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Reading & Literacy

Why Do Literacy Retention Policies Target 3rd Grade?

By Elizabeth Heubeck 鈥 August 12, 2024 5 min read
Third graders listen at the start of Lindsey Wuest's Science As Art class, at A.D. Henderson School in Boca Raton, Fla., on April 16, 2024.
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Third graders in Maryland who don鈥檛 read on grade level by the end of the school year may find themselves repeating the grade.

Maryland鈥檚 department of education is considering enacting a statewide early literacy grade-retention . If it is approved, Maryland will join a growing number of states with similar policies: As of 2022, 25 states and the District of Columbia had implemented 3rd grade retention policies, up from 13 states in 2013, according to the National Council of State Legislatures.

The practice of 3rd grade retention has trended upwards in recent years, but the research on the practice is complex, and it has been by education experts who argue that such policies are ineffective over the long term.

While much of the backlash around these policies has focused on the act of retention itself, less attention has been paid to the actual timing of it鈥攁t the end of 3rd grade: Why do these early literacy retention policies overwhelmingly focus on the end of 3rd grade? Is this target of when kids should know how to read warranted?

Here鈥檚 what development and education experts had to say.

Data collection plays big role in retention policies

When asked why retention policies target 3rd graders, multiple experts said it鈥檚 due in large part simply to when districts collect students鈥 data on how well they can read.

For one thing, that鈥檚 the year that states must begin annually assessing students鈥 reading under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.

鈥淪chools don鈥檛 have good data before 3rd grade, so it can be a much more complicated decision before then,鈥 said Rebecca Kockler, executive director of Reading Reimagined, a program that鈥檚 part of the education research nonprofit .

Former Baltimore City 1st grade teacher Jarrod Bolte agreed.

鈥淭hird grade is the first time that there is an indicator that kids are on grade level or off grade level based on a common metric that is applied across the state. I think that鈥檚 why you鈥檙e getting all of those [retention] policies,鈥 said Bolte, who is now the CEO of , a nonprofit that aims to improve educational systems.

Kockler said while many districts don鈥檛 have access to 鈥渆xternally validated鈥 student data in 1st and 2nd grade, that鈥檚 changing.

鈥淭here are a couple of assessments coming into the market earlier, and we think that鈥檚 a good thing,鈥 she said.

Earlier indicators may predict reading challenges

Bolte suggests that educators shouldn鈥檛 have to wait until 3rd grade to recognize when students have fallen behind. Kindergarten readiness assessments measure skills that are highly predictive of 3rd grade outcomes, and about half of all states use them, Bolte said.

鈥淲e actually have indicators way back when kids are as young as 4 or 5 years old of those who might not make it,鈥 he said.

Bolte points to a 2023 report conducted by at Johns Hopkins University that analyzed the kindergarten readiness of six student cohorts in the Baltimore city school district, from the 2016-17 to the 2021鈥22 school years. The study found a strong relationship between kindergarten readiness and 3rd grade outcomes.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 have to wait for kids to fail. We can actually make sure that they鈥檙e hitting these targets earlier through this entire trajectory,鈥 Bolte said.

A cognitive neuroscientist marvels at students鈥 ability to read by 3rd grade

Cognitive neuroscientist Tzipi Horowitz-Kraus marvels at people鈥檚 ability to learn to read鈥攑eriod.

鈥淓volutionarily, the brain was not created to read. To learn how, the brain utilized different brain regions and networks originally created to do other things鈥攙isually, auditory, cognitive control and attention, and motor skills,鈥 said Horowitz-Kraus, an associate professor in the neuropsychology department at the Kennedy Krieger Institute and in the psychiatry and behavioral sciences department at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

With typical development and the right exposure to literacy that includes oral storytelling and sound literacy instruction, most kids are able to read accurately by the end of 3rd grade, Horowitz-Kraus explains. For those who struggle, potential reasons include neurological issues like attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, and dyslexia, or environmental factors, such as stress, lack of exposure to literacy at home, or overuse of screens.

Repeating 3rd grade without modifying those factors or the instruction students receive won鈥檛 remedy the problem, Horowitz-Kraus said.

鈥淎side from saying, 鈥榳e have a reading problem,鈥 we need to understand why鈥攁nd what the most appropriate intervention is,鈥 she said.

Data on retention policies show mixed results

Research on retention policies like the one proposed by Maryland鈥檚 board of education鈥攚hose states that 鈥渆ach student鈥檚 progression from one grade to another be determined, in part, upon proficiency in reading鈥濃攈ave shown mixed results. But no two such policies are alike.

The policy currently under consideration in Maryland includes several components beyond grade retention鈥攕uch as a 鈥渟ystem of support鈥 for all kindergarten through 3rd grade teachers, professional learning requirements on the science of reading and related assessments, and guidelines on requesting exemptions for student retention, among other things.

Florida, which implemented its 3rd grade retention policy in 2002-03, helped spur other states to follow suit, bolstered by from major advocacy organizations like the Annie E. Casey Foundation. But a body of recent research on the effects shows mixed findings.

See also

Hispanic school teacher reading aloud to her young students
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One that tracked the initial effects of Florida鈥檚 retention policy found significant improvement in reading achievement for the first two years. By years five and six, however, the advancements proved statistically insignificant.

A body of more recent research seems to suggest that a key difference that can make retention more effective is providing those students who are held back with additional supports, and access to teaching shaped by evidence-based literacy methods.

Some literacy experts want to see more emphasis on teachers鈥 preparedness in the early grades to teach literacy instead.

鈥淭o me, this is about: Are our teachers being trained to succeed in kindergarten through 2nd and 3rd grade? Are school systems using instructional resources based on research?鈥 said Reading Reimagined鈥檚 Kockler.

Kockler agrees that retaining individual students at the end of 3rd grade without meaningful changes in instruction and support will not reap benefits. She also questions why so many students鈥攏ot just those being retained鈥攕truggle to read proficiently. It鈥檚 a question many literacy experts raise, especially given the increasing interest in evidence-based literacy instruction in a growing number of states.

鈥淲e know that every kid can learn to read unless they have a very severe disability, and that鈥檚 a tiny percentage of kids,鈥 said Kockler. 鈥淭he burden is on our system to figure out why 70 percent of kids aren鈥檛 reading on grade level.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the August 28, 2024 edition of 澳门跑狗论坛 as Why Do Literacy Retention Policies Target 3rd Grade?

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