Districts Have Invested in Literacy. What’s Next?

Literacy’s Next Challenge
Over the last several years, literacy has become one of the biggest priorities in K-12 education. Districts have adopted new instructional materials. Teachers have participated in Science of Reading training. Schools have strengthened screening processes and invested in intervention supports. In many places, literacy improvement has moved from being a conversation to being a system-wide effort.
That’s good news.
A decade ago, many districts were still debating what effective reading instruction should look like. Today, the conversation is much more focused. Educators have a stronger understanding of how students learn to read and what support struggling readers need.
But as many district leaders are discovering, knowing what works and delivering it consistently are two different things.
The work of improving literacy doesn’t end when a curriculum is adopted or professional learning is completed. In many ways, that’s when the harder work begins.
Beyond the Plan
For many districts, the challenge is no longer deciding which literacy practices to implement. The bigger question is whether students are receiving the support they need consistently enough to benefit from those efforts.
A student may be identified through screening as needing additional reading support. The district may have a clear intervention plan. Teachers may understand the instructional approach.
But between staffing shortages, schedule constraints, competing priorities, and the realities of running schools, support can look very different from one building to the next.
Many district leaders are taking a closer look at how literacy support is being delivered across schools, not just how it was designed. Our Literacy Implementation Checklist can help teams assess where things are working well and where gaps may exist.
Download the Literacy Implementation Checklist
What Students Actually Experience
When literacy initiatives are discussed at conferences or in strategic plans, the focus is often on systems, frameworks, and instructional models.
Students experience literacy improvement differently.
They experience it through the intervention group they attend three times a week. Through the adult who works with them on foundational skills. Through the additional practice they receive after a screening identifies a gap.
What matters most is whether that support happens consistently enough to change outcomes.
The districts making progress are often the ones finding ways to make intervention a dependable part of the student experience rather than an initiative that fluctuates depending on staffing, scheduling, or available capacity.
That consistency matters because struggling readers rarely need a single intervention. They need sustained support over time.
Why Relationships Matter
One part of the literacy conversation that doesn’t always get enough attention is the role relationships play in student growth. Students who are behind in reading often know they’re behind. Many have experienced years of frustration before receiving targeted support.
Academic strategies matter. So do the people delivering them.
When students trust the adults supporting them, engagement, persistence and confidence all improve. That’s one reason many districts are paying closer attention to how intervention and tutoring are delivered, not just what is being delivered.
Later this month we’ll be diving deeper into this topic and we invite you to join us. Our upcoming webinar, The Human Element: Why the Tutor-Teacher Relationship Drives Tutoring Outcomes, will explore how relationships contribute to stronger student outcomes. Learn more and register here.
Making Literacy Efforts Last
Districts making progress are focusing on the day-to-day realities that influence student outcomes. They’re working to connect intervention more closely to classroom instruction, make student support easier to coordinate, and create systems that can withstand staffing changes and competing priorities.
Most importantly, they are asking a different question.
Not “How do we start this?” But “How do we make sure students continue receiving this support next year, and the year after that?”
That shift may seem subtle, but it often separates short-term improvement from long-term progress.
From Theory to Practice
A Pennsylvania district used daily high-impact tutoring to support struggling readers, with every participating student improving at least one reading level.
Looking Ahead
The next chapter of literacy improvement is less about deciding what works and more about ensuring students can access that support consistently, regardless of which school they attend or the challenges districts face along the way.
Because literacy growth doesn’t happen when a plan is written.
It happens when students receive the support they need, week after week, long enough for progress to take hold.


