05/30/2026
No framework has ever taught a child to read.
MTSS, tiers, progress monitoring, data meetings. All of it exists for one reason: to make it possible for teachers to deliver the right instruction to the right students with enough consistency to change outcomes at scale.
The system is the structure. Teachers are the instruction.
When people ask why MTSS isn't working, the answer is almost always found in what's happening inside the classroom. Not in what's on the schedule.
05/29/2026
End of year is almost here.
And somewhere in every classroom, there is a student who can do something with words today that they could not do in September.
That does not happen without a teacher who understood what was missing and worked to build it.
Literacy changes lives. You are part of how that happens.
Have a beautiful weekend.
05/28/2026
Your MTSS schedule is built around something. The question is whether it's built around students.
Most schools design intervention time around what fits between specials and lunch.
The schools that see the strongest reading growth design it around what the data says each student needs: which skill, how often, how intensively, and with whom.
When the schedule serves the instruction, students get what they need. When the instruction serves the schedule, the system is working for the building. Not for the students inside it.
05/27/2026
Most schools measure MTSS success by how well the intervention is running. The schools that get this right measure it differently. They ask how few students needed to be pulled in the first place. When Tier 1 is strong enough to reach most learners, intervention becomes what it was always meant to be: targeted, intensive support for a small group with specific needs. Not a system scrambling to catch up with half the school.
05/26/2026
Some MTSS systems move students forward. Most don't.
The ones that work aren't using a different framework. They're using the same framework with better instructional precision.
Skill-based grouping. Strong Tier 1. Progress monitoring that drives decisions. Leadership that protects intervention time and supports teachers in delivering it with fidelity.
This week's newsletter breaks down what that structure actually looks like and what makes it sustainable when the school year gets hard.
05/25/2026
Most schools want MTSS to work. Most schools are also quietly frustrated that it doesn't.
We hear the same friction points everywhere we go: intervention time that gets cut, groups that never change, progress monitoring data that doesn't make it back to the classroom.
Where is the breakdown for your school right now? Drop your answer in the comments. We read every one.
05/24/2026
The most common progress monitoring mistake is not skipping it.
It's collecting the data and not acting on it.
When scores aren't informing instructional decisions, students can sit in the wrong intervention group for months while the data quietly signals that something needs to change.
Three consecutive data points below the goal line is your signal to adjust: the skill target, the instructional approach, the group composition, or the tier.
Progress monitoring is only useful when it has a decision attached to it.
05/23/2026
The schools with the best reading outcomes aren't using the best programs.
They're using whatever they have with more precision.
Skill-based grouping. Explicit instruction. Progress monitoring that actually changes what happens next.
The research keeps pointing to the same conclusion: the tool matters far less than the system it operates inside.
Stop looking for a better program. Build a better system.
05/22/2026
Every student who learns to read proficiently carries that skill for the rest of their life.
It opens doors to college, to careers, to independence and possibility they would not otherwise have.
The teachers who make that happen do not always get to see the full picture of what they built.
But it is real. And it matters.
Have a beautiful weekend.
05/21/2026
A student who was growing in January can be completely flat by May. Not because they hit a ceiling. Because somewhere along the way the instruction stopped matching where they actually were. Plateaus are not a student problem. They are an instructional signal. Swipe to see the three most common reasons it happens.