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How Childhood Reading Became Oklahoma鈥檚 Top Policy Focus

Where state lawmakers, educators, parents agree and differ on how to improve literacy rates.

Students raise their hands in a fourth-grade classroom at Cleveland Elementary in Oklahoma City on March 6 during Read Across America Week. (Photo by Nuria Martinez-Keel/Oklahoma Voice)

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OKLAHOMA CITY 鈥 Everywhere House Speaker Kyle Hilbert goes, the topic of childhood literacy follows.

Hilbert, R-Bristow, said improving Oklahoma鈥檚 elementary reading scores is 鈥渢op of the agenda for me,鈥 and he鈥檚 been telling everyone who will listen.

鈥淓very single event that I鈥檓 asked to go to or every single question that I鈥檓 asked where it鈥檚 economic development, tourist-related, you name it, I talk about reading because it applies to everything,鈥 he told news reporters last month.

Early literacy has risen to the top of state lawmakers鈥 priorities for their 2026 legislative session, generating discussions and disagreement across the state about what policy changes and resources are necessary to improve children鈥檚 reading levels.

Only 27% of Oklahoma public school students scored at their grade level or higher on state reading tests last school year. A ranking of drew widespread public attention to Oklahoma鈥檚 ongoing struggles.

House Speaker Kyle Hilbert, R-Bristow, proposed sweeping changes to Oklahoma laws on student literacy. (Photo by Nuria Martinez-Keel/Oklahoma Voice)

Legislators have discussed in literacy programs, but the single most dramatic change 鈥 and the most concrete reading policy idea that has emerged at the state Capitol 鈥 would be retaining struggling readers in third grade.

Republican leaders have pointed to third-grade retention as a clear solution for Oklahoma鈥檚 , but educators and parents said they鈥檙e less convinced.

Hilbert鈥檚 legislation would require students who score below a basic level in reading to repeat third grade. It also would promote earlier interventions, like summer tutoring, small-group lessons and optional retention in younger grades.

鈥淲e know if we pass this bill we will have better education outcomes,鈥 Hilbert told a House education subcommittee in February. 鈥淭hat is a fact. It鈥檚 backed by science. It鈥檚 backed by data. It鈥檚 backed by research. It鈥檚 backed by evidence of what other states have done. We know what will happen if we pass this. We just have to have courage to do that.鈥

Research indicates retaining a student in elementary school leads to a , but retained students face a and .

Parents voice concerns over retention policy

Republican lawmakers and have pointed to Mississippi, with its strict retention requirement and improved reading scores, as a success story to emulate.

Mississippi has surpassed the national average in fourth-grade reading proficiency after on literacy initiatives and reading coaches, along with retaining its lowest-performing third-grade readers.

Oklahoma implemented similar third-grade requirements in the 2013-14 school year and by 2015-16 among early elementary grades.

School districts at the time said the retentions were necessary to prepare students for the high-stakes third-grade reading test.

The policy became unpopular among parents and educators, who complained the state placed far too much consequence on the results of one annual reading test. Lawmakers progressively for children to avoid being held back. They altogether in 2024.

Books stand on display in the school library at Cleveland Elementary in Oklahoma City on March 6. (Photo by Nuria Martinez-Keel/Oklahoma Voice)

Parents don鈥檛 want to return to high-stakes testing, said Wendy Hardwick, president of the Oklahoma Parent Teacher Association.

Hardwick鈥檚 twin daughters were in third grade when Oklahoma last had strict retention laws. They had already repeated first grade, and two years later, their reading skills were strong, she said. That didn鈥檛 stop them from feeling 鈥渟cared to death鈥 that a poor testing performance would hold them back again in third grade, she said.

Hardwick, who worked in public schools as a long-term substitute and later in special education, recalled the school environment was 鈥渟tressful and palpable鈥 during state testing time.

鈥淲hat (students) understand is that they鈥檙e going to take this test, and if they don鈥檛 pass it, they鈥檙e going to have to take third grade again,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to see kids of that age being put under that type of pressure.鈥

Senate Minority Leader Julia Kirt, D-Oklahoma City, had similar worries for her son, who was in pre-K when the retention law first passed.

Like Hardwick鈥檚 children, Kirt鈥檚 son repeated first grade. It worked out well, she said, but she feared a poor standardized test result would hold him back a second, more damaging time.

鈥淚 was pretty nervous about it, and knowing my educators didn鈥檛 have much say in it concerned me,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ur classroom educator the year my son was in third grade said, 鈥業 know he can read. I鈥檝e talked to him about it. I watch him read. He tells me he knows. We have no idea if he will show that on a standardized test.鈥欌

Senate Minority Leader Julia Kirt, D-Oklahoma City, right, gives a response to the governor鈥檚 State of the State Address on Feb. 2 at the state Capitol in Oklahoma City. (Photo by Nuria Martinez-Keel/Oklahoma Voice)

Broken Arrow parent Kristine Chambers said her daughter in second grade already reads above her grade level and tests well. An extra reading curriculum her daughter received in pre-K through Broken Arrow Public Schools set her up for success today, Chambers said.

Boosting early literacy instruction should be lawmakers鈥 focus, she said, rather than having students repeat a grade.

鈥淚 think that instead of focusing so hard on this retention, maybe put that focus into funding for new programs, new ideas for early childhood literacy, so that we have that good base,鈥 Chambers said. 鈥淥bviously, there鈥檚 going to be students that learn at different speeds, but I think that if we have a really good, strong reading support and intervention early, we can not have the retention possibility at third grade.鈥

The state鈥檚 poor reading scores demonstrate not enough schools are intervening sufficiently when young readers are struggling, Hilbert said.

That鈥檚 why his would require schools to offer summer tutoring, small-group instruction and other services. Mandatory retention 鈥渇orces that accountability鈥 for schools to take action and communicate with parents earlier, he said.

Teaching quality comes to forefront

Public school teachers have voiced disagreements, not with the concept of retention, but with doing so in third grade.

Students learn the foundations of reading in earlier grades, so the sooner a student is retained, the better, if it鈥檚 absolutely necessary, said Cari Elledge, the president of the Oklahoma Education Association, the state鈥檚 largest teacher union.

鈥淚f you wait until third grade, it might be too late,鈥 said Elledge, a former elementary teacher. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 really what we鈥檙e hearing from our educators across the state, is we do support this, but if there was any way that we could shift it back a little bit to pre-K, kindergarten, first grade, that would be more beneficial.鈥

Cari Elledge, president of the Oklahoma Education Association, said third grade is 鈥渢oo late鈥 to retain students. (Photo by AJ Stegall/Provided to Oklahoma Voice)

Republican legislators and business leaders have framed backing off of tough retention laws as the start of Oklahoma鈥檚 downturn in education rankings. But, other key factors have impacted public schools since that time.

Oklahoma experienced some of the and an . Public schools in Oklahoma now employ and over 800 uncertified adjunct instructors, both of which used to be a rarity in the state.

鈥淲hen we talk about watering down things, we鈥檝e also watered down certification and licensure, and that has been a dramatic change to public education in the state of Oklahoma,鈥 Elledge said.

The state Legislature has steadily increased public school funding since then, though Oklahoma in per-pupil spending.

Sen. Adam Pugh, who leads the Senate Education Committee, said as lawmakers invest more dollars in public schools, they鈥檙e aware Oklahoma鈥檚 teacher workforce is now younger, less experienced and more reliant on emergency certified educators.

That鈥檚 why measures to recruit and retain more teachers, including raising teacher salaries by $2,500, doubling college scholarship funds for aspiring educators, growing a statewide team of reading coaches and adding millions of dollars to support literacy instruction in public schools.

鈥淚 also think when it comes down to it, it鈥檚 not about the curriculum,鈥 said Pugh, R-Edmond. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the individual that鈥檚 in front of the classroom every day, and so preparing that individual to go teach kids to learn how to read, I think, is really important.鈥

Oklahoma City schools show improvement in early readers

Test scores were already on the decline when disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic . Scores then from 2022 to 2024.

As districts seek to claw their way back up, Oklahoma City Public Schools has found a reason for optimism this school year. Winter benchmark testing showed nearly a quarter of the district鈥檚 first graders had more than a full academic year of growth in a semester of learning.

Oklahoma City Public Schools Superintendent Jamie Polk reads a book to a fourth-grade class at Cleveland Elementary in Oklahoma City on March 6. (Photo by Nuria Martinez-Keel/Oklahoma Voice)

If more first graders show accelerated growth now, more will be on track to read proficiently by fourth grade, Oklahoma City Superintendent Jamie Polk said.

A major factor in that growth has been the addition of an extra reading curriculum on top of the district鈥檚 core literacy instruction, district leaders said in a March school board meeting. The extra curriculum more explicitly covers phonics and phonemic awareness, two concepts that are essential to sounding out words.

Classrooms that showed the most growth had another key element, Polk told Oklahoma Voice. They had teachers who were trained through content-specific professional development.

鈥淲hat we have found that works more than anything is 鈥 teacher clarity 鈥 teachers understanding exactly this is what the students need to know and be able to do, but also when our students can articulate what they need to know and be able to do,鈥 Polk said.

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Oklahoma Voice maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Janelle Stecklein for questions: [email protected].

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