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SchoolStatus Launches Literacy Solution to Help Districts Engage Families in Improving Reading Outcomes
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SchoolStatus Launches Literacy Solution to Help Districts Engage Families in Improving Reading Outcomes
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Parents care deeply about how their child is learning to read. Yet many families don’t fully understand literacy progress until late in the school year. Educators should connect with families on reading progress early enough to make a difference.
Research shows that strong family engagement supports literacy growth, but families need clear, usable information to act on. Harvard Graduate School of Education research has highlighted the role families can play in children’s literacy development, especially when schools and families share a clear understanding of what children need.
By the time families hear that their child is struggling in reading, the pattern has usually been forming for months.
Teachers see it early. They notice decoding gaps. They see comprehension challenges emerge. They observe a confidence shift during independent reading. Families often just see a report card.
That timing gap creates a familiar dynamic. A literacy concern feels sudden to a parent, even though the early signals were present long before. Schools aren’t consciously hiding information. The process of getting information from data sources into plain language that families can understand and act on is the challenge.
Reading development is layered. A student may decode well but struggle with comprehension. Another may read fluently but avoid independent reading. A third may be progressing steadily but still need targeted support to stay on pace. Teachers see these details every day. Families often receive a single indicator.
The challenge goes beyond how often schools share updates. Families need a plain-language explanation of what the school is seeing and what it means. Education Northwest describes the link between family engagement and literacy and reinforces that families are most effective as partners when communication supports shared understanding.
Many parents want answers to simple questions:
• What reading skills is my child building right now?
• What’s going well?
• What needs reinforcement?
• What can we do at home that actually helps?
A large body of research connects home literacy practices to stronger language and reading development. For example, a study in Early Childhood Research Quarterly (via ERIC) examines the relationship between the home literacy environment and children’s language growth.
Parents’ beliefs matter too. Research highlights how parents’ beliefs and attitudes toward literacy activities relate to what happens at home. Another study reports links between parents’ literacy beliefs, home literacy activities, and children’s literacy skills over time.
In many districts, literacy communication is structured around benchmarks.
If a student falls below a target score, a letter goes home. If an intervention begins, a notification is sent. If a report card shows a concern, a conference is scheduled.
Those touchpoints matter, but they arrive after patterns have already formed.
Families benefit from earlier communication that explains what skills are developing, what the teacher is seeing, and what the family can do right now. That’s where partnership starts to feel real.
Even in districts that care deeply about family engagement, barriers persist.
Literacy data may live in assessment platforms that families cannot access easily. Updates may rely on quarterly reporting cycles. Messages may use instructional language that makes sense in a PLC meeting but not at a kitchen table.
None of this is intentional.
Without solutions that connect educators and families on literacy progress in real time, parents remain slightly behind the curve.
Strong communication means clearer messages, earlier messages, and messages tied to what families care about. Families respond to relevance. They respond to a sense that the school sees their child as a whole person.
That kind of connection turns parents into partners. It reduces surprise conversations late in the year. It supports consistent reinforcement at home. It helps students feel supported in more than one place.
Parents should not be the last to know how their child is learning to read.
When educators and families stay connected around what matters — skill development, confidence, progress — literacy growth becomes a shared effort. And shared effort leads to stronger outcomes.
Literacy information is often shared at formal checkpoints rather than continuously. Families may not see early skill-level signals until a benchmark is missed or a report card arrives.
Research across multiple studies links home literacy practices and parent beliefs to stronger literacy development.
Clear explanations of specific skills, strengths, and growth areas, plus simple strategies families can use at home that align with classroom instruction.
Share timely updates in plain language, provide context families can act on, and make it easy for educators and families to stay aligned around literacy goals throughout the year.
Rob HumenikSenior Content Marketing Manager
Rob Humenik is a seasoned content marketing professional with over a decade of experience in educational technology. He is passionate about leveraging technology to improve student outcomes and simplify the lives of teachers and administrators. As Senior Content Marketing Manager at SchoolStatus, Rob showcases how the company’s solutions help school districts boost attendance, increase engagement, and drive meaningful improvements in student success. When he’s not crafting content, Rob enjoys kayaking, fishing, and cooking for friends and family.
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