Creating Readers with Savannah Campbell

Savannah Campbell

Join Savannah Campbell, a certified reading specialist and passionate advocate for the Science of Reading, as she shares her journey from traditional teaching methods to transformative, evidence-based practices. Savannah brings you the latest research, practical strategies, and actionable insights to help educators refine their craft and empower their students to become confident, lifelong readers. Whether you’re a seasoned teacher or new to the field, ”Creating Readers” is your go-to resource for making meaningful progress in literacy education—without the overwhelm. Grab a seat, and let’s create readers together!

  1. FEB 11

    #26 The 3 Great Spelling Rules (and How to Make Them FINALLY Stick)

    Spelling multisyllabic words is not about being “naturally good” at spelling. It is about understanding what happens to base words when we add suffixes and giving students enough meaningful practice to internalize those patterns. In this episode, Savannah walks through the Three Great Spelling Rules and shares practical ways to help those rules actually stick through daily spelling and reading routines. In This Episode, You’ll Learn: What the Three Great Spelling Rules are and why they matter for multisyllabic spelling The CVC doubling rule and when to double the final consonant The silent E (magic E) rule and how vowel and consonant suffixes change the base The Y rule for spelling, including a simple chant to help students remember it How to use daily multisyllabic dictation to reinforce spelling patterns over time How morphology word chains help students practice suffixes, prefixes, spelling rules, grammar, and meaning all at once A simple reading review routine using word lists or PowerPoints to help students explain spelling changes they see in print The Three Great Spelling Rules only work when students see them again and again in meaningful ways. With daily dictation, morphology-based practice, and intentional reading review, students can move beyond guessing and toward real spelling confidence. This short, practical episode is designed to give you strategies you can start using right away.   Resources Mentioned: Morphology Dictation Lists Morphology Review PowerPoints The Megabook of Vocabulary* (affiliate link) Blog Post on The 3 Great Spelling rules

    15 min
  2. JAN 28

    #25 What 50 Years of Research Reveal About Comprehension Instruction (and Textbooks)

    What does decades of research actually say about how comprehension is taught in classrooms, and how much help do textbooks really provide? In this episode, Savannah takes a deep dive into 50 years of comprehension research, beginning with Dolores Durkin’s landmark studies in the late 1970s and extending through large-scale analyses published as recently as 2023. Together, these studies paint a consistent and sobering picture: while comprehension is the stated goal of reading instruction, explicit comprehension teaching has historically been rare, heavily outweighed by assessment, worksheets, and questioning. Savannah walks you through: What classroom observations reveal about real comprehension instruction What teacher manuals actually prioritize inside core reading programs Whether teachers follow textbook guidance—and why many don’t How newer studies show progress, but still reveal major gaps Why “following a textbook with fidelity” is not the solution This episode is especially relevant for educators working under mandated programs who feel the tension between what research says works and what materials require them to do. Savannah argues that teacher knowledge, not textbook fidelity, is the true lever for improving comprehension outcomes. Resources Discussed: Blog Post Discussing the Comprehension Studies Studies Discussed: Norwegian Study (Mentioned but Not Discussed): Bogaerds-Hazenberg, S. T., Evers-Vermeul, J., & van den Bergh, H. (2022). What textbooks offer and what teachers teach: An analysis of the Dutch reading comprehension curriculum. Reading & Writing, 35(7), 1497–1523 Capin, Philip, et al. “Reading Comprehension Instruction: Evaluating Our Progress Since Durkin’s Seminal Study.” Scientific Studies of Reading, 23 Oct. 2024, https://doi.org/10.1080/10888438.2024.2418582. Dewitz, P., & Jones, J. (2013). Using basal readers: From dutiful fidelity to intelligent decision making. The Reading Teacher, 66(5), 391-400. Durkin, Dolores. "What classroom observations reveal about reading comprehension instruction." Reading research quarterly (1978): 481-533. Durkin, D. (1981). Reading comprehension instruction in five basal reader series. Reading Research Quarterly, 515-544. Durkin, D. (1984). Is there a match between what elementary teachers do and what basal reader manuals recommend?. The Reading Teacher, 37(8), 734-744. Reutzel, D. R., Child, A., Jones, C. D., & Clark, S. K. (2014). Explicit instruction in core reading programs. The Elementary School Journal, 114(3), 406-430.

    29 min
4.9
out of 5
31 Ratings

About

Join Savannah Campbell, a certified reading specialist and passionate advocate for the Science of Reading, as she shares her journey from traditional teaching methods to transformative, evidence-based practices. Savannah brings you the latest research, practical strategies, and actionable insights to help educators refine their craft and empower their students to become confident, lifelong readers. Whether you’re a seasoned teacher or new to the field, ”Creating Readers” is your go-to resource for making meaningful progress in literacy education—without the overwhelm. Grab a seat, and let’s create readers together!

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