
Science of Reading: The Podcast S10 E1: The (not so) Simple View of Reading, with Wesley Hoover, Ph.D.
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Sep 10, 2025 Wesley Hoover, Ph.D., a psycholinguist from the University of Texas at Austin, dives deep into the complexities of the Simple View of Reading. He explains how reading comprehension hinges on both word recognition and language comprehension. Discover the impact of these factors on student struggles and misconceptions surrounding the model. Wesley also highlights the importance of assessing reading frameworks against research while advocating for the value of language comprehension instruction in lifelong learning.
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Path To The Simple View
- Wesley Hoover traced his interest in reading to a philosophy of language course and meeting Phil Gough at UT Austin.
- He used data from work at SEDL to run the first empirical test of the Simple View.
Speed And Accuracy Matter In Word Recognition
- Word recognition requires fast, accurate decoding of print so prior words remain in memory to build sentence meaning.
- Mistakes or slowness produce different meanings or lost context that block comprehension.
Complexity Lives Inside The Two Components
- Each big component hides hierarchies of subskills (alphabetic principle, phonemic awareness, letter knowledge) needed for word recognition.
- Mapping those subskills clarifies which foundation failed when students can't decode.



