Transcripts and additional resources:
Meet Our Guest(s):
Julie Burtscher Brown
Julie Burtscher Brown, Ed.D., has worked at the intersection of instruction, intervention, and schoolwide systems as a structured literacy teacher, secondary special educator, teacher of multilingual learners (MLLs), MLL coordinator, and district PreK–12 literacy facilitator for Mountain Views Supervisory Union in Woodstock, Vermont. She established the Structured Literacy Program at Woodstock Union High School and Middle School and is a founding member of the Project for Adolescent Literacy (PAL), a national educator-driven effort to confront the adolescent literacy crisis and scale effective solutions. Her work is grounded in the experiences of her students and the opportunities that strong literacy instruction creates for them.
Meet our host, Susan Lambert.
Susan Lambert is chief academic officer of literacy at Amplify and host of Science of Reading: The Podcast. Throughout her career, she has focused on creating high-quality learning environments using evidence-based practices. Lambert is a mom of four, a grandma of four, a world traveler, and a collector of stories.
As the host of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Lambert explores the increasing body of scientific research around how reading is best taught. A former classroom teacher, administrator, and curriculum developer, she’s dedicated to turning theory into best practices that educators can put right to use in the classroom, and to showcasing national models of reading instruction excellence.
Quotes
“Adolescent literacy is enormous and multifaceted. There's specialized instruction that needs to happen.”
“If you think of the word ‘intervene’ as a verb, it means to take action to prevent a predictable outcome.”
“Real, meaningful change can happen.”
“What differs between the tiers shouldn't be the presence or absence of evidence-based instruction, but rather the intensity and the explicitness with which it's taught.”
“We reframed the word ‘intervention’ as an action, not a place.”