Meet Our Host: Susan Lambert, Ed.D.

In each episode, host Susan Lambert, chief academic officer of literacy at Amplify, explores the increasing body of scientific research about how reading is best taught. As a former classroom teacher, administrator, and curriculum developer, Susan has special interests in turning theory into best practices that educators can use in the classroom and showcasing national models of reading instruction excellence. Listen and subscribe here!

Person with short gray hair, glasses, and an orange jacket smiles at the camera; graphic elements of a white circle and a yellow lightbulb highlight Susan Lambert from the Science of Reading Podcast.

Browse by season

Three children sit on the floor reading and writing in notebooks, with a pencil, paper, and educational posters in the background.

Adolescent literacy miniseries

This special miniseries is dedicated to one of the most urgent—and often overlooked—topics in literacy today: adolescent readers. Host Susan Lambert is joined by leading authors, educators, and policy experts to explore what middle and high school students need when it comes to literacy, and why it matters more than ever. Across four episodes, Susan and her guests examine what foundational skills can unlock reading growth for adolescent readers, what teachers on the ground are already doing to move the needle, and what meaningful policy should look like to support literacy beyond the early grades.

In this first episode of a special four-part Science of Reading: The Podcast Adolescent Literacy miniseries, Susan Lambert, Ed.D., speaks with Doug Fisher, Ph.D., a celebrated professor, author, and one of the most influential voices in adolescent literacy. They explore what the evidence really tells us about supporting adolescent learners, and what it means for classroom practice. They also discuss why Doug and his colleagues set out to find a new model for adolescent literacy, how self-efficacy powers literacy development in adolescent learners and what teachers can do to build it, and what “foundational skills” in reading truly means for adolescent readers—and why it is non-negotiable.

Listen now
A man with short brown hair and glasses is pictured against a blurred indoor background, framed by a circular border with a pattern of lightbulbs, books, and pencils symbolizing literacy education.