244 episodes

This podcast is for educators interested in the science of reading who want to hear the latest research on teaching reading and writing and learn how to make it practical for your classroom. Our guests include some of the most well-known literacy researchers and experts, as well as teachers and leaders doing the hard work every day! 

Melissa & Lori Love Literacy ‪™‬ Powered by Great Minds

    • Education
    • 4.8 • 291 Ratings

This podcast is for educators interested in the science of reading who want to hear the latest research on teaching reading and writing and learn how to make it practical for your classroom. Our guests include some of the most well-known literacy researchers and experts, as well as teachers and leaders doing the hard work every day! 

    [Listen Again] Ep. 96: What About Spelling? with Richard Gentry

    [Listen Again] Ep. 96: What About Spelling? with Richard Gentry

    From 3/4/2022
    We’ve been asked about spelling and the connection to reading science more times than we can count. Today, we talk with expert J. Richard Gentry,  author of Brain Words and blog contributor to Psychology Today: Raising Readers, Writers, and Spellers (An Expert Guide for Parents).
    He tells us all about spelling and how it connects to our speech and language system. Moreover, he supplies teachers with practical, meaningful, science of reading-aligned strategies to teach spelling. 


    Connect with us
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    Helping teachers learn about science of reading, knowledge building, and high quality curriculum.

    • 56 min
    Ep. 190: How to Teach Heart Words with Jessica Farmer (Quick Tips from our Teacher Friends)

    Ep. 190: How to Teach Heart Words with Jessica Farmer (Quick Tips from our Teacher Friends)

    In this episode, Jessica Farmer shares tips for teaching heart words. She explains the importance of blending and introduces the concept of continuous blending. Jessica defines heart words as high-frequency words with irregular or temporarily irregular spellings. She emphasizes the need to follow a scope and sequence and provides a routine for introducing new heart words. Jessica also discusses the process of orthographic mapping and suggests engaging activities for teaching heart words. She concludes by recommending additional resources for teaching heart words.


    Takeaways
    Blending is the process of putting sounds together to form words, and continuous blending is a method that connects phonemes without breaking between the sounds.Segmenting is important for spelling, while continuous blending is effective for decoding words.Heart words are high-frequency words with irregular or temporarily irregular spellings, often involving vowel sounds.Teaching heart words should be done in a systematic and routine-based manner, following a scope and sequence.Engaging activities for teaching heart words include coloring by sounds and unscrambling the spelling.Resources 
    Find Jessica at Farmer Loves Phonics on social! Connected Phonation Research A New Model for Teaching High-Frequency WordsBlending PyramidsHeart Word Cards30 Early High Frequency Words for Beginning Readers Connect with us
    Facebook and join our Facebook Group Twitter Instagram Don't miss an episode! Sign up for FREE bonus resources and episode alerts at LiteracyPodcast.com
    Helping teachers learn about science of reading, knowledge building, and high quality curriculum.

    • 20 min
    Ep. 189: Kindergartners Can Read CVC Words by November: Find Out How!

    Ep. 189: Kindergartners Can Read CVC Words by November: Find Out How!

    Julie VanLier and Dr. Svetlana Cvetkovic discuss their experiences and successes teaching phonics.  They both highlight the importance of a speech-to-print approach and the impact it has had on their students' reading and spelling abilities. The conversation also delves into the principles of speech to print and the scope and sequence of instruction.  They emphasize the importance of interleaving, where concepts are revisited over time. The integration of phonics into all aspects of reading and writing is key, as well as the use of authentic text. Overall, their approach focuses on engagement, flexibility, and integration to ensure student success in literacy.
    Takeaways
    Teaching phonics using a speech-to-print approach can lead to significant improvements in students' reading and spelling abilities.The principles of speech to print include the understanding that one, two, three, or four letters can spell a sound.A sound can be spelled in many different ways, and the same spelling can represent different sounds.The scope and sequence of instruction in a speech-to-print approach involves teaching students the different sound-spelling patterns and helping them understand the logic and patterns of the English language.Key Tenets of Speech to Print 
    Sounds can be represented by 1, 2, 3, or 4 letters. Sounds can be spelled different ways.Spellings can be pronounced in different ways.
    Resources
    Julie's iReady scores infographicKinder spelling phase comparisons using traditional & speech-first phonics approaches infographicEvidence-Based Literacy Instruction (EBLI) Li & Wang (2023) self-teaching meta analysis -- self-teaching was enhanced through phonological recoding via spelling A step-by-step pdf for k-2 teachers using FREE speech-first resources-- I especially encourage kinder teachers to take the free 1-hour Udemy course by John Walker (founder of Sounds-Write) as it includes a full scope & sequence for teaching the basic code and even into the beginning advanced codeEp. 147: Hot Topic Series: What is Speech to Print? Connect with us
    Facebook and join our Facebook Group Twitter Instagram Don't miss an episode! Sign up for FREE bonus resources and episode alerts at LiteracyPodcast.com
    Helping teachers learn about science of reading, knowledge building, and high quality curriculum.

    • 41 min
    [Listen Again] Ep. 120: Research-Based Routines for Developing Decoding Skills with Julia Lindsey

    [Listen Again] Ep. 120: Research-Based Routines for Developing Decoding Skills with Julia Lindsey

    From August 12, 2022

    Talking with Dr. Julia Lindsey is like popping into the classroom next door to chat with your best teacher friend after school. On this podcast, Julia shares what evidence says that young readers need to know to help them decode words efficiently. We discuss foundational reading skills, starting with oral language and print concepts through multisyllabic word reading. Instructional swaps take this conversation to the classroom where Julia tells us what to swap to improve instruction. Efficient and effective instruction is critical when teaching decoding. 
    Resources
    Reading Above the Fray by Dr. Julia B. Lindsey
    Connect with us
    Facebook and join our Facebook Group Twitter Instagram Don't miss an episode! Sign up for FREE bonus resources and episode alerts at LiteracyPodcast.com
    Helping teachers learn about science of reading, knowledge building, and high quality curriculum.

    • 1 hr 10 min
    BONUS: Happy Schwa Day! with Yvette Manns

    BONUS: Happy Schwa Day! with Yvette Manns

     Yvette Manns discusses the schwa and its importance. She shares insights from her book, The Not So Lazy Schwa, and explains how it helps children understand the schwa sound. Yvette also tells all about National Schwa Day, a holiday she created to celebrate language and literacy in schools. She provides suggestions for celebrating the day and highlights the resources available in the National Schwa Day toolkit. 
    Takeaways
    The schwa is a neutral unstressed sound that is the most common sound in the English language.Teaching the schwa is important for helping students decode and encode multisyllabic words.National Schwa Day is a holiday created to celebrate language and literacy in schools.The National Schwa Day toolkit provides resources and activities for teachers to implement the holiday.Connect with us
    Facebook and join our Facebook Group Twitter Instagram Don't miss an episode! Sign up for FREE bonus resources and episode alerts at LiteracyPodcast.com
    Helping teachers learn about science of reading, knowledge building, and high quality curriculum.

    • 20 min
    Ep. 188: How to Teach Students to Read Irregular Words with Danielle Colenbrander & Katie Pace Miles

    Ep. 188: How to Teach Students to Read Irregular Words with Danielle Colenbrander & Katie Pace Miles

    Danielle Colenbrander and Katie Pace-Miles discuss orthographic mapping, irregular word instruction, and the different terms used to describe high frequency and irregular words. They translate research about the effectiveness of different approaches to teaching irregular words. They also discuss the role of morphology - how understanding morphemes can help students decode and understand words. 
    Takeaways
    Irregular words exist on a spectrum, ranging from completely regular to highly irregular.Different teaching approaches, such as mispronunciation correction, can be effective for teaching irregular words.Meaning and context play a crucial role in word recognition and understanding.Teachers should provide students with a toolbox of strategies to decode and understand irregular words.Temporary irregularity is a helpful concept for students, emphasizing that irregular words are only temporarily challenging until they learn the necessary grapheme-phoneme correspondences.Resources
    Hear more from Danielle Colenbrander on Teaching Literacy podcast (Ep. 38) and Thinking Deeply About Primary Education podcast (Ep. 76)Assessing the Effectiveness of Structured Word Inquiry for Students in Grades 3 and 5 With Reading and Spelling Difficulties: A Randomized Controlled Trial by Colenbrander et. al. Katie's PRINTABLE Word Analysis Manual, a resource to support learning and word analysis activities to use with high frequency words (and any word, really!)Treasure trove of additional research articles (Katie Pace-Miles, Devin Kearns, Linnea Ehri, and more!)http://reading-ready.com/ Our guests mentioned the work of Lyndall Murray but meant Bruce Murray. The correct article is linked above. 
    Connect with us
    Facebook and join our Facebook Group Twitter Instagram Don't miss an episode! Sign up for FREE bonus resources and episode alerts at LiteracyPodcast.com
    Helping teachers learn about science of reading, knowledge building, and high quality curriculum.

    • 54 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
291 Ratings

291 Ratings

April Geibe ,

Hungry for Knowledge

I am so grateful for this podcast! I teach at a small, Christian school where we are limited in resources. I have learned so much from listening to these episodes and then purchasing books to read! I am a veteran teacher of 23 years, yet I still have so much to learn! I’m super thankful for the free resources offered to help our society get back to evidence based literacy instruction! ❤️

Jean Forst ,

Excellent podcast

Excellent podcast! I’ve learned so much. Thank you for your work!

AmyCWood ,

Melissa and Lori Love Literacy

This is a helpful podcast, however their presentation is rough. One of these girls…who seems so very kind…has a nervous laugh throughout each episode. What I mean is that she repeatedly laughs when nothing is funny…just to fill space. Additionally, it takes them a long time in an interview to get down to what the listener actually wants to hear.

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