
Reveal Teaching Kids to Read: How One School District Gets It Right
Feb 28, 2026
Christopher Peek, journalist who covered curriculum reviews and EdReports, and Emily Hanford, investigative reporter on reading instruction, discuss Steubenville’s rare success teaching virtually all students to read. They explore preschool access, sounds-first phonics, district-wide reading practices, data-driven tutoring, attendance strategies, and how state policy and curriculum reviews threatened then later validated Steubenville’s approach.
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Teach Letter Sounds Before Names To Reduce Confusion
- Steubenville teaches letter sounds before letter names to reduce confusion when decoding words.
- The sounds-first approach prioritizes phonemic knowledge so students immediately map letters to sounds when reading.
Combine Direct Instruction With Cooperative Practice
- Steubenville pairs direct phonics instruction with cooperative learning so students get explicit teaching and abundant practice.
- Cooperative groups let students practice reading together while teachers still provide explicit lessons.
Every Teacher Teaches Reading In A Shared Block
- Every teacher, including gym and music teachers, teaches reading during a common morning reading block from 9:00 to 10:30.
- This lets schoolwide leveled grouping place students by skill, not grade, for targeted instruction.



