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The Importance of High-Quality Reading Instruction

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This section is available for download—Improved Early Reading Instruction and Intervention

Reading is the fundamental skill upon which all formal education depends. Research clearly shows that children who are poor readers at the end of first grade are never likely to acquire the reading skills they need to successfully complete elementary school—unless these students are identified early in their school career and given the intensive, systematic intervention they require. Any child who doesn't learn to read early and well will not easily master other skills and knowledge, and is unlikely to ever flourish in school or in life.

Low reading achievement, more than any other factor, is the root cause of chronically low-performing schools, which harm students and contribute to the loss of public confidence in our school system. When many children don't learn to read, the public schools cannot and will not be regarded as successful—and efforts to dismantle them will proceed.

Thanks to new scientific research—plus a long-awaited scientific and political consensus around this research—the knowledge exists to teach all but a handful of severely disabled children to read well. It is estimated that over 90 percent of students—including many now classified as learning disabled—could increase their reading skills to roughly average levels with intensive, early instruction delivered by skilled teachers.

Therefore, the AFT advocates that states and districts ensure that all K-3 teachers have the knowledge, resources and supports they need to implement high-quality early reading instruction for their students. To do so requires that the following elements of an effective reading program be in place:

What You Can Do

Examples from the Field

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Charting the Course

This topic is one of six that AFT is highlighting in Charting the Course: The AFT's Education Agends to Reach All Children. Learn more about the campaign and what you can do to get involved.

AFT Resources

Where We Stand: K-12 Literacy (2007)

Nurturing Teacher Knowledge, American Educator, Winter 2006-07

Drop Everything and Read—But How?, American Educator, Summer 2006

Teaching Reading IS Rocket Science (2004)

Practicing Prevention—One District's Success, American Educator, Fall 2004

Preventing Early Reading Failure, American Educator, Fall 2004

Reading Comprehension Requires Knowledge—of Words and the World, American Educator, Spring 2003

A Reading Success Story (2003)

Teacher to Teacher: Issues Affecting the Classroom Teacher (2002)

Focus on Reading (2002)

Teaching Decoding, American Educator, Spring/Summer 1998

Additional Resources

Reading Rockets

Put Reading First: Helping Your Child Learn to Read, A Parent’s Guide, U.S. Department of Education

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