Science of Reading: The Podcast

Amplify Education
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Jul 14, 2021 • 45min

S4-01: Applying the Science of Reading at any grade level: Laura Cusack

Kicking off our new season, Susan Lambert hosts this special episode with Laura Cusack, Executive Director of K–8 ELA Strategy at Amplify. This dynamic duo sheds light on the pandemic’s effects on literacy achievement and strategizes how to make up for lost foundational skills while keeping students moving forward in grade-level learning. They also urge educators to make it a point to honor the diverse experience of their students during reading instruction.Quotes:“It’s all about growing and learning.”“When we get that diversity of kids in the classroom, we have to honor all of their experiences.”Resources:The Reading Comprehension Blueprint by Nancy HennessySpeech to Print by Louisa MoatsAmplify Science of Reading Handbook (Primers #1 and #2)Science of Reading: The Podcast w/ Louisa Moats EpisodeScience of Reading: The Podcast w/ Nancy Hennessy EpisodeScience of Reading: The Podcast w/ Laurence Holt EpisodeWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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Jun 30, 2021 • 36min

S3-13. Deconstructing the Rope: A look back at Season 3

Join your host, Susan Lambert, as she recaps Deconstructing the Rope, our series for season 3 of Science of Reading: The Podcast. She highlights the special guests we’ve had this season such as Louisa Moats, Bruce McCandliss, and Sonia Cabell and shares their expert insights on Scarborough’s Reading Rope. From vocabulary to word and sight recognition, tune into this special episode and cement this knowledge in your Science of Reading journey.Want to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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Jun 16, 2021 • 45min

S3-12. Fostering accessible instruction for all: DeJunne’ Clark Jackson

Join DeJunne’ Clark Jackson, vice president of program development for the Center for Development and Learning, as she talks about delivering instruction all students can access. She also urges listeners to foster better experiences for educators and students. Finally, she speaks on the connection between the Science of Reading and dyslexia.Quotes:“The intersection of the Science of Reading and dyslexia is that the Science of Reading is the foundation for what dyslexia therapy is built upon.”“Access is the core and focus of equity. Bias is the major barrier of diversity. Inclusion is the ultimate goal.”Resources:Center for Development and LearningPlain Talk ConferenceWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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Jun 2, 2021 • 43min

S3-11. Continuously improving literacy instruction: Alana Mangham

Join Alana Mangham, literacy specialist for the Center for Development and Learning, as she shares her pathway from educator to changemaker in the Science of Reading field. She’ll also highlight her successful four-part literacy plan and urge you to question your instructional practices to better foster reading achievement in children today. Quotes:“The power in not being an expert to start out with is that we grow together.”“We need to give teachers credit, but we need to get to work. We have things to do.Resources:Center for Development and LearningGrowing Reading BrainsPlain Talk ConferenceNarrowing the Third Grade Reading Gap | EABWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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May 19, 2021 • 47min

S3-10. Deconstructing the Rope: Language structures with Kate Cain

Join Kate Cain, professor of language and literacy at Lancaster University, as she unwinds language structures, a strand of Scarborough’s Reading Rope. In the latest episode of our Deconstructing the Rope series, Kate explores language structures in the simple view of reading and explains its connections across reading comprehension in literacy development. She also highlights the reciprocal relationship between books and conversation and underscores the importance of reading aloud to children from a young age to develop their vocabulary and semantics. Quotes:“Simply knowing the individual word meanings and the word order alone is not going to be sufficient to have accurate sentence comprehension.”“The language of books is different from the language of conversation.”References:Professor Kate Cain’s Publications SiteWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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May 5, 2021 • 47min

S3-09. Deconstructing the Rope: Vocabulary with Nancy Hennessy

Join Nancy Hennessy, past president of the International Dyslexia Association, as she unwinds vocabulary, a strand of Scarborough’s Reading Rope. In the latest episode of our Deconstructing the Rope series, Nancy defines the role of vocabulary and elaborates on the nuanced structures of comprehension in literacy instruction. She also highlights how to explicitly teach vocabulary to students through her research-backed, four-pronged approach.  Quotes:"Every one of the strands of the rope is important. If any strand frays, then reading is in jeopardy. ""Vocabulary instruction is really getting our students interested in words as the building blocks of our language." Resources:The Reading Comprehension Blueprint: Helping Students Make Meaning from Text by Nancy HennessyDaniel Willingham–Science & Education Want to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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Apr 21, 2021 • 40min

S3-08. Deconstructing the Rope: Language comprehension with Sonia Cabell

Join Sonia Cabell, assistant professor at the School of Teacher Education at Florida State University, in the latest episode of our Deconstructing the Rope series as she unwinds language comprehension, a strand of Scarborough’s Reading Rope. Sonia explains the true definition of language comprehension in relation to the simple view of reading and highlights the role of parents and educators in the use of advanced language models in literacy development. She also reflects on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on teachers and families and discusses how it has highlighted the importance of education today.Quotes:“Young children are very smart. They know a great deal more than we give them credit for and they can do a lot more than we understand.”“Parents are childrens’ first teachers and so, to really embrace parents in childrens’ learning process is really critical.”Show Notes:Florida Center for Reading ResearchCore Knowledge Language ArtsWriting Into Literacy TEDx Talk by Sonia CabellEdWeek Science of Reading Article by Sonia CabellLive with the Author interviewThe Power of Conversations: Building Primary Grade Students’ Vocabulary and Comprehension in a Changing Educational Landscape by Sonia CabellTwitter: @SoniaCabellWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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Apr 7, 2021 • 1h 3min

S3-07. A Defining Movement: The Reading League on the Science of Reading, with Maria Murray

In this special episode, Dr. Maria Murray, President and CEO of The Reading League, analyzes the intricacies of literacy instruction and shares common misconceptions that educators have about the science of reading. She explains why The Science of Reading: A Defining Movement coalition was founded: the belief of clear understandings of what the science of reading is and what it is not to promote the proper use of instructional practices aligned with the findings from the science of reading.Quotes:“What systems do we need to change and strengthen to ensure that everyone is successful?”“Nothing creates excitement more than success.”Show notes:The Science of Reading: A Defining MovementThe Reading LeagueWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.Episode timestamps*03:00 Introduction: Who is Maria Murray?04:00 Seeing the impact of effective reading programs09:00 The birth of The Reading League13:00 The Reading League's growth and mission17:00 The Science of Reading: Going beyond the “buzz word”31:00 Science of Reading as an education system issue33:00 Defining the Science of Reading35:00 The Importance of a common definition43:00 Science of Reading as a social justice issue50:00 Introducing The Reading League's TV Show01:00:00 Conclusion and call to action*Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute
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Mar 24, 2021 • 41min

S3-06. Deconstructing the Rope: Background knowledge with Susan Neuman

Join Susan Neuman, Professor of Childhood and Literacy Education at the Steinhardt School at New York University, as she unwinds background knowledge, a strand of Scarborough’s Reading Rope. In the sixth episode of our Deconstructing the Rope series, Susan explains the important link between background knowledge and reading comprehension in the science of reading and shares about her five research-based principles to build knowledge networks in literacy instruction. She also highlights the connection between speech and reading and previews her upcoming studies on the role of cross-media connections in children’s learning.Quotes: “What you’re helping children do is create a mosaic; putting all those ideas together in a knowledge network. If you don’t do it explicitly, many children cannot do it on their own.”“We’ve got to start early. We’ve got to start immediately and know that children are eager to learn and use the content to engage them.”Resources:Book: "Giving Our Children a Fighting Chance" by Susan Neuman. More books in the link.Article: Developing Low-Income Children's Vocabulary and Content Knowledge through a Shared Book Reading Program by Susan Neuman and Tanya KaeferArticle: The information book flood: Is additional exposure enough to support early literacy development? by Susan NeumanWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.
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11 snips
Mar 10, 2021 • 55min

S3-05. Deconstructing the Rope: Sight recognition with Dr. Bruce McCandliss

Join Dr. Bruce McCandliss, Professor at the Graduate School of Education of Stanford University, as he unwinds sight recognition, a strand of Scarborough’s Reading Rope. In the fifth episode of our series, Bruce explains the role of sight and word recognition in the science of reading and highlights the importance of the rapid integration of print, speech, and meaning. He also encourages listeners to be cognizant of the ever-changing, technological learning environment while nurturing young readers and writers.Quotes:“You’re continually developing the system of word recognition. It’s not a one-and-done kind of thing. It’s continually being refined; it becomes more and more automatic.““Word recognition is the ability to see a written word and then in your mind link it very precisely to how that word is spoken and what that word might mean.”Resources:Word Recognition in Beginning Literacy by Linnea EhriStanford University Educational Neuroscience InitiativeScience of Reading: The Podcast, Season 1 Episode 12 with Bruce McCandlissWant to discuss the episode? Join our Facebook group Science of Reading: The Community.

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