Family Partnerships & Literacy Gains webinar from District Administration and SchoolStatus
Literacy

The Missing Half of Literacy Gains

Headshot of Dr Kara Stern.
By Dr. Kara Stern 4 min

TL;DR:

Districts across the country have invested heavily in structured literacy and many are seeing real gains. But there’s a persistent gap between what schools know about a child’s reading progress and what families know. That gap is about communication. When family outreach is teacher-driven rather than system-driven, some families get personalized, timely updates while others hear nothing until a report card arrives. Research shows families can significantly boost student reading achievement, but only when they have concrete guidance. Closing the school-to-home information gap is the missing half of most literacy strategies.


Mississippi’s public school students are reading better than they were a decade ago. Significantly better. The state’s Literacy-Based Promotion Act, combined with a sustained commitment to evidence-based curriculum and structured literacy instruction, produced gains that researchers and policymakers noticed nationwide.

And yet. In classrooms across that same state, what families know about their child’s reading progress still depends largely on which teacher their child has.

That’s the observation Dr. Rachel Powell, Director of Curriculum, Instruction, and Federal Programs at Brookhaven School District, brought to a recent SchoolStatus webinar on literacy and family engagement. Mississippi, she noted, prefers “marathon” to “miracle” when describing its reading gains—because the work was long and deliberate. But the communication side of literacy? Still teacher-driven rather than system-driven. Some families get proactive, personalized updates. Others don’t hear anything until a report card lands.

Powell joined Chad Alderman—founder of Read Not Guess and columnist at The 74—for a conversation about what stands between districts with strong literacy instruction and the family partnerships those gains actually require.

Rachel Powell, Brookhaven School District, on what Mississippi got right—and where the work continues.


The Parent Who Didn’t Know

Alderman came to this work through his own family. His son was struggling to read. The school was using strategies that reading science has since discredited. And nobody communicated that anything was wrong—not in a way that gave his family anything to act on.

That experience became the foundation of Read Not Guess. It also surfaced research that shapes how Alderman thinks about family engagement: families want to help and are capable of helping, but only when they have clear, concrete guidance. Vague progress reports don’t move the needle. Translated benchmark scores with age-appropriate at-home activities do.

There’s an attendance dimension here that often surprises people. The relationship runs both directions: struggling readers disengage, disengagement becomes avoidance, and avoidance shows up as absence. Chronic absence then widens the literacy gap further. Families who understand where their child stands—and feel equipped to help—interrupt that cycle before it compounds.

Chad Alderman, Read Not Guess, on why struggling readers disengage—and what families can do about it.


A Communication Problem Is a Solvable Problem

What Powell described in Mississippi—literacy gains real enough to move state data, alongside family communication that still varies classroom to classroom—isn’t unique to Mississippi. It’s the norm. Districts can do everything right on the instructional side and still leave families on the outside of the information their children need them to have.

The fix is a communication system. One that takes the data districts already have—benchmark scores, progress monitoring results, grade-level proficiency definitions—and gets it to families consistently, personally, and in their home languages, regardless of which school or classroom their child is in.

SchoolStatus Literacy was built for exactly that. It integrates with the assessment platforms districts already use and sends personalized family updates multiple times per year, with each child’s reading level and concrete at-home strategies. Every family. Every school. Same floor.

What it looks like when a district solves the family communication gap at scale.

Hear the full conversation—including what Powell and Alderman would each tell a district leader to do first.

FAQs

Why do literacy gains stall even when instruction improves?

Instruction is only half the equation. Students spend more waking hours at home than at school, and families who understand their child’s reading level and have concrete strategies to help can reinforce learning between school days. When that information never reaches home, the gains from classroom instruction have nowhere to compound.

What does the research say about families and reading achievement?

Research suggests families can be powerful partners in boosting student reading achievement, but only when they’re given clear, specific guidance—not just a score. Studies also show a significant relationship between reading struggles and chronic absenteeism: students who fall behind in reading disengage, disengagement becomes avoidance, and avoidance shows up as absence. Fourth graders who missed three or more days in a month scored 17 points lower on reading assessments than peers who missed none.

What information do families actually need about their child’s reading progress?

Three things: where their child stands relative to grade-level expectations (in plain language, not assessment jargon), what that means for their child’s trajectory, and what they can do at home to help.

How do districts make family literacy communication consistent across schools?

The districts that do this well don’t leave it to individual teachers or principals. They build a system that pulls assessment data automatically, translates it into family-friendly language, and sends personalized updates to every family—in their home language—multiple times per year. Consistency is the key word. What families know shouldn’t depend on which classroom their child is in.

How does SchoolStatus Literacy work?

SchoolStatus Literacy integrates with the assessment platforms districts already use and sends personalized updates to families with their child’s reading level, progress over time, and age-appropriate at-home activities. Messages go out in families’ home languages, across every school, on a consistent cadence.

Headshot of Dr Kara Stern.
Dr. Kara Stern

Director, Education and Engagement

Dr. Kara Stern has seen school from just about every angle: high school English teacher, middle school principal, fellowship director for math and science teachers across New York City, and head of school at a rural N-12 school. That breadth is what she brings to her work at SchoolStatus, where she writes, speaks, and challenges educators to build the kinds of school communities where every student thrives. She holds a Master’s in Education Leadership from Teachers College and a Ph.D. in Teaching and Learning from NYU.

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