Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

‘Science of reading’ defended

Educators claiming ‘three-cueing’ method a better option

- JULIE CARR SMYTH AND HEATHER HOLLINGSWO­RTH

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The battle over how to teach reading has landed in court.

With momentum shifting in favor of research-backed strategies known as the “science of reading,” states and some school districts have been ditching once-popular programs amid concerns that they aren’t effective.

A legal fight in Ohio centers on a state ban of material that uses a common technique called three-cuing. It involves encouragin­g students to draw on meaning, sentence structure and visual clues to identify words, asking questions like: “What is going to happen next?” “What is the first letter of the word?” or “What clues do the pictures offer?”

The technique is a key part of the Reading Recovery program used in more than 2,400 U.S. elementary schools. The Reading Recovery Council of North America filed a lawsuit earlier this month, saying lawmakers infringed on the powers of state and local education boards by using a budget bill to ban three-cuing.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, blasted the lawsuit, calling evidence in favor of the science of reading “abundantly clear.”

“Now we have a lawsuit being filed by people who just want to make money,” he told reporters this week. “They’re upset that they’re not going to be able to make money any more. They don’t care about kids, and I think Ohioans ought to be very angry about that type of a lawsuit.”

The Reading Recovery Council, the nonprofit that operates the program, didn’t immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment. But it said on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, that it will fight for evidence-based reading instructio­n “as defined by educators and researcher­s, not politician­s and corporate interests.”

Proponents of the science of reading argue that students need detailed instructio­n on the building blocks of reading. The push was led by parents of children with dyslexia, who need systematic instructio­n to read. It gained steam during the pandemic as schools looked for ways to regain ground lost during the pandemic.

Reading Recovery is not the only program to find itself on the outs.

Last month, Columbia University’s Teachers College announced that it was shutting down a reading program that also employed three-cuing and was founded by education guru Lucy Calkins.

Once used in hundreds of New York City public schools and thousands of others nationwide, Calkins’ “Units of Study” found itself facing scrutiny. Calkins added more phonics to appease her critics, but it was too late.

New York City, whose mayor often talks about his personal struggle with dyslexia, dropped her program. And several other states, including Arkansas, Louisiana and Virginia, have banned schools from using methods based on three-cuing.

Mike McGovern, president of the Internatio­nal Dyslexia Associatio­n of Central Ohio, said his organizati­on is behind the governor in the legal fight.

“It’s about money,” he said of the lawsuit. “Like any business, they have to fight back.”

In Ohio, the latest state operating budget bill stipulates that by the next school year, all schools must use reading programs that have been approved by the state.

In its lawsuit, the Worthingto­n, Ohio-based Reading Recovery Council of North America argued that a budget bill cannot set policy. Under the state’s constituti­on, that role is left to the state Board of Education — some of whose members also have sued the state over budget provisions that restructur­e the state’s Education Department and curtail their authority.

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