Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Schools are racing to improve kids' reading

- By Bianca Vázquez Toness

ATLANTA >> Michael Crowder stands nervously at the front of his third grade classroom, his mustardyel­low polo shirt buttoned to the top.

“Give us some vowels,” says his teacher, La'Neeka Gilbert-Jackson. His eyes search a chart, but he doesn't land on an answer. “Let's help him out,” Gilbert-Jackson says.

“A-E-I-O-U,” the class says in unison.

Michael missed most of first grade, the foundation­al year for learning to read. It was the first fall of the pandemic, and for months Atlanta only offered school online. Michael's mom had just had a baby, and there was no quiet place in their small apartment. He missed part of second grade, too. So, like most of his classmates at his Atlanta school, he isn't reading at the level expected for a third grader.

That poses an urgent problem.

Third grade is the last chance for Michael's class to master reading with help from teachers before they face more rigorous expectatio­ns. If Michael and his classmates don't read fluently by the time this school year ends, research shows they're less likely to complete high school. Pandemic-fueled school interrupti­ons have raised the stakes. Nationally, third graders lost more ground in reading than kids in older grades.

To address learning loss, Atlanta has been one of the only cities in the country to add class time — 30 minutes a day for three years.

Gilbert-Jackson hopes it will be enough. The school year has been a race to prepare her students for future classes, where reading well is a gateway to everything else.

Right before December vacation, Gilbert-Jackson's class is subdued and visibly tired. But Gilbert-Jackson moves on with her lessons.

She reviews suffixes, how to spell words ending in -ch, -tch, and how to make words plural. Some students have spellings memorized; for those who don't, Gilbert-Jackson explains the rules. It's a phonics-based program the district now mandates for all third graders, in line with science-backed curricula gaining momentum across the country.

It can be dry and tedious stuff, replete with obscure jargon like “digraph” and “trigraph.”

The strong readers nod and respond, but the students still learning the basics look lost.

To inject fun into the lesson, Gilbert-Jackson turns it into a quiz game.

“Teach,” Gilbert-Jackson calls out. “How do you spell teach?”

Students choose between “teach” and “teatch.” Only half got it right. As the first semester draws to a close, 14 of Gilbert-Jackson's 19 students aren't meeting expectatio­ns for reading. That includes Michael.

Gilbert-Jackson has an important advantage: She taught Michael and most of his classmates in first grade and second grade, and followed them to third. She knows how much school many of them missed — and why.

The strategy was adopted by Boyd Elementary to give students consistenc­y through the crisis.

The long-term connection — or perhaps just the continuity of attending school daily — has helped Michael start reading. At the end of first grade he knew two of the so-called “sight words” — “a” and “the.”

By that point, first graders were expected to have memorized 200 of these high-frequency words that aren't easily decodable by new readers.

Now, midway through third grade, he is reading like a midyear first grader. It's progress, Gilbert-Jackson says. “

I see a change in him,” says Michael's stepfather, Rico Morton. “I feel like he has the potential to be someone.”

Michael isn't the only student who's still far behind.

In a couple cases, Gilbert-Jackson believes students' parents were doing work for them when school was online.

 ?? ALEX SLITZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Michael Crowder, 11, reads during an after-school literacy program in Atlanta on Thursday. Michael missed most of first grade, the foundation­al year for learning to read.
ALEX SLITZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michael Crowder, 11, reads during an after-school literacy program in Atlanta on Thursday. Michael missed most of first grade, the foundation­al year for learning to read.

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