Wisconsin Public Radio

Republicans Have $50 Milllion, Science-Based Plan To Revamp How Children Learn To Read

DPI Superintendent says bill is "non-starter" as it includes 3rd grade retention requirement.

By , Wisconsin Public Radio - Jun 9th, 2023 12:23 pm
Riverwest Elementary School, 2765 N. Fratney St. Photo taken March 30th, 2021 by Dave Reid.

Riverwest Elementary School, 2765 N. Fratney St. File photo by Dave Reid.

Wisconsin Republicans released a plan that would change the way most public schools in the state teach children to read.

State Rep. Joel Kitchens, R-Sturgeon Bay, and State Sen. Duey Stroebel, R-Cedarburg, held a press conference Thursday in Madison discussing the bill that will move schools away from teaching what is known as “balanced literacy” to a “science of reading” approach.

Instead of being taught reading through pictures, word cues and memorization, children would be taught using a phonics-based method that focuses on learning to sound out letters and phrases.

According to DPI, only about 20 percent of school districts are using a phonics-based approach to literacy education. Other reading curriculums that don’t include phonics have been shown to be less effective for students.

The bill will include $50 million in the state budget — up from $15 million — that would be used to retrain teachers, hire reading coaches and purchase curriculum materials. That money would be in addition to a $1 billion investment in K-12 education funding announced Thursday as part of a shared revenue agreement.

“Wisconsin currently faces a literacy crisis,” Stroebel said, “In 2022, nearly 70 percent of Wisconsin fourth graders were not reading at grade level. This is the lowest recorded score since 1998. Further, students are four times more likely to not graduate if they aren’t reading at grade level by third grade. This bill will get Wisconsin back on track to close achievement gaps in reading and language arts by shifting to a science of reading approach.”

Republicans have modeled their plan off Mississippi, which is often cited by advocates of the science of reading curriculum. From 2013 to 2019, Mississippi fourth graders increased their reading scores on a national exam by 10 points after the state transformed its approach to reading instruction.

“Mississippi is sort of the poster child in having gone from dead last in the country to essentially being tied with us,” Kitchens said.

The bill will also include requirements for screening beginning in kindergarten to identify students who need extra help.

“These are not standardized tests, these are quick screenings that take maybe 15 minutes. And then in first, second and third grade, it will be three times a year,” Kitchens said. “What we do with that is we identify kids who are struggling, and we’ll do diagnostic testing, and they’ll be put on a plan to catch them back up.”

DPI says third-grade retention policy is a “non-starter”

State Superintendent Jill Underly released a statement saying she does not support the plan as it stands, despite working with key legislators on it for more than four months, because of the retention policy requirement.

“That is a non-starter for us because, as drafted, it is harmful to our learners, families and communities,” Underly said. “My staff will be able to respond with further information as soon as we have had time to thoroughly read the current bill, which differs considerably from versions we had previously seen.”

Under the bill, by Jan. 1, 2025, the Department of Public Instruction must establish a model policy for promoting third-graders to the fourth grade. The policy must include that students who score in the lowest proficiency category on the third grade reading assessment be retained in the third grade. There is also a requirement that school boards provide “intensive instructional services, progress monitoring, and supports to a pupil who is retained under the policy.”

Additionally, beginning on Sept. 1, 2028, school boards, independent charter schools and private schools participating in a parental choice program are prohibited from promoting a third grade student unless the child complies with their respective promotion policy.

“There will be a lot of interventions. We don’t want to hold kids back,” Kitchens said. “If we’re catching them early … and they’ll have a lot of opportunities to take the (standardized) test. That’s the last resort.”

More than 30 states have already adopted laws or are moving toward requiring school districts to use a science of reading approach. But partisan gridlock in Wisconsin has kept the state from moving forward on a comprehensive reading plan for several years, despite third grade reading test scores remaining stagnant or falling.

Only 33.8 percent of third-graders were proficient in reading on the most recent Wisconsin Forward Exam. Wisconsin’s achievement gap between Black and white fourth grade students in reading has often been the worst in the nation.

Previous reading-related bills brought forward by the GOP have been vetoed by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers. They included a 2021 bill that would have increased the number of times students were tested and asked schools to come up with intervention plans for students who scored poorly.

Evers also vetoed a similar 2022 bill. With both vetoes, the governor raised concerns about retention and long-term sustainable funding.

Listen to the WPR report here.

Wisconsin Republicans unveil plan to revamp how children learn to read was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.

6 thoughts on “Republicans Have $50 Milllion, Science-Based Plan To Revamp How Children Learn To Read”

  1. Mingus says:

    I can read and pronounce paragraphs written in Spanish quite well but I do not understand most of what it. This is how phonics works. Young students learn how to sound out the word in a context of a canned curriculum with no connections to what subjects are being studied in the class or anything from their daily experience. Mississippi has a history of underfunding education and family support programs. It is hardly amazing that some extra reading support would make a difference. The students in Wisconsin are functioning at much higher level due to the history of good educational, quality of life, and family support programs. The concerns about reading are proper but the Republicans want to make it a major crisis which will justify their takeover of public education.

  2. Jmj1624 says:

    Reading starts at birth! Parents should be sent home from the hospital with their newborn and with information on the important role they play in their child’s education. Talking, singing, reading to their newborn on a daily basis. Reading specialists should be employed through community health centers to do home visits and model early learning practices. With a healthy start children are ready to start school and learn to read from a balanced reading program that included phonics but is not phonics only.

  3. Mingus says:

    Jmj1624 has some great ideas that would have more impact than the “reading coaches” whomever they might be. Republicans are not smart enough to see that they are just recycling old, failed practices.

  4. Linsey Sieger says:

    “The Daily” podcast just had an episode about Balanced Literacy. I’m very rarely on board with our state legislators, but they may be right on this issue. Even the creator of the Balanced Literacy curriculum is changing her tune and incorporating phonics into the latest edition.

    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-daily/id1200361736?i=1000615844859

  5. ringo muldano says:

    Science-based science. Tax money for xtian schools to teach creationism and otherism sucks money from public schools.

  6. mkwagner says:

    There is NO one best method of teaching read to every child. Each child’s needs differ and with proper assessment, a reading strategy should be crafted for each child. However, Vos and company do not want to fund early reading programs. No they want to wait until the 3rd grade before intensive measures are applied. Politicians have no business making curricular decisions for ANY school. They have no expertise in learning and cognition. Their meddling is only about destroying public education in the state of Wisconsin so that this state can race Mississippi to the bottom.
    FYI: public education is a corner stone of a democratic society. It’s also the reason behind the US’ phenomenal economic growth in the 19th and early 20th century.

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