Science of Reading
Comprised of over 40 years of research, the Science of Reading focuses on phonemic awareness, phonics and word recognition, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension鈥攕kills that intertwine to forge proficient readers.
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Drawing on insights from 16 renowned literacy experts, our program takes the latest and greatest Science of Literacy research and transforms it into actionable practices. In addition, more than 6,400 teachers, students, and administrators further informed our explicit, systematic approach, ensuring that Emerge! reflects the needs of real classrooms nationwide.
Emerge! takes the national conversation on literacy to the next level, expanding the definition of science-based reading instruction to focus on not just the Science of Reading, but the Science of Writing and Knowledge Building. We call this rich body of research the Science of Literacy鈥攁 phrase that addresses the interrelated, reciprocal nature of reading, writing, speaking, and thinking.
Comprised of over 40 years of research, the Science of Reading focuses on phonemic awareness, phonics and word recognition, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension鈥攕kills that intertwine to forge proficient readers.
The Science of Writing posits that explicit writing instruction鈥攊ncluding instruction on the writing process, student practice time, and feedback opportunities鈥攊s essential to building overall literacy skills.
Building knowledge is an ongoing process in students鈥 learning journeys, ensuring that they have the context they need to fully engage with the texts they鈥檙e reading and writing about.鈥
Every instructional moment within Emerge! was designed to be explicit and systematic鈥攁 research-backed approach to building strong literacy skills. When instruction is clear, structured, and consistent, students can better engage with and retain what they are learning.
Emerge! employs a gradual release of responsibility framework鈥攁 proven pedagogical approach that slowly transitions the responsibility for learning from the teacher to the student. Here鈥檚 how it works:鈥
Gradually transitioning the responsibility for learning onto students promotes their growth and confidence as independent learners. Simultaneously, this framework frees up teachers to work closely with individual students, meeting them exactly where they are and encouraging them to work at their own pace.
Routines help streamline the learning experience for students, reducing their cognitive load to help them focus on the learning rather than the process of learning. Not only are routines themselves a research-proven strategy, but the specific types of routines employed in Emerge! are also rooted in best practices identified by the expertise of our authors to ensure effective instruction.
Contributing expertise in all key aspects of literacy instruction, these scholars, researchers, and educators ensured the curriculum is grounded in the latest research and reflects classroom best practices..
Multilingual Learners, Dual Language
Dr. Diane August is a Research Professor at the University of Houston and a principal at D. August and Associates. Dr. August is currently a co-principal investigator at the Center for the Success of English Learners, one of two federally funded centers focused on improving educational outcomes for secondary-level English learners. Dr. Diane August brings 40 years of experience in the many aspects of educating language-minority children. Her areas of expertise include policy, research, and technical assistance related to the education of preschool and school-age second-language learners. Dr. August has also worked as a teacher, school administrator, legislative assistant, Grants Officer for the Carnegie Corporation, and Director of Education for the Children's Defense Fund. She received her Ph.D. in education and completed a postdoctoral fellowship in psychology at Stanford University.
Multilingual Learners, Dual Language, Oral Language Development
Jana Echevarr铆a, Ph.D., is Professor Emerita at California State University, Long Beach where she was selected as Outstanding Professor. Prior to receiving her Ph.D. from UCLA, she taught in general education, special education, ESL, and bilingual programs. A creator of the SIOP Model, her research and publications focus on effective instruction for multilingual learners, including those with learning disabilities. She has presented her research across the U.S. and internationally including Oxford University (England), Wits University (South Africa), Harvard University (U.S.), Stanford University (U.S.), University of Barcelona (Spain) and South East Europe University (Macedonia) where she was a Fulbright Specialist. Dr. Echevarria was inducted into the California Reading Hall of Fame in 2016 and has served as an expert on English learners for the U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division.
Comprehension, Foundational Skills, Vocabulary, Writing聽
Dr. Douglas Fisher is Professor and Chair of Educational Leadership at San Diego State University and a leader at Health Sciences High & Middle College having been an early intervention teacher and elementary school educator. He is the recipient of an International Reading Association William S. Grey citation of merit, an Exemplary Leader award from the Conference on English Leadership of NCTE, as well as a Christa McAuliffe award for excellence in teacher education. He has published numerous articles on reading and literacy, differentiated instruction, and curriculum design as well as books, such as聽鈥淭he Teaching Reading Playbook.鈥
Writing, Spelling, Handwriting
Steve Graham is a Regents and the Warner Professor in the Division of Leadership and Innovation in the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, Arizona State University. For 42 years, he has studied how writing develops, how to teach it effectively, and how writing can be used to support reading and learning. His research involves typically developing writers and students with special needs in both elementary and secondary schools, with much of the learning occurring in classrooms in urban schools. Graham is the former editor of Exceptional Children, Contemporary Educational Psychology, Journal of Writing Research, Focus on Exceptional Children, and Journal of Educational Psychology. He is the co-author of the "Handbook of Writing Research," "Handbook of Learning Disabilities," "APA Handbook of Educational Psychology," "Writing Better," "Powerful Writing Strategies for All Students," and "Making the Writing Process Work." He is also the author of three influential Carnegie Corporation reports: Writing Next, Writing to Read, and Informing Writing
Writing, Spelling, Handwriting聽
Dr. Karen Harris has been an educator for 50 years, first teaching 4th grade in a coal mining community in West Virginia and then teaching special education. She developed the Self-Regulated Strategy Development (SRSD) model of instruction, deemed an evidence-based practice by the What Works Clearinghouse for teaching writing. SRSD instruction is also validated for teaching close reading for informative and persuasive writing. She is a former editor of the Journal of Educational Psychology and has authored 15 books/handbooks. She is lead author of "Powerful Writing Strategies for All Students" and lead editor of the APA Educational Psychology Handbook. She has published more than 250 peer-reviewed articles and chapters for teachers and researchers and has served on multiple panels and committees.
Oral Reading Fluency, Foundational Skills, Intervention
Jan Hasbrouck, Ph.D., is a leading researcher, educational consultant, and author who works with schools in the U.S. and internationally. Dr. Hasbrouck worked as a reading specialist and coach for 15 years and later became a professor. Her research in reading fluency, academic assessment and interventions, and instructional coaching has been widely published. She is the author and coauthor of several books, curriculum materials, and assessment tools. Dr. Hasbrouck was the 2024 recipient of the Samuel Torrey Orton Award from the International Dyslexia Association. She continues to collaborate with researchers on projects related to reading assessment and intervention and enjoys volunteering at her grandson鈥檚 K鈥8 school in Seattle.聽
Multilingual Learners, Dual Language聽
Jeannette Mancilla-Martinez is an Associate Professor in the Special Education Department, as well as Associate Dean of Graduate Education for Peabody College. She holds an M.Ed. and Ed.D. in language and literacy from Harvard University, as well as a B.A. in liberal studies with a concentration in English and Spanish from Mount Saint Mary's College. She is a 2013 National Academy of Education/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow, a 2013 Hellman Fellow, and a 2017 English Language Learners Policy Fellow. Jeannette鈥檚 program of research is focused on advancing students鈥 language and reading comprehension outcomes, including those of students from linguistically diverse and low-income homes. The studies she is engaged in build on her earlier research in reading development and focus on the central role of supporting students鈥 language comprehension to mitigate later reading comprehension difficulties. Her most recent work examines the intersection of language and special education status. Jeannette was appointed to the National Assessment of Education Progress Standing Committee on Reading in 2017 and serves on the Early Literacy Advisory Council for the Tennessee Department of Education.
Children鈥檚 Literature, Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy聽
Dr. Michelle H. Martin is the Beverly Cleary Endowed Professor for Children and Youth Services in the Information School at the University of Washington and from聽2011鈥2016 was the inaugural Augusta Baker Endowed Chair in Childhood Literacy at the University of South Carolina. She published "Brown Gold: Milestones of African-American Children鈥檚 Picture Books, 1845鈥2002" (Routledge, 2004) and "Song of the Land: Celebrating the Works of Mildred D. Taylor" (University Press of Mississippi, 2025). She鈥檚 also the co-founder, with Dr. Rachelle D. Washington, of Read-a-Rama, a non-profit that uses children鈥檚 books as the springboard for year-round and summer camp programming.
Foundational Skills, Oral Language Development聽
Katie Pace Miles, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor and the Director of the Advanced Certificates in Reading Science at Brooklyn College, City University of New York (CUNY). Dr. Miles鈥檚 research interests include orthographic mapping, high frequency word learning, reading interventions, high-impact tutoring, and literacy instruction that is both developmentally appropriate and grounded in the science of reading. She is the author of "Reading Ready,鈥 "Reading Ready for Whole Phonics,鈥 and "Making Words Stick," and she is the academic advisor for Reading Go. Dr. Miles is the co-founder and principal investigator of CUNY Reading Corps, which improves preservice teacher training and provides free high impact tutoring to over 2,300 historically underserved NYC students per year. Dr. Miles is also the founder of a nonprofit, The Reading Institute, which expands access to structured literacy tutoring.
Foundational Skills, Comprehension, Oral Reading Fluency, Writing
Dr. Timothy Shanahan is Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Illinois at Chicago where he is Founding Director of the UIC Center for Literacy. He operates a popular website for educators, www.shanahanonliteracy.com, and his blogs are carried regularly on Reading Rockets. He was Director of Reading for Chicago Public Schools and served as Visiting Research Professor at Queens University, Belfast, Northern Ireland. He is the author/editor of more than 300 publications and books. His research emphasizes the connections between learning to read and learning to write, literacy in the disciplines, and improvement of reading achievement. Dr. Shanahan served on the Advisory Board of the National Institute for Literacy and is a past president of the International Literacy Association. He was inducted into the Reading Hall of Fame in 2007.聽
Vocabulary, Building Knowledge, Disciplinary Literacy
Tanya S. Wright is a former kindergarten teacher whose research and teaching focus on curriculum and instruction in early literacy during the early childhood and elementary school years. Her research examines instructional practices that promote oral language, vocabulary, and knowledge development for young children. Wright is co-author of several books for teachers and parents including, "A Teacher鈥檚 Guide to Vocabulary Development Across the Day: Grades K鈥3" (Heinemann) and "Literacy Learning for Infants, Toddlers, & Preschoolers: Key Practices for Educators" (NAEYC). Her work has been published in journals such as American Educator, The Elementary School Journal, The Reading Teacher, Reading and Writing, Reading Research Quarterly, Science and Children, and the Journal of Literacy Research. Wright鈥檚 research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Institute of Education Sciences, the Spencer Foundation, and Open SciEd.
The Emerge! consulting authors contributed expertise in specific aspects of literacy instruction.
Building Knowledge, Disciplinary Literacy聽
Dr. Kevin Colleary has taught curriculum and methodology courses at Fordham University鈥檚 Graduate School of Education and Hunter College, CUNY in New York. His research and publications focus on social studies education, knowledge curricula, content area reading, critical thinking, digital literacy, diversity issues, and helping teachers understand how to develop content-driven literacy instruction at all grades. Dr. Colleary is the author of "Ensuring a Better Future: Why Social Studies Matters" (2022) published by Gibbs-Smith Education. Dr. Colleary is a member of the English Language Specialist Program, a US Department of State initiative that sends academic scholars to lead teacher training programs overseas. He has been an elementary, middle, and high school teacher in Harlem and Brooklyn, New York. Dr. Colleary received his BA in history from Siena College, Albany NY. He also earned both his master鈥檚 and doctorate in education from Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.
Linguistically Diverse Learners
Brandy Gatlin-Nash is an Associate Professor in the School of Education at University of California, Irvine. She received her Ph.D. from Florida State University where she was a fellow at the Florida Center for Reading Research. She completed postdoctoral studies at Georgia State University as a research associate and project director at the Urban Child Study Center. Her research crosses the disciplines of education, psychology, and communication sciences with a focus on diversity and on impacting positive societal change, particularly for children from disadvantaged backgrounds. Her work focuses heavily on language variation among individuals from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds. The majority of this work has included research on language and literacy development for Black and African American children and has also included children who identify as Latinx or Hispanic and who are bilingual. Dr. Gatlin-Nash鈥檚 research also focuses on the needs of those who face challenges in the acquisition of academic skills. As a former special education teacher, her research is driven by her prior experience working with students with learning difficulties and disabilities. This work has largely focused on exploring relations in the areas of reading and writing with the goal of providing evidence-based practices for teachers.
Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy聽
Dr. Jaleel R. Howard is a University of California Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow at UC Riverside. He completed his doctorate in Urban Education at UCLA, and before his graduate training he taught middle school English in Houston, Texas. His research uses critical methodologies to examine effective school practices and policies that foster wellness and academic achievement for Black students and other historically marginalized groups. He attends to the roles of race, culture, poverty, and other social forces that shape educational experiences for students and adults in K鈥12 settings. As a former classroom teacher, Dr. Howard鈥檚 scholarship seeks to identify replicable strategies that enable schools to serve as spaces that mitigate vulnerabilities for nondominant student groups rather than reproduce societal inequities.
Multilingual Learners, Dual Language
Patrick Manyak began his career in education in 1991 as a bilingual elementary school teacher. After completing his Ph.D. in Literacy Education at the University of Southern California, where he won the Literacy Research Association鈥檚 Outstanding Graduate Student Research Award for his study of the literacy development of young Spanish-English emergent bilinguals, he joined the faculty at the University of Wyoming in 2001. During his time as a faculty member, he taught classes in literacy instruction and difficulties, conducted research studies focused on many areas of elementary literacy instruction, and consulted with schools and provided professional development throughout the Rocky Mountain region. In 2009, he received a three-year grant from IES to pursue research to develop and implement multifaceted vocabulary instruction in high-needs schools, and this project led to a series of vocabulary instruction studies in which the participating students, including many multilingual learners, made accelerated growth on standardized tests of vocabulary knowledge. Patrick finished his tenure at the University of Wyoming as the Lantz Distinguished Professor of Education. Always having prioritized staying in close touch with schools and classrooms, Patrick recently chose to return to teaching elementary school in a Title 1 school in California. He is currently a high-energy fifth grade teacher, a summer school principal, and is in the accelerated graduate program in educational administration at San Francisco State University. He is proud of having maintained a passion for teaching culturally and linguistically diverse students for 32 years.
Media Literacy, Culturally Sustaining Pedagogy