

I think you might find helpful my Reading Improvement Wheels – a model of school reading improvement.  

When it comes to what we can do directly with children to improve reading achievement there are three things that make a difference: the amount of instruction that we provide, the content or curriculum of that instruction, and the quality of the delivery of that content. Those variables are especially productive because they represent variables that if altered will change the students’ experience.

All things being equal, the teacher who keeps her kids on task 94% of the time is going to end up with higher achievement, than the teacher who only manages to accomplish that 62% of the time. Likewise, the teacher who engages students in learning how to read (like those abilities included in those three processing models) will be more successful than the teacher who emphasizes other stuff during the Language Arts block. And, the teacher who has clear purposes, explains things well, and provides kids with lots of opportunity to respond will out teach those who do not manage to do those things.

As such those models of reading advise what should be included in a curriculum – what we should try to teach the students to know or do – but they don’t emphasize how much attention we should pay those curricular components or how they may most effectively be delivered. Teachers often under- or overvalue some components, according too much time to some and too little to others. Seemingly, their actions are consonant with the various models – they are teaching items from the models, but mis-dosage can easily undermine success, as would a lack of quality in lesson delivery.

There is another whole tier of variables that should be attended to as well. These variables are important, but they are not as powerful as time, curriculum, and quality of instruction. They are secondary in nature. They can be successful in delivering higher reading achievement but only to the extent that they alter time, curriculum, and quality.

Think about it. If your school provides teachers with the highest quality professional development, it can only improve reading to the extent that it increases the amount of instruction, better focuses that instruction on essential curriculum goals, and/or improves the quality of the learning experience for students.

If any teacher comes away from that training not wanting to implement it for some reason, then it will have none of those outcomes – which means achievement won’t improve since the PD won’t have affected the children’s experience.

The same can be said about several other of these useful, but decidedly subsidiary school improvement levers. There is evidence supporting the potential value of leadership/supervision, parent involvement, textbooks/programs, assessments, special programs, and motivational efforts for improving reading achievement.

But none of these variables directly impacts student learning. They all operate through their ability to influence amount of instruction, content of instruction, or quality of instruction. These outer ring actions always must exert their impact, if there is impact, through some intermediary person or process. The best textbook program in the world will only work to the extent that teachers are willing and able to implement it. Supervision can only improve achievement if it leads to better implementation; and so on. As such, none of these secondary variables has the power to raise reading achievement – at least not directly – and all of them can do so if the intermediary person or process comes through.  

My Reading Improvement Wheel is meant to help you to think about these different types of school improvement variables. The students are in the middle. It is their learning that matters. The golden circle includes those three potent aspects of student experience that teachers and parents can shape. Appropriately, the golden circle is the one closest to the children, summarizing their academic learning experiences; experiences that can impact learning directly.

The outer blue ring includes those levers that we use to try to influence what happens in classrooms. These variables tend to have lesser effects when it comes to learning, since they only work to the extent to which they alter children’s experiences. If you download the circle and put in slide show mode, click the model snd the outer ring will rotate. This is important because each of those variables in the blue circle may affect any and all of the variables in the golden circle.

My advice? Start with the Wheels and determine what actions you intend to take to raise reading achievement, considering how that is all going to work. Think about how you will ensure that your actions on the perimeter will collaborate powerfully enough to exert changes in the inner circle. Then think about how you would organize the information in those reading process models to support instruction – Which lessons in the textbooks connect with those variables? How much time should teachers devote to these? How will teachers know these are being learned? What will they need to know to present such lessons effectively? How will supervisors monitor and shape students’ learning experience? How can parents contribute?

In other words, providing teachers with any of these models of reading processing will only be helpful if they can be translated into instructional actions that teachers can implement in their classrooms. Those models address only a small amount of what needs to be considered (they suggest, in broad strokes, some of the content for that curriculum variable in the golden circle – though they do not even attempt to organize that information in any way that would guide teachers in how to address these abilities in the classroom.


READ MORE: Shanahan On Literacy Blog

Comments

See what others have to say about this topic.

William Kerns Apr 29, 2023 02:21 PM

Love this advice. Cuts through the destructiveness of the so-called reading wars. As Yaden, Reinking and Smagorinsky argued in their Reading Research Quarterly piece, the binary (nature v. nurture) nature of the discourse over reading and the instruction of reading is unhealthy. The "us v. them" side taking is not healthy when talking of these models, and I love the way you cut through the fog.

Sara Peden Apr 29, 2023 02:22 PM

Where could we see a visual of your wheels, please?

Sara Peden Apr 29, 2023 02:23 PM

OOPS ... sorry ... found the link that was right in front of me the whole time!

Maggie Oliver Apr 29, 2023 02:33 PM

I appreciate the clarity of instruction in the golden circle: how much time, the content, and the quality. It causes me to reflect on how I can give the most and best to my students.

Ann Christensen Apr 29, 2023 02:38 PM

I made this point, although not as eloquently, in my book, Constructing Strong Foundations of Early Literacy (Jones & Christensen, 2023). The models all include basic components of reading but not an adequate model of instruction. I included the Cueing Systems as a viable model because it includes the components a reader must control in order to read. The instructional practices associated with the model are flawed. Still, the inclusion of this model meant my text was rejected by the Colorado Department of Education for use in the college classroom.
It appears to me that both Rope and the 3 Cueing systems contain the same components. What am I missing?

Gail Eskew Apr 29, 2023 03:17 PM

Thank you Dr Shanahan for painting the entire picture of what’s needed for literacy success!
Literacy will open the door to building knowledge. Changes in practice is key and needs to be a focus as well as the curriculum following the research models.
I appreciate your wheel !

Timothy Shanahan Apr 29, 2023 03:20 PM

Ann--

What you're missing is that there is no rigorous research supporting the idea that proficient readers depend upon 3-cueing to recognize words. It is clear that readers -- when they are unable to read a word -- do try to get at it other ways, but that is a work around, not reading. That's why, as students become proficient readers, depend less and less upon information other than the letters when reading words. There is no question that semantics and syntax play important roles in reading -- just not the roles that 3-cueing envisions. You have the right players, just not the right game.

tim

tim

Timothy Shanahan Apr 29, 2023 03:21 PM

Ann--

What you're missing is that there is no rigorous research supporting the idea that proficient readers depend upon 3-cueing to recognize words. It is clear that readers -- when they are unable to read a word -- do try to get at it other ways, but that is a work around, not reading. That's why, as students become proficient readers, depend less and less upon information other than the letters when reading words. There is no question that semantics and syntax play important roles in reading -- just not the roles that 3-cueing envisions. You have the right players, just not the right game.

tim

tim

Timothy Shanahan Apr 29, 2023 03:21 PM

Ann--

What you're missing is that there is no rigorous research supporting the idea that proficient readers depend upon 3-cueing to recognize words. It is clear that readers -- when they are unable to read a word -- do try to get at it other ways, but that is a work around, not reading. That's why, as students become proficient readers, depend less and less upon information other than the letters when reading words. There is no question that semantics and syntax play important roles in reading -- just not the roles that 3-cueing envisions. You have the right players, just not the right game.

tim

tim

Katherine Hamski Apr 29, 2023 03:42 PM

We want them to be able to "think" about what is on the page and to be able to cognitively interact with the text.

Dr. Bill Conrad Apr 29, 2023 05:44 PM

Thank you for the clear model to support reading instruction. Very valuable.

May I suggest the inclusion of formative assessment with descriptive feedback be incorporated into your inner ring. The eminent educator, Ralph Tyler, made assessment part of the three key elements of quality instruction: curriculum, instruction, and assessment.

Additionally, Black and Wiliam did extensive research on the value of formative assessment with descriptive feedback demonstrating large (0.6) effect size on growth in student achievement.

Just a thought. What are your thoughts?

Lauren Apr 29, 2023 03:21 PM

Thank you for this clear and concise model. I just wanted to comment on the relationship between curriculum and quality of teaching. What I have experienced in my district over the past decade or so, is what I've heard described as the "Chasing the latest shiny thing", or "Hopping on the latest bandwagon" for reading instruction. Maybe it's "The magic pill", and if you just take it, every child will read at and above grade level. My comment is, that if you constantly change the curriculum, the quality of teaching will go down. Like anything, there is a learning curve when you get a new curriculum to teach. I think that consistency, and a commitment to stick with a program and see it through will help our schools and our students. I honestly am tired of the reading war whiplash. Very irrational....

Christy Glenn Apr 29, 2023 05:51 PM

https://learningbydesign.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/TLLN_11x8.5.pdf
From Christy Glenn

Timothy Shanahan Apr 29, 2023 05:56 PM

Bill-
Assessment is already there.

tim

Dr. Bill Conrad Apr 29, 2023 07:07 PM

Hi Tim,

Yes, I saw your inclusion of assessment.

However, relegating assessment to the second ring diminishes the essential foundational role that formative assessment plays in the teaching and learning of reading. No?

As we know, assessment illiteracy is rampant in K-12 education. I know because I was an assessment and accountability director im many education settings for many years.

Many teachers and administrators still do not recognize the power that formative assessments play in teaching and learning. Many will think of your second ring placement as a reference to state and standardized assessments. These assessments play no role in day to day student learning. Most educators still prefer to rage against the thermometers.

When teachers effectively use just in time formative assessments to diagnose, intervene, and monitor student reading needs, powerful learning will occur!

Let’s give formative assessment with descriptive feedback the prominence that it truly deserves! It is a foundational element in instruction. It is not peripheral.

Thanks Tim.

John Young Apr 29, 2023 08:24 PM

Thanks once again. Your columns continue to get to the core of my work of supporting 40 schools with very high percentages of Aboriginal students in delivering literacy programs (MultLit). It involves a lot of travel to some very remote parts of Australia. The sections on quality of instruction, on task behaviour, how much instruction are the key challenges faced in improving reading achievement. Rates of absences are very high.
I have been doing this work for 18 months after being a principal of a school like the ones I now work with for 10 years. I have come to the conclusion that one of the key ways to improve reading achievement is to make sure the schools are run effectively and teachers are trained and supported in behaviour management.

Timothy Shanahan Apr 29, 2023 09:19 PM

Bill-

I didn't relegate to the second ring, that's just where it belongs. No one has ever found (or even argued) that assessment has a direct and immediate impact on student learning. In fact, assessment can even have a negative impact on learning. But even if you tested kids with the greatest and most appropriate, valid, and reliable assessment ever devised -- kids reading would not be expected to improve without several additional steps. You are overestimating the nature/value/significance of assessment.

tim

Ann Christensen Apr 29, 2023 10:22 PM

Thank you Tim. Just to clarify, my book also explains both the rope and the simple view of reading, and makes the point that instruction, time, and expertise are necessary for beginning readers no matter what infographic you claim. But you are (of course) correct. In order to get to proficient reading, one must learn to use just the print as the path to meaning. Thank you.

Dr. Bill Conrad Apr 29, 2023 11:12 PM

Hi Tim,

I think we have a fundamental definitional issue with assessment. You seem to think of assessment in a somewhat narrower and summative sense.

I have a broader definition that includes not only the collection of data but also the use of that data to diagnose students learning needs aligned to specific learning targets, Formative assessment with descriptive feedback provides focused specific, and timely feedback on student performance on the learning targets, teacher and student interventions to address gaps or misconceptions in learning, followed by monitoring of subsequent student performance. That is why I call it formative assessment with descriptive feedback in order to accentuate assessment’s role in providing focused feedback that is specific, timely, and aligned to clear achievable learning targets.

Assessments exist on a continuum of most formative to most summative. Just in time most formative assessments with focused feedback, intervention, monitoring will have a huge impact on student achievement. A bibliography follows:

Black, P. & Wiliam, D. (1998). Inside the black box: Raising standards through classroom assessment. Phi Delta Kappan, 80(2), 139-148.

Hattie, J., & Timperley, H. (2007). The power of feedback. Review of educational research, 77(1), 81-112.

Kluger, A. N., & DeNisi, A. (1996). The effects of feedback interventions on performance: A historical review, a meta-analysis, and a preliminary feedback intervention theory. Psychological bulletin, 119(2), 254-284.

Shute, V. J. (2008). Focus on formative feedback. Review of educational research, 78(1), 153-189.

Wiggins, G. (2012). Seven keys to effective feedback. Educational leadership, 70(1), 10-16.


Timothy Shanahan Apr 30, 2023 04:45 PM

Bill-

No, we don't have a different definition of assessment. Assessment can be valuable formatively as well as summatively -- and yet, it only improves learning if it manages to shape the students' educational experience -- by shifting the focus, increasing the amount of teaching (it more often reduces it), or enhances the quality. This mens not only does the assessment need to take up minimal time, it has to lead to actions that improve achievement. There is a paucity of evidence supporting its effectiveness in improving learning for most kids (there is some -- as I've cited before on this site). Testing has no direct impact on learning.

tim

Dr. Bill Conrad Apr 30, 2023 06:22 PM

Hi Tim,

I find your perspective interesting, especially as it relates to summative assessments. Summative assessments should play an important role in helping to inform adult practices. It is not intended to inform individual student or even small student academic achievement. I spent many years helping schools and school districts visualize standardized test data as a part of their strategic planning process.

Build it and they did not come. Field of nightmares. Back to blaming the children, families, the tests, yada yada! No one ever really changed their practices based on a review of summative data. Your point is well taken.

However, the judicious use of formative assessment with descriptive feedback is crucial to student learning. The great educational cognitive scientist, Ausubel, taught us to ascertain where students are at in the learning process and then adjust teaching appropriately. Formative assessment with descriptive feedback supports this wonderful epigram.

Assessment must include not only the collection of data but also an evaluative component as well. It is different than testing where grades are assigned with little or no descriptive feedback, intervention, or monitoring.

In my old age, I tutor children in reading. I noticed that one of my students randomly interjected the /a/ sound when orally reading. I asked her if she was aware of this phenomenon. She said she was not aware and no one had ever brought it to her attention. I then used my phone to record her reading where she heard the phenomenon. She was surprised to hear it. I then suggested that she slow the pace of her reading and incorporate regular breathing. She tried the intervention and I monitored it. She significantly reduced her ersatz use of the /a/. One starfish saved using just in time formative assessment.

Of course, this is a special case. More bibliography reference providing evidence. Of the power of formative assessment (not testing) with descriptive feedback.

Thanks for the productive dialogue, Tim.

Nicol, D. J., & Macfarlane-Dick, D. (2006). Formative assessment and self-regulated learning: A model and seven principles of good feedback practice. Studies in Higher Education, 31(2), 199-218.

Hattie, J. (2009). Visible learning: A synthesis of over 800 meta-analyses relating to achievement. Routledge.

Kluger, A. N., & DeNisi, A. (1998). Feedback interventions: Toward the understanding of a double-edged sword. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 7(3), 67-72.

Gail Eskew May 01, 2023 02:29 PM

Thank you Dr Shanahan for painting the entire picture of what’s needed for literacy success!
Literacy will open the door to building knowledge. Changes in practice is key and needs to be a focus as well as the curriculum following the research models.
I appreciate your wheel !

Miriam Trehearne May 01, 2023 03:44 PM

Miriam P. Trehearne

Thanks Tim for sharing your Wheels of Reading. We do know from the work of John Hattie and others that there is typically a large within- school gap in any school in teacher effectiveness. It was through a similar model using the Whole School Approach that we were able to close this gap within 56 high needs, high poverty schools in a large Canadian school district. The schools that I worked with implemented Dr. Peter Hill’s model, very similar to yours. The results were monitored and interpreted by the university and a private program evaluator.

SOME of the key variables, supported by the work of John Hattie include:

Shanahan: Curriculum…. Whole School Approach: Teacher Beliefs and Understandings of Curriculum and Implementation
Shanahan: Amount of Instruction… Whole School Approach: Long Blocks of Uninterrupted Language Arts Time…SACRED TIME
Shanahan: Quality of Teaching… Whole School Approach: Focussed Teaching: Linking Assessment to Instruction Using Research Based Strategies and Stressing the Importance of Relationships

Thanks Tim for sharing the Wheels of Reading. I would simply change the title to the Wheels of Literacy. They work…. We have the proof!

Heather May 03, 2023 01:36 PM

This last statement really hits the nail on the head "In other words, providing teachers with any of these models of reading processing will only be helpful if they can be translated into instructional actions that teachers can implement in their classrooms."

It's really discerning when people throw these models around and claim they are the answers to get kids reading. Especially when it comes to Scarborough's Rope and Simple View of Reading. Scarborough's Rope seems to always be the infographic most often associated with the Science of Reading, which is basically at its core just another term thrown around to claim a "scientific" instructional approach, but really lacks any depth. Similar to Balanced Literacy. Often I see people confusing Scarborough's Rope with the definition of the Science of Reading. As in you ask someone to define it, and they throw that info graphic at you. This seems to be especially present in the Dyslexia Education community. As a dyslexic person, Reading Specialist, and CALT in training it's a big pet peeve of mine. People who claim to be such experts in the field really have little answers when it comes to how does this apply to actual classroom instruction. They will pick out what is wrong, but can rarely help give practical advice for how to improve over all reading achievement.

Funny, I was at ALTA's (Academic Language Therapist Association) national conference over the weekend. The very same day your blog came out I was enjoying a presentation made by Kelly Cartwright herself about the Active Reading Model. I do appreciate that this model includes the importance of the role that executive function plays in reading. It helps to understand, and see how this effects the reading process in the brains of those of us who have such neurodiversities as dyslexia and adhd. This is often a component missing from many instructional approaches that claim to remediate such things as dyslexia, and it is a huge factor in the retention of skills required in order to actually read. I always feel like so many remediation programs are written, constructed, and delivered without having actual struggling readers brain processes in mind. They are just focused on "filling gaps", and not really addressing how those processes are actually occurring in the readers mind. For a lot of dyslexic people basic reading skills are present, but how to switch from that to using actual metacognition is somewhat illusive because for many of us that executive function is a bit disorganized. I feel like dyslexia interventions are great at teaching extensive word and language skills needed to decode and spell, but do little to help us dyslexics be active readers. They lack depth, over complicate things that are aren't as important in the processes, have little in the way of trouble shooting when said struggling readers continue to struggle even when getting systematic and explicit instruction in decoding, and don't make use of helpful hints to help us save mental energy when actively reading.

Gaynor May 04, 2023 05:03 AM

Tim and Bill , I read with interest your discussion but without your sophistication and knowledge.
Personally I have interpreted assessment with revision,consolidation and reinforcement. As a maths (arithmetic) as well as reading tutor I believe I have had great success with using highly structured, sequential, and explicitly taught workbooks. One third of the workbook lessons are revision. The books printed in Oz (Australia) in the 1960s were not commercial products ,only, but used in many Australian schools for a couple of million children in classes in exclusive private schools. Curiously most of the panel of writers were US, from Columbia with a Ph.D. This was the era of Direct Instruction and di ,which I gather had a hard time everywhere for no good reason ? Anyway ,sadly, in my opinion by the middle 1980s they were out of print. The replacements had a lot less revision.
Because of my success, I am an absolute fan of daily revision and correction with supplementary exercises for those sections/ concepts the student has failed to grasp, using different formats and approaches. They are not however the only texts I use.
I used the same model of continual revision for phonic instruction with workbooks as well. Half the workbook for phonics/ phoneme awareness was revision. For reading material I use adapted ,US old fashioned controlled vocabulary basal readers and workbooks from before awful WL was introduced as well as phonic readers.
I don't believe this programme is as suitable for the top half of achievers in a class but rather the lower half and low SES students where maybe the teachers are not good quality or too busy. Anybody patient including sibling or more able classmate can supervise the work and provide feedback.
I have seen some dreadful programmed/mastery/ workbook learning programmes but wonder if there has been an unreasonable overreaction overall, to it somewhere in the past decades. There is an art and cognitive science involved in their production. Additionally , I strongly subscribe to handwriting, now proved to be often superior to computerized learning and it also does something in the brain to improve reading apparently Pencil work can be erased and repeated. You may have guessed I am a child of the mid 20th Century.
I would include revision/ assessment half way between the inside and outside the first ring in Tim's model.

Jacqueline Kilburn May 04, 2023 04:22 PM

"When it comes to what we can do directly with children to improve reading achievement there are three things that make a difference: the amount of instruction that we provide, the content or curriculum of that instruction, and the quality of the delivery of that content."

I love this from above, we as leaders sometimes believe the curriculum will solve the issue, however I always say when coaching teachers.. you can make any curriculum or practice better if you believe in it, devote time to the instruction, and your delivery is engaging and gets your students engaged and responding.

Amy L Thompson Jun 21, 2023 10:56 PM

I find this model incredibly helpful as a school leader. And not just for reading. At the end of the day, if we aren't making changes in the "golden" circle, we aren't making a difference to student learning. This model helps me consider costs, benefits, and trade offs. Did we use all of our reading improvement budget on expensive, time-intenstive PD, but nothing on curriculum materials that support the implmenetation of the newly acquired professional learning? How do we support and grow teacher autonomy that results in better delivery while also insisting upon best practices? This model fosters good questions that don't have easy answers.

With regards to the back and forth about assessment, of course it goes on the outer circle. But it's a powerful lever to pull to impact the "golden" circle. One year, I took progress monitoring data to Kinder teacherse twice per month and DIBELS scores went up significantly. But I'm under no illusion that giving teachers the assessment data was what changed the student outcomes. The teachers adjusted their Tier 1 intruction and they targeted individual student needs. They responded to the data (golden circle) and student learning improved.

Thank you, Tim, for this simple, illuminating model.

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Which Reading Model Would Best Guide Our School Improvement Efforts?

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