Friday Musings: Changing The System
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Friday Musings: Changing The System

The Black and Dyslexic Podcast from Winifred Winston and LeDerick Horne wrapped up its first season this week. What a triumph! The podcast does three things, in particular, exceptionally well. First, the hosts directly confront the reality that IEP and 504 programs are failing Black students and families. They make the causes (racism) and the consequences (limited opportunity and options) of that failure abundantly clear. Second, they invite guests to tell their personal stories, which illuminate the inequities and racism of the system while also building empathy, community, and connection. But they don’t stop there. Third, Winston, Horne, and their guests then offer specific advice, tips, and information to other parents who are trying to make a broken system work for their children. My favorite is this recurring refrain: “Extended time isn’t going to teach your child how to read. It’s accommodation. Your child needs an intervention from the school that addresses the underlying issue.” Ultimately, Winston’s and Horne’s podcast succeeds because they are vulnerable, funny, and honest. They help their guests feel at home, and they make their audience feel like they’re on their team.

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Elephants in the Room: Why Does The Science of Reading World Skew Conservative?
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Elephants in the Room: Why Does The Science of Reading World Skew Conservative?

The science of reading, evidence-based reading instruction, whatever you want to call it, is not a partisan issue. There is nothing left or right about the facts of how students learn. We know better than ever how to teach all students to read, but we’re not doing it. Instead, we’re politicizing our students' futures.

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Friday Musings: Goose Rock Rocks
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Friday Musings: Goose Rock Rocks

You need to read this remarkable case study about Goose Rock Elementary. In 2012, 23% of 3rd graders at Goose Rock were reading proficiently. In 2019, 90% were. What happened? Through a partnership with Elgin Children’s Foundation, Goose Rock’s literacy curriculum was overhauled, its teachers were retrained, and new interventions for students reading two-three levels below grade level were introduced. Notably, these gains came even as the number of students eligible for free or reduced lunch rose from 80% to 85%.

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Ideas for 2022: One School at a Time
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Ideas for 2022: One School at a Time

My eventual plan is to select one elementary school in one of these districts, get to know the parents and community it serves, and work with interested parents to ask tough questions about their literacy curriculum, with the goal of ultimately changing the literacy curriculum to a higher quality one. If I support the parents in launching a campaign to change the curricula, then I’ll choose another school and go from there. Hence, the One School at a Time Project.

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Learning in 2021
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Learning in 2021

I spent most of 2021 learning. I learned about the false dichotomy between content and skills. I learned about cognitive load theory. I learned about various teacher education programs, the process by which school psychologists recommend accommodations, and Scarborough’s Reading Rope. I learned about different screeners for dyslexia and conflicting theories of student support, and evidence-based tutoring programs. I learned how to build a website. I didn’t really learn how to use social media. 

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Accommodations under a Microscope (Part 3)
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Accommodations under a Microscope (Part 3)

Some combination of accommodation, modification, and intervention is likely appropriate for most students with learning differences. However, when schools rely too heavily on the former two instead of the latter—and indeed it’s convenient to rely on the former—they are depriving students with learning differences of the opportunity to become more independent and grow new skills.

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Accommodations under a Microscope (Part 2)
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Accommodations under a Microscope (Part 2)

It won’t be possible for every teacher to “interventionalize” every accommodation, of course. But I think if we take these ideas as starting points—both that students need to be taught how to use their accommodations AND that accommodations are probably most impactful when they’re tied to actual learning—we’ll be on a better path.

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Student Panel on Learning Differences
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Student Panel on Learning Differences

On Monday this week, the Goyen Foundation hosted its first student panel with five high school students. The students reflected on their experience being diagnosed with learning and attentional differences, considered accommodations, and interventions that have helped them in school, and explored what they wanted and needed their parents and teachers to know and hear. Our panelists were thoughtful, expressive, and brave, and I’m incredibly grateful for their insights and honesty.

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The Promise Project
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

The Promise Project

When people ask me why the Goyen Foundation has chosen to focus on supporting students with learning differences, I usually reply that it’s because it’s an equity problem. Simply, students from wealthier families are able to get expensive support (private neuropsychological testing, relentless advocacy, and expensive tutoring ) and students from lower-income families (who are disproportionately Black and Brown) do not have access to these services that are often transformative. When people ask about organizations that are working to ameliorate these inequities, I always tell them about the Promise Project (Promise). In this piece, I’m going to tell you about Promise’s work, and then I’m going to explore what we can learn from it.  

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If You Had One Million Dollars
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

If You Had One Million Dollars

The Goyen Foundation is not especially wealthy. It doesn’t have a bottomless bank account. It won’t give away millions of dollars a year because it doesn’t have millions of dollars a year to give. 

So, let’s consider, as a thought exercise: 

  • You have about one million dollars in the bank. 

  • You want to make the world better for students with learning differences. 

  • What do you do? 

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Defining The Problem
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Defining The Problem

We are failing students with learning differences. This was true before the pandemic (1). This was true during the pandemic. This is still true now. I think we’re failing these students in three fundamental ways, and I think these failures (particularly the last one) harm all students.

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Welcome To The Goyen Foundation
Kathryn Solow Kathryn Solow

Welcome To The Goyen Foundation

Welcome to the Goyen Foundation! Two years ago, I was an administrator at an independent school in Washington D.C. I spent my days counseling students, advising teachers, and talking to parents. 

One year ago…

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