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Missouri is Trying to Overhaul Reading Instruction. KIPP Got There First

As states launch a raft of new literacy laws, the charter network is rolling out more testing and training in schools nationwide.

This is a photo of a teacher teaching phonics to her students.
KIPP teachers in St. Louis spend hours each week teaching students how to pick apart the phonics code. (Kevin Mahnken)

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The kindergartners at St. Louis鈥檚 KIPP Wisdom Academy stood with their hands apart and palms up, facing a whiteboard festooned with rows of vowels and consonants. 

Their teacher, Sonya Taylor, was leading a lesson designed to help them recognize sound and letter patterns. In a piping, resonant voice 鈥 she stretches it out Sundays as a singer and worship leader at her church 鈥 Taylor called out a string of words for the class to echo, clapping simultaneously, before repeating the sound they had in common.

鈥淪ay 鈥榬ub, tribe, scrub鈥!鈥&苍产蝉辫;

RUB, TRIBE, SCRUB!鈥&苍产蝉辫;

鈥淲hat鈥檚 the end sound?鈥 she trilled in syncopated eighth-notes.

Buh-Buh-Buh,鈥 answered all 20 students, sounding like a school of fish.

The lesson comes from of phonemic tutorials, one of four reading-specific programs in use at KIPP Wisdom. Taylor鈥檚 class, along with their schoolmates in grades 1鈥4, are taught for hours each week how to pick apart the phonics code through a sequence of clapping, call-and-response, group discussion and independent study. The aim is to identify which letter combinations produce certain sounds and, with enough practice, to get a successful start on reading. 

As in dozens of other states over the last decade, that students between kindergarten and the third grade be screened for reading challenges. It鈥檚 part of a widespread campaign among educators and activists to bring English language arts into closer alignment with the 鈥渟cience of reading,鈥 the sprawling body of psychological and neuroscientific research exploring how people come to understand the written word. And in Missouri, where reading scores ranked around the middle of the pack nationally even before the pandemic, school leaders hope the new regime of testing and additional support will help kids recover from suffered over the last few years. 

Kim Stuckey is president of the Missouri chapter of the , an organization dedicated to spreading awareness of the science of reading. In an email, she called the state鈥檚 actions a positive step, while cautioning that more substance is needed to change how teaching candidates are trained around literacy.

鈥淏uilding teacher knowledge is critical to transforming reading outcomes for all children,鈥 Stuckey wrote in an email. 鈥淭hat said, teacher preparation programs need to align their coursework with science-of-reading research so that everyone is moving in the same direction.鈥

KIPP St. Louis, which operates six schools throughout the city, executed its own turn to the science of reading even before the change in law. The in the United States, enrolling roughly 120,000 students across nearly 300 campuses, KIPP is completing a gradual overhaul of its literacy instruction, which will take effect for all of its schools by 2025. Over the last few years, that revision has brought new curricula, training and focus to a local network that was already seeing some impressive results: from Saint Louis University鈥檚 Policy Research in Missouri Education Center, KIPP Victory Academy (Wisdom鈥檚 sister school) posted the best scores for reading growth of any elementary school on Missouri鈥檚 2021 state standardized testing. 

One analysis found that St. Louis鈥檚 KIPP Victory saw the highest reading growth on state testing of any elementary school in Missouri. (KIPP St. Louis)

Victory鈥檚 principal, Cetera Altepeter, said that KIPP leaders in St. Louis were eager to change their approach, in part because they felt local students 鈥渨eren鈥檛 mastering鈥 the building blocks of literacy.

鈥淲e knew that we needed to explore other things and make sure we were staying up on the science and the research,鈥 Altepeter said. 鈥淣ow we’re starting to see the impact.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

鈥楾here was no strategy for them鈥

KIPP has long been one of the most well-known and respected names within the charter sector. The network鈥檚 rapid spread was fueled by in federal grants, awarded largely in recognition of its success raising the achievement of disadvantaged kids. 

The evidence of that success mounted over the last decade, with a from the research group Mathematica showing that attending both a KIPP middle and high school made students more likely to attend and graduate from college.

But within the organization, some believed they could improve upon their work in foundational literacy. Chief Schools Officer Jim Manly, who previously served for eight years as the superintendent of KIPP鈥檚 schools in New York City, remembered that when he was hired in 2014, a kind of agnosticism prevailed on elementary reading strategy 鈥 perhaps because KIPP鈥檚 national network begin in a middle school. 

鈥淥ne of the things I found when I got there was that they didn’t really have a point of view about early literacy and teaching kids to read, at least in New York City,鈥 Manly said. 

At the same time, galvanized of nationwide failure to lift reading scores or to impart reading knowledge, states like Mississippi, Nevada, and Michigan began to require evidence-based practices in the classroom and new resources for schools and teachers. 

KIPP made its own move in 2019, piloting a series of measures in New York City designed to improve both instruction and professional capacity. Incoming students were tested on reading performance using , with struggling readers assigned to additional reading intervention blocks and elementary reading staff encouraged to take LETRS, on literacy acquisition. 

KIPP schools in St. Louis have moved away from the 鈥済uided reading鈥 materials used previously. (Kevin Mahnken)

Even as COVID disrupted the work of schools around the country, the changes road-tested in New York were brought to six more of KIPP鈥檚 27 regions in the 2020鈥21 school year, followed by an additional seven in 2021鈥22. By 2024鈥25, all 27 regions will have adopted the early literacy agenda.

KIPP St. Louis was one of one of the first regions to opt into the initiative. For years, KIPP Victory and KIPP Wisdom (a third elementary school, KIPP Wonder, was opened in 2019) relied heavily on , through which pupils are taught strategies 鈥 such as using context clues or looking for pictures 鈥 to determine the meaning of unfamiliar words. Angela Jackson, the region鈥檚 head of elementary literacy instruction, said that doubts were building about the effectiveness of those methods.

鈥淲e knew that when kids get to longer texts, pictures go away, and there was actually no strategy for them,鈥 recalled Jackson, who worked as a second- and fourth-grade teacher at KIPP Victory before taking her current job. 鈥淭here were voices around the buildings: ‘I don’t think we’re doing this correctly. There has to be a better way.'”

Whether the new way will prove to be the better way remains to be seen. But data from system-wide mCLASS assessments (a literacy screening test administered throughout the academic year) offer some early signs of progress. In a sampling of students from 12 KIPP regions in the beginning stages of implementing the network鈥檚 early literacy program, just 22 percent were meeting or exceeding grade-level benchmarks at the beginning of the 2022鈥23 school year. By the end of that year, 66 percent were 鈥 equivalent to the national mCLASS sample. 

Kelly Haywood said she has seen some of the same promising early returns in St. Louis. The mother of two daughters at St. Louis鈥檚 KIPP Wonder Academy, she has visited and observed Heggerty sessions in her daughter Londyn鈥檚 kindergarten class. While reading together at home, the two use some of the same methods to make sense of unfamiliar vocabulary.

“She picks up on those strategies they use in school,鈥 Haywood said. 鈥淚’ll ask her, ‘What does this say?’ and if she doesn’t know the word, we’ll sound it out. That has really helped with both of them.”

Reading鈥檚 role in learning recovery

KIPP St. Louis鈥檚 course correction has now been underway since the early stages of the pandemic, and while substantial changes have already been achieved, much more work remains.

Teachers at KIPP Wisdom and Victory are currently employing parts of four different reading programs. While each brings its own strengths, using such a broad array of materials comes with the risk of teacher burnout.

In the coming years, Jackson hopes to streamline by moving all three KIPP elementary schools toward the curriculum, which places a heavy emphasis on the explicit teaching of academic content and the cultivation of students鈥 subject-matter knowledge. A showed that schools relying on the Core Knowledge sequence saw large improvements in ELA, math, and science scores. 

LETRS training will also be made available to new teachers joining KIPP schools in St. Louis, Jackson added, with stipends available for those choosing to take the course in their off-hours. Roughly 70 percent of elementary literacy teachers in the region have already absorbed the first LETRS volume, which includes worth of sessions on phonics and decoding. 

One of them is Erica Williams, who teaches third graders. A St. Louis native and a gregarious personality in the hallways of KIPP Wisdom, Williams came to the profession by an unconventional route: Over a decade ago, concerned over her young son falling behind on reading and developmental milestones, she began volunteering in his Head Start program. After that experience led her to experiment with substitute-teaching, Williams eventually became a lead teacher in her own classroom and earned a master鈥檚 degree. 

Literacy training in her preparation program was 鈥減retty surface-level,鈥 Williams recalled, with little emphasis on the mechanics of sound and word formation. By contrast, she said, her experience with LETRS opened her eyes to the 鈥渆ver-involving鈥 process of how young brains develop. 

“I’m doing it to become more effective as a teacher,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚鈥檓 intrigued by it, and I also see the need.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Reading instructor Erica Williams says she has taken LETRS training 鈥渢o become more effective as a teacher.鈥 (KIPP St. Louis)

The need, particularly after the COVID era, is greater than ever. In spite of the impressive growth statistics flagged by Saint Louis University researchers, of KIPP Victory鈥檚 third and fourth graders demonstrated basic literacy skills on Missouri鈥檚 2023 round of state standardized tests. Far beyond St. Louis, one of the most troubled school districts in the country, Missouri鈥檚 reading scores on the 2022 NAEP exam to their lowest level in decades. 

In response, Missouri鈥檚 legislature has adopted an initiative , which mandates that schools test their youngest students for reading challenges, develop improvement plans for those that fall behind and regularly communicate with parents on their progress throughout the school year. 

Rebecca Treiman, who researches language development at Washington University in St. Louis, called those proposals 鈥済ood steps.鈥 But she argued that even high-quality training and classroom materials would have a limited impact if teacher turnover in Missouri, during the pandemic, did not abate. Both in the state are among the lowest in the country, a fact that some have blamed for ongoing churn.

鈥淵ou might have a trained teacher, but teachers need experience putting this into practice,鈥 Treiman said. 鈥淢aking sure kids go to school every day, and making sure that teacher salaries are good enough, is really important.”

KIPP St. Louis Executive Director Garrett applauded the change in policy and said schools in the network were benefiting from it, while noting that the local affiliate 鈥漵tarted basically putting all our teachers through that a year ahead.鈥

Jackson said that Missouri鈥檚 new laws around student assessment and family outreach would present schools with the challenge of hiring new interventionists to devise personalized action plans and work with parents; with many already operating under a manpower deficit, that task could be significant. 

Still, she added, higher standards could ultimately galvanize improvement, both inside and outside the charter sector. 

鈥淚t’s a lot to take hold of, and it’s going to hold us accountable,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are identifying kids who are at risk, we are telling parents that we’re doing something about it, and from that perspective, I think it’s great.”


Disclosure: Walton Family Foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and the City Fund provide financial support to KIPP and 成人抖阴.

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