Jan Hasbrouck, Ph.D.
Nancy Young, Ed.D.
2024 | 5 minutes
In the book we co-edited, Climbing the Ladder of Reading & Writing, we sought to provide clear guidance and support to a wide audience (educators, administrators, parents, and community members) for successfully implementing need-based literacy instruction for the success of all students.
In Chapter 3, “Instructional Implications,” Margie Gillis and Nancy Young (2024) provide key terms related to instruction, including:
Knowing the meaning of all three of these terms and how to include them appropriately in literacy instruction is essential for optimal student outcomes.
Instruction is systematic when it is thoughtfully designed to:
When teachers use systematically designed instruction—as appropriate for each student’s identified needs—learning is accelerated and more effective.
Explicit instruction, sometimes called direct instruction, refers to how systematically designed instruction is delivered when teaching a new skill or information a student needs to learn. Teachers initially model or demonstrate the new skill and provide sufficient practice opportunities with guidance and support until students show some level of skill mastery, automaticity, or understanding.
There's no guessing involved. Students are shown exactly what to do and how to do it. Any errors are immediately corrected, ensuring skill or knowledge mastery and minimizing confusion and frustration.
Another feature of explicit instruction is lots of active student engagement such as answering questions, writing, and reading text related to the instruction. Further, the amount of explicitness and the form of instruction needed will vary across the continuum of ease in learning to read and write.
Implicit learning happens when information is acquired, or skills are learned, without conscious awareness. Most of us acquire our initial language implicitly, along with many other things. The ease with which humans learn the patterns in written text (i.e., statistical learning) varies. When learning to read and write, experiences in the environment allow for implicit learning. Cognitive scientist Mark Seidenberg (2023) points out that most learners need some amount of explicit instruction. However, that kind of instruction must be thoughtfully “balanced” with implicit learning opportunities. In other words, “explicit instruction is there to scaffold statistical/implicit learning” (Seidenberg, 2023). Teachers should be aware of this instructional balance because students’ need for explicit instruction and their ability to learn implicitly varies. Providing excessive explicit instruction can delay or even impede learning.
Most experts who have studied the evidence on effective instruction believe that an approach incorporating systematically designed and explicit instruction along with ongoing opportunities for implicit learning is most effective. When we provide an appropriate amount of direct instruction in foundational skills while also fostering a love of reading and encouraging independent exploration, we set children up for lifelong success.
Remember, however, that every child is different. What works for one may not work for another. It's important to be flexible and adapt instruction to meet the individual needs of each student based on ongoing data collection that includes progress monitoring. If you have concerns about your child's reading development, talk to their teacher or a reading specialist. With the right support, every child can become a confident and capable reader and writer.
Gillis, M., & Young, N. (2024). Instructional implications. In N. Young & J. Hasbrouck (Eds.), Climbing the Ladder of Reading & Writing: Meeting the Needs of All Learners (pp. 24-45). Benchmark Education Company, LLC.
Seidenberg, M.S. (2023, December 4). Where does the "science of reading" go from here? [PowerPoint slides]. Reading Matters.
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