Across U.S. classrooms, a troubling trend is emerging: students can decode words, but struggle to understand what they mean. Despite gains in foundational reading skills, many children—particularly multilingual learners and minority students—are failing to connect text to their lives, raising questions about the effectiveness of current literacy instruction.
The Comprehension Gap Widens
Recent data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) confirms this decline. Reading comprehension scores have worsened nationwide, with the sharpest drops among African American, Hispanic, Native American, and multilingual students. This happens despite the widespread adoption of “science of reading” reforms focused on decoding. The paradox is clear: students can sound out words, but they don’t necessarily understand them. This is partly because reading comprehension requires both decoding and linguistic comprehension. Multilingual learners face an additional hurdle, as they are simultaneously developing language skills while trying to grasp complex texts.
Why Current Methods Fall Short
The core problem is that many science of reading curricula are designed for monolingual, culturally homogenous classrooms. They assume students come from English-speaking, middle-class backgrounds, ignoring the reality of today’s diverse schools where over 5 million students are multilingual. These curricula often lack cultural relevance, failing to connect to students’ identities and experiences. Research shows that students read better when texts reflect their backgrounds, because culture shapes the oral language needed for comprehension.
Decodable texts, while useful for phonics practice, often lack the rich vocabulary and complex language needed for true understanding. Students may perform well on decoding tests but still lag behind in comprehension, confirming the widening gap highlighted by NAEP.
Practical Solutions for Teachers
Teachers can improve comprehension by expanding the definition of literacy beyond decoding. Here are five strategies:
- Choose culturally representative texts. Literature that affirms students’ identities improves comprehension, motivation, and critical thinking.
- Prioritize read-alouds. Daily read-alouds introduce rich vocabulary, model fluent reading, and build shared background knowledge – all essential for comprehension. Choose texts 2-3 levels above students’ reading levels to challenge them.
- Teach vocabulary explicitly. Build vocabulary before, during, and after reading, using visuals for multilingual learners or those from low-income backgrounds who may be unfamiliar with basic words. Integrate vocabulary into thematic units for repeated practice.
- Use collaborative talk structures. Oral language develops comprehension. Encourage turn-and-talks, small-group discussions, and shared inquiry to build linguistic skills.
- Allow translanguaging. Let multilingual students use their home languages to process ideas, compare concepts, or discuss texts – a powerful cognitive tool backed by decades of research.
The Role of Parents and Communities
The literacy crisis cannot be solved in classrooms alone. Parents and community partners must be involved. Initiatives that send home bilingual books or literacy kits, host family literacy nights, or offer community tutoring can significantly improve comprehension. One teacher’s “Bilingual Book in a Bag” project proved successful: students took home bilingual books, activities, and journals to share with their families, leading to improved writing and comprehension.
The Path Forward
To truly improve reading comprehension, educators must move beyond narrow, English-only interpretations of the science of reading. Foundational skills matter, but decoding is only the beginning. Children need oral language, background knowledge, and cultural connections. Reading isn’t just about sounding out words; it’s about making meaning, connecting text to identity, culture, and lived experience. The future of literacy depends on valuing the full humanity of every child.
