Remote learning means teachers have to get creative to ensure their students make progress in reading. The context in which they are teaching has changed, but the underlying principles of learning have not.
Aligning assessment, instruction, and practice to both the brain’s cognitive processes and the individual learner’s strengths, needs, and context is still central in online instruction. Here are some areas to target.
1. Manage Attention to Maximize Learning
Attention is the cognitive process of selectively focusing on something. Nothing can be learned without first attending to it, but people’s minds naturally wander 30–50% of the time! For any subject, students need to focus during instruction to avoid missing out on essential information.
When it comes to reading, being able to selectively focus on one thing and suppress irrelevant information is thought to enable development of the brain structures required for decoding and recognizing words. The combination of not having an in-person teacher, the rabbit hole that is the internet, and the unavoidable distractions that come from learning away from school means teachers need to focus even more on managing their students’ attention for remote learning.
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2. Use Retrieval Practice to Improve Retention and Automaticity
Retrieval practice—the simple act of recalling what you’ve learned—makes learning active rather than passive and increases retention. When learning to read, students must develop foundational word reading skills to automaticity so that when they read connected text, their cognitive load shifts away from figuring out what the words say to figuring out what the text means. The more students retrieve a piece of information like a letter name or a letter-sound combination, the more automatic that retrieval becomes. The key to successful retrieval practice is spacing it out over multiple shorter sessions rather than one longer session: having a little time to “forget” in between sessions actually deepens learning and strengthens the memory when the information is encountered again.
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3. Provide Feedback to Course-Correct
Retrieval practice is even more effective when students are given feedback on their responses. Giving informative feedback—not just right or wrong, but also why—addresses underlying misconceptions directly. “Practice makes permanent,” so students need to practice accurate decoding and comprehension monitoring to develop permanent, effective reading habits. Feedback is one of the top 10 influences on reading achievement, but it only works if it is received. Students need to understand that mistakes are not only okay but also that they are welcomed opportunities for learning, and that the feedback is about performance on the task, not an evaluation of learners themselves.
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4. Address Individual Variability with Differentiation
Students learn to read at different rates, and the greatest learning gains happen when teachers target the skills students need to work on—skills that are just above their current level of understanding, but not so far beyond that point as to cause frustration.
Teachers can target differentiated reading instruction, but not all instruction should be differentiated—a mix of whole-class, small-group, and individualized instruction allows teachers to address both common and individual needs of their students flexibly.
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Adapting instruction to a remote environment comes with plenty of challenges. By going back to the fundamentals of learning that have been established over decades of research, we can find new approaches to instruction that fit our ever-changing world.
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