Teaching Literacy Podcast

Jake Downs

Bridging literacy research and practice

  • 59 minutes 26 seconds
    E71|Evaluating Advanced Phonemic Awareness with Dr. Michael Coyne

    In this episode of the Teaching Literacy Podcast, host Jake Downs discusses with Dr. Michael Coyne from the University of Connecticut the concept of advanced phonemic awareness and its implications for early reading proficiency. Dr. Coyne shares findings from his recent study that examines the impact of using oral-only advanced phonemic awareness instruction on first graders. They explore the theoretical underpinnings, practical recommendations for teachers, and the overall relevance of these findings to classroom practice. Tune in to understand the nuanced debate around advanced phonemic awareness and its role in effective literacy instruction.

    00:00 Introduction to Advanced Phonemic Awareness
    01:33 Guest Introduction: Dr. Michael Coyne
    02:25 Defining Phonological and Phonemic Awareness
    06:29 Research on Phonemic Awareness
    10:04 Advanced Phonemic Awareness: Concepts and Tasks
    12:17 Theoretical Underpinnings and Critiques
    20:21 Study Overview: Curriculum and Implementation
    26:55 Study Design and Measures
    29:44 Evaluating Phonemic Awareness Instruction
    30:46 Study Results: Phonemic Awareness Outcomes
    32:54 Near Transfer Outcomes: Word Reading and Fluency
    34:53 Exploring Differential Benefits
    37:39 Recommendations for Phonemic Awareness Instruction
    42:17 Balancing Oral and Integrated Phonemic Awareness Activities
    50:15 Optimism in Literacy Research and Instruction
    52:29 Jake’s Take on Teaching Phonemic Awareness

    Reference:
    Coyne, M. D., McCoach, D. B., Santoro, L. E., Gentile, M., Rodrigues, C., & Kastner, P. (2025). The Effects of Advanced Phonemic Awareness Instruction in First Grade. The Elementary School Journal, 000–000. https://doi.org/10.1086/737952

    4 December 2025, 7:07 pm
  • 55 minutes 41 seconds
    E70|Science of Reading for Multilingual Learners with Dr. Steve Amdendum

    How can we best apply the Science of Reading to support multilingual learners? This episode tackles that critical question with Dr. Steven Amendum from the University of Delaware.

    We explore how evidence-based literacy instruction must leverage a student’s first language as a key asset, not a barrier. Dr. Amendum breaks down practical teaching strategies to boost decoding and reading comprehension for bilingual and multilingual students in diverse classrooms.

    You’ll also learn how to build effective collaboration between classroom teachers and language specialists and hear about the research-demonstrated impact of the Bella professional learning program. If you’re looking for actionable, research-driven approaches to support your English learners, this episode is a must-listen.

    00:00 – Introduction and overview of the episode
    02:07 – Current support and challenges for multilingual learners in schools
    04:29 – State vs. federal roles and legislation for multilingual learners
    06:49 – Key research: Importance of first language (L1) in English reading development
    09:21 – Cross-linguistic transfer and leveraging home language as an asset
    11:09 – Oral language, vocabulary, and comprehension strategies in L1 and L2
    13:44 – Practical strategies for teachers: supporting students without knowing their L1
    17:30 – Previewing text language and other evidence-based practices
    21:28 – Benefits of these strategies for all students
    23:00 – Decoding, fluency, and phonological awareness across languages
    25:54 – Instructional strategies: Blend as you go & Say it, move it
    34:29 – Peer support and collaborative learning
    36:10 – Effective teacher collaboration and professional learning
    41:00 – Evidence of impact: Bella program and student outcomes
    44:35 – Final thoughts and optimism for literacy research
    46:18 – Jake’s Take

    Reference:
    Kittle, J. M., Amendum, S. J., & Budde, C. M. (2024). What Does Research Say About the Science of Reading for K-5 Multilingual Learners? A Systematic Review of Systematic Reviews. Educational Psychology Review, 36(4), 108. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10648-024-09942-6

    11 November 2025, 8:53 pm
  • 1 hour 14 minutes
    E69|Transforming Comprehension: Main Ideas, Text Structures, and Teaching Techniques with Dr. Kay Wijekumar

    In episode 69 of the Teaching Literacy Podcast, host Jake Downs speaks with Dr. Kay Wijekumar, Houston Endowed Chair in the Department of Teaching and Learning and Culture at Texas A&M University. They discuss the importance of teaching students to generate rather than find the main idea in texts, detailing Dr. Wijekumar’s evidence-based KAT framework (Knowledge Acquisition and Transformation). The episode delves into how the main idea is foundational for reading comprehension and explores practical strategies for teachers, touching on the inefficacies of current curricular practices. Dr. Wijekumar highlights her website, literacy.io, which offers resources and professional development for educators. The conversation also includes a discussion on the critical role of text structures, and how principals and coaches can support teachers in implementing these strategies effectively.

    00:00 Show Opening
    02:23 Literacy as a Civil Right
    04:47 Literacy.io: A Resource for Teachers
    08:48 Challenges in Identifying the Main Idea
    12:10 Generating vs. Finding the Main Idea
    15:49 Knowledge Acquisition and Transformation (KAT) Framework
    25:11 Text Structure and Main Idea
    34:15 Cause, Problem, Solution Text Structure
    35:59 Identifying Causes and Solutions in Education
    38:59 The KAT Framework: Knowledge, Acquisition, and Transformation
    40:31 Implementing the KAT Framework in Classrooms
    41:37 Scaffolding and Sentence Stems for Effective Learning
    49:03 Inference Questions and Background Knowledge
    01:00:59 Teachers and Coaches: Improving Main Idea Identification
    01:07:55 Conclusion and Optimism for Literacy Instruction
    01:10:40 Jake’s Take: What Matters Most?

    References
    Hudson, A. K., Owens, J., Moore, K. A., Lambright, K., & Wijekumar, K. (2021). “What’s the Main Idea?”: Using Text Structure to Build Comprehension. The Reading Teacher, 75(1), 113–118. https://doi.org/10.1002/trtr.2016

    Rice, M., & Wijekumar, K. (2024). Inference skills for reading: A meta-analysis of instructional practices. Journal of Educational Psychology, 116(4), 569–589. https://doi.org/10.1037/edu0000855

    Rice, M., Wijekumar, K. (Kay), Lambright, K., & Stack, A. (2024). Promoting Inference Generation: Using Questioning and Strategy Instruction to Support Upper Elementary Students. The Reading Teacher, 78(2), 121–130. https://doi.org/10.1002/trtr.2353

    Wijekumar, K., Beerwinkle, A., McKeown, D., Zhang, S., & Joshi, R. M. (2020). The “GIST” of the reading comprehension problem in grades 4 and 5. Dyslexia, 26(3), 323–340. https://doi.org/10.1002/dys.1647

    Wijekumar, K., Hudson, A., Lambright, K., Owens, J. K., Binks-Cantrell, E., Beerwinkle, A., & Stack, A. (2023). Knowledge acquisition and transformation (KAT) using text structures. The Reading League Journal.

    7 October 2025, 5:30 pm
  • 1 hour 18 minutes
    E68|Strategic Assessment Systems with Dr. Adrea Truckenmiller and Dr. Eunsoo Cho

    Dr. Adrea Truckenmiller and Dr. Eunsoo Cho discuss building a strategic assessment system in literacy education. They cover how to use data to inform reading instruction, the difference between screeners, diagnostics, curriculum based measures, and computer adaptive tests, and the importance of reliability in assessments. Common pitfalls like over-testing and teaching to the test are addressed, along with practical advice for setting up a coherent and actionable assessment framework in schools.

    Show Documents:
    Michigan Department of Education (2020). Early literacy assessment systems that support learning. Lansing, MI: Authors. https://www.michiganassessmentconsortium.org/wp-content/uploads/ELAS_Guide_2020_v5.pdf
    Truckenmiller, A. J., Cho, E., Bourgeois, S., & Friedman, E. (2024). Uses and Misuses of Commercial Reading Assessment: An Applied Framework for Decision Making in Grades K through 6. The Reading Teacher, 77(5), 609–623. https://doi.org/10.1002/trtr.2274
    Truckenmiller, A., Coyne, M., Valentine, K., & Moura, P. (2025). Independent Researcher Review of Commercial Reading Screening Assessment Suites May 2025. https://doi.org/10.35542/osf.io/vrn3g_v1

    00:00 Introduction and Welcome
    02:36 The Importance of a Strategic Assessment System
    05:25 Different Stakeholders, Different Data Needs
    09:50 Assessment of Learning vs. Assessment for Learning
    13:31 The Myth of the One Perfect Assessment
    17:18 Understanding Screener, Diagnostic, and Progress Monitoring Assessments
    28:26 CBM vs. CAT: Formats of Assessment
    34:42 Accuracy in Assessment: Sensitivity and Specificity
    38:05 Balancing Sensitivity and Specificity in Assessments
    39:22 Importance of Reliable Assessments
    40:40 Challenges of Over and Under Identification
    45:12 Informal Reading Inventories: Pros and Cons
    46:14 Modern Assessments and Their Advantages
    54:48 Common Pitfalls in Data Usage
    57:15 Over Testing and Its Implications
    01:00:35 Teaching to the Test: A Critical Look
    01:06:24 Building a Coherent Assessment System
    01:13:55 Optimism for the Future of Literacy Research

    6 September 2025, 10:13 pm
  • 1 hour 4 minutes
    Practices of Effective K-2 Teacher Teams with Dr. Jake Downs

    Guest host Dr. Kristin Conradi Smith interviews Dr. Jake Downs about the ‘secret soup’ of highly effective K-2 teacher teams.

    Link to Jake’s Study: https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/15/2/259

    Downs, J., Martz, K., & Mohr, K. (2025). Exploring the Instructional Effectiveness of High-Growth K-2 Teacher Teams in Foundational Reading. Education Sciences, 15(2), https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15020259

    Link to ULEAD Report: https://schools.utah.gov/ulead/uleadfiles/reports/ipr/Instructional%20Clarity%20Early%20Lit%20IPR.pdf

    Please write a short impact statement for Jake’s USU review packet (and thank you!): https://forms.gle/QcUs8ciMcAy2yG6L6

    Episode Outline & Show Notes

    • 00:00Host Introduction & Listener Call-to-Action
      Jake asks listeners for impact statements to support his third-year review.
    • 01:23Guest Host Introduction
      Kristin Conradi Smith introduces herself and the episode’s focus on effective K-2 teacher teams.
    • 01:44Introducing Jake & Study Overview
      Kristin introduces Jake as the guest, outlines his research on high-growth teacher teams.
    • 02:20Defining Teacher Effectiveness
      Jake discusses different ways to define “effectiveness” and the study’s focus on student growth.
    • 04:07Why Study Teams?
      Jake explains the importance of studying effective teams, not just individual teachers.
    • 06:32District Background
      Jake describes the “Lincoln School District,” its shift in reading instruction, and its reputation for growth.
    • 09:00Study Methods: Quantitative Data
      Jake explains how teams were identified using ACADIS data and effect sizes.
    • 11:32Student Growth Results
      Jake shares impressive proficiency gains by grade level and discusses effect sizes.
    • 13:43Mixed Methods & Qualitative Interviews
      Transition to focus group interviews with teacher teams and how themes were identified.
    • 16:36Theme 1: Collaboration
      Teams engage in active, data-driven collaborative planning and shared student ownership.
    • 21:23Theme 2: Affordances for Instruction
      Teachers describe autonomy, flexibility, and supportive professional development.
    • 28:59Theme 3: Data Practices & Goal Setting
      Regular data meetings, intentional goal setting at team/class/student levels, and actionable use of data.
    • 41:29Theme 4: Teacher Factors
      Discussion of teacher knowledge, beliefs, and collective efficacy.
    • 44:57Key Takeaways & Reflections
      Jake and Kristin reflect on the “secret soup” of effective teams, the importance of systems, and actionable insights for schools.
    • 53:21Assessment & Goal Setting in Practice
      How effective teams use assessment and goal setting to drive instruction.
    • 57:20Teacher Development
      The value of both top-down and bottom-up professional learning.
    • 1:00:26Final Thoughts & Optimism
      Jake and Kristin discuss optimism for the future of reading research and practice.
    • 1:04:02Closing & Kristin’s Take
      Kristin summarizes the study’s impact and calls for more collaborative, teacher-centered research.
    5 August 2025, 11:40 pm
  • 53 minutes 46 seconds
    Jake Talks Paired Oral Reading with Melissa and Lori

    Melissa and Lori invited Jake to discuss Synchronous Paired Oral Reading Techniques (SPORT) — Listen to the episode here!

    Please write a short impact statement for Jake’s USU review packet (and thank you!): https://forms.gle/QcUs8ciMcAy2yG6L6

    7 July 2025, 6:00 pm
  • 1 hour 1 minute
    E66|Linking Automaticity, Vocabulary, and Text With Dr. Freddy Hiebert

    Please write a short impact statement for Jake’s USU review packet (and thank you!): https://forms.gle/QcUs8ciMcAy2yG6L6

    In this episode, host Jake Downs welcomes guest Dr. Freddy Hebert, a renowned literacy researcher, CEO/Founder of TextProject. The conversation covers topics such as the importance of automaticity, the core vocabulary, reading volume, and shifts in text complexity over the decades. They also dive into how teachers can better support students’ reading proficiency, particularly in early grades, and discuss actionable strategies for educators. The episode concludes with reflections on the current state and future of reading research and instruction.

    Link to TopicReads at TextProject: https://textproject.org/teachers/free-texts/topicreads-primary/

    Link to figures mentioned by Dr. Hiebert: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1m36jgp8Dt055UrdEa73IQAFES7PPemc_/view

    Figure 1 shows the reading accuracy by percentile in grades 1-8. Figure 2 shows the ratio of rare words from core reading programs 1957-2014.

    Episode Overview
    01:51 Welcome to the Teaching Literacy Podcast
    02:28 Introduction to Reading Automaticity
    03:36 Defining and Understanding Reading Automaticity
    08:10 Core Vocabulary and Its Importance
    11:28 Challenges with Rare Words and Proper Names
    19:29 Implications for Teaching and Curriculum Design
    31:00 Introduction to TextProject.org
    31:21 The Importance of Reading Volume
    32:19 Engaging Students with Texts
    33:15 Statistical Learning and Vocabulary
    39:56 Challenges in Reading Programs
    46:15 Third Grade Reading Emphasis
    48:58 Complexities of English Orthography
    54:26 Optimism in Reading Research
    56:29 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

    9 June 2025, 8:27 pm
  • 1 hour 5 minutes
    E64|AI and the Future of Writing Instruction with Dr. Steve Graham

    Jake interviews Dr. Steve Graham of the Mary Lou Fulton College for Teaching and Learning Innovation at Arizona State University

    Please write a short impact statement for Jake’s USU review packet (and thank you!): https://forms.gle/QcUs8ciMcAy2yG6L6

    5 May 2025, 3:31 pm
  • 51 minutes 4 seconds
    EP63| Is Comprehension Instruction Getting Better? with Dr. Phil Capin

    Dr. Phil Capin joins the show to discuss 40 years of reading comprehension instruction.

    References:

    Capin, P., Dahl-Leonard, K., Hall, C., Yoon, N. Y., Cho, E., Chatzoglou, E., Reiley, S., Walker, M., Shanahan, E., Andress, T., & Vaughn, S. (2024). Reading Comprehension Instruction: Evaluating Our Progress Since Durkin’s Seminal Study. Scientific Studies of Reading, 1–30. https://doi.org/10.1080/10888438.2024.2418582

    What Works Clearinghouse Practice Guides Mentioned by Dr. Capin

    Improving Adolescent Literacy: Effective Classroom and Intervention Practices: Kamil, M. L., Borman, G. D., Dole, J., Kral, C. C., Salinger, T., & Torgesen, J. (2008). Improving adolescent literacy: Effective classroom and intervention practices: A practice Guide (NCEE #2008-4027). National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Available at https://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/docs/practiceguide/adlit_pg_082608.pdf

    Improving Reading Comprehension in Kindergarten Through 3rd Grade: Shanahan, T., Callison, K., Carriere, C., Duke, N. K., Pearson, P. D., Schatschneider, C., & Torgesen, J. (2010). Improving reading comprehension in kindergarten through 3rd grade: A practice guide. National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Available at https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED512029.pdf

    Foundational Skills to Support Reading for Understanding in Grades K–3: Foorman, B., Beyler, N., Borradaile, K., Coyne, M., Denton, C. A., Dimino, J., Furgeson, J., Hayes, L., Henke, J., Justice, L., Keating, B., Lewis, W., Sattar, S., Streke, A., Wagner, R., & Wissel, S. (2016). Foundational skills to support reading for understanding in kindergarten through 3rd grade (NCEE 2016-4008). National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE), Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Available at https://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/Docs/practiceGuide/wwc_foundationalreading_040717.pdf

    Providing Reading Interventions for Students in Grades 4–9: Vaughn, S., Gersten, R., Dimino, J., Taylor, M. J., Newman-Gonchar, R., Krowka, S., Kieffer, M. J., McKeown, M., Reed, D., Sanchez, M., St. Martin, K., Wexler, J., Morgan, S., Yañez, A., & Jayanthi, M. (2022). Providing reading interventions for students in grades 4–9 (WWC 2022007). National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE), Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Available at https://ies.ed.gov/ncee/WWC/Docs/PracticeGuide/WWC-practice-guide-reading-intervention-full-text.pdf

    7 April 2025, 6:00 am
  • 1 hour 4 minutes
    E62|Stopping the Summer Slide with Dr. Blythe Anderson and Dr. John Strong

    Jake Downs talks with Dr. Blythe Anderson and Dr. John Strong about effective summer tutoring programs to prevent the summer slide in elementary reading. They discuss strategies such as small-group tutoring, differentiated instruction, and interactive read-alouds, based on multi-year research that shows significant gains in vocabulary, reading fluency, and foundational skills. The episode emphasizes the importance of data-driven decision-making and continuous improvement in summer programs, with implications for school-year instruction.

    02:07 Understanding the Summer Slide
    02:54 Research on Summer School Programs
    07:00 Designing Effective Summer Tutoring Programs
    08:46 Training and Implementation of Tutors
    12:16 Session Format and Instructional Strategies
    18:31 Assessment and Differentiation
    27:21 Year Three Results and Findings
    42:25 Program Evolution Over the Years
    48:48 Big Lessons Learned from Summer School Programs
    58:52 Final Thoughts and Optimism for Literacy Research

    4 March 2025, 11:39 pm
  • 52 minutes 18 seconds
    E61| Does Science of Reading Legislation Improve Reading Outcomes with Dr. Katherine O’Donnell

    Host Dr. Jake Downs is joined by Dr. Katherine O’Donnell, an Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology at the University of Utah, to discuss her research on student outcomes in states following the implementation of science of reading legislation.

    03:02 Historical Context: Reading First Era
    09:37 Mississippi’s Science of Reading Legislation
    17:02 Comparative Analysis of State Outcomes
    29:08 Impact on Special Education and ELL Students
    34:58 Implementation Takes Time
    39:48 Why Did the ‘Advanced’ Category on NAEP balloon?
    42:56 NAEP SOR Outcomes as ‘Matthew Effects’
    48:26 Jake’s Take Capitalizing on Advantages


    3 February 2025, 10:38 pm
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