State lawmakers moved one step closer today to mandating evidence-basedliteracy instruction across all primary schools, signaling a significant shift in the nation’s pedagogical landscape.
In a decisive move that could reshape K-12 education across the region, a key House education panel today advanced the Literacy Excellence and Advancement Act (LEAA). The bill, which passed with bipartisan support, explicitly prioritizes funding for curricula rooted in the “science of reading”—a body of research emphasizing phonics, phonemic awareness, and structural language comprehension.
The Shift Toward Evidence-Based Practice
For decades, the “balanced literacy” approach has dominated classrooms, often emphasizing context
clues and whole-word recognition over explicit phonetic decoding. However, plummeting literacy
scores in the wake of the pandemic have forced a legislative reckoning. The new bill proposes $450
million in grants specifically reserved for districts that can prove their instructional methods align with
cognitive science.
Key Provisions of LEAA
- Mandatory teacher training in phonics-based instruction
- Phase-out of "three-cueing" systems by 2026
- Universal screening for dyslexia in grades K-3
Expert Consensus
“We are no longer guessing what works. The brain’s mechanism for acquiring language is well-mapped, and our policy is finally catching up to our biology.”
— Dr. Elena Vance, Cognitive Scientist
The bill’s sponsors argue that these changes are about more than just reading scores—they are about
civil rights. “If a child can’t read by the end of third grade, we have failed them for life,” said
Representative Sarah Jenkins, the bill’s lead author. “This grant program ensures that zip code doesn’t determine a child’s access to the best instructional science available.”