Resources for Educators Who Want to Put Aside the Reading Wars and Focus on Helping Kids

RECENT VIDEOS…

I developed this site to establish a common ground for discussion and to provide support for teachers, school leaders and parents who have no desire to see schools torn apart by the so-called “reading wars" and who want, instead, to center again on the kids. 

–Lucy Calkins: Author/co-author of Teaching Writing Well and of Units of Study in Reading, Writing and Phonics, Founding Director of the Teachers College Reading and Writing Project and of Mossflower Reading and Writing Project, and the Robinson Professor of Literacy at Teachers College, Columbia University. 

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

For those who want to learn more about Balanced Literacy, the Science of Reading, phonics instruction, and responses to the media, I’ve created a bibliography with links to essays, research articles, and editorials from thought leaders and scholars in education.

We'll update this section often so as to provide you with a continuing supply of resources that can help you shift the balance of your instruction. These resources will also help you communicate with families.

We're excited to organize small, supportive study groups that will meet 3-5 times over zoom (and will, of course, be renewable.)  As the site evolves, we'll also provide sparks to ignite conversation, access to free seminars on related topics, and support via a Help Desk. 

  • “I am, like you, struck by the degree to which people are willing to invoke a literacy crisis, when the data do not support anything like a literacy crisis. NAEP scores, aside from the pandemic then-- but NAEP scores, over the last 10, 15 years have grown-- slowly, but they have gotten better in literacy. And it's deeply puzzling to me why we have all of this public discourse about a literacy crisis. If I were deeply cynical, I would say it's probably a useful technique for companies that are trying to sell their programs to get people to buy those programs, if parents and some school districts are very agitated about the so-called literacy crisis.”

    Harvard EdCast: To Weather the "Literacy Crisis," Do What Works

    Catherine Snow

    John H. and Elisabeth A. Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education

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