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news
February 26, 2025
Reading failures must be addressed
By JONATHAN SMALL

It’s said, “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing expecting different results.” This describes the failures in reading proficiency by Oklahoma students, despite billions of dollars of increased spending on public education in Oklahoma.

Edunomics Lab revealed that from 2013 to 2024 Oklahoma’s per-pupil spending increased 47 percent during that decade, but National Assessment of Educational Progress test scores in both reading and math are far lower today than in 2013. One cannot ignore that reality. Oklahoma’s spending increase far outpaced inflation during that time. Regarding Oklahoma, Edunomics noted, “Reading 4th-grade scores fell through the decade and continue to decline even as spending increased.”

NAEP scores show that only 23 percent of Oklahoma fourth grade students scored at or above proficient in reading, compared to 33 percent in 2015.

Lawmakers have begun to address the problem.

Lawmakers have passed, and the governor has signed, a law to address a major culprit in reading deficiency in Oklahoma and across the country, the failed academic experiment of “three cueing” instruction, which places emphasis on the memorization of pictures and images to determine words. This approach has long been known to be flawed but was taught by Oklahoma public higher education teacher training programs. Effective for the upcoming 2025-2026 school year, it’s finally going to be illegal for K-12 public schools to use any other methods of teaching reading than the proven methods of phonetic instruction and the “science of reading,” which has historically proven overwhelmingly successful.

But clearly much more must be done. After Oklahoma demonstrated significant success from 2011-2015 with a law known as the “Reading Sufficiency Act,” which largely prevented “social promotion” of students past the third grade who couldn’t read at a first grade level, special interests at the Oklahoma Capitol prevailed at gutting Oklahoma’s law and ushered back in social promotion.

Policymakers, educators, parents and voters are going to have to take an “all-hands-ondeck approach” to reverse this crisis, and it must become the num- ber one issue regarding public education. Given that from pre-K to third grade the most important aspect of schooling is learning to read, and from third grade on we read to learn, it’s time to do the hard things now to drastically improve the reading proficiency of Oklahoma students.

Jonathan Small serves as president of the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (www.ocpathink. org).

City of Eufaula rings in the New Year with Fire Chief Corey Cantrell at the helm
A: Main, news
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A: Main, news
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Eufaula Chamber of Commerce welcomes Turner as new executive director
A: Main, news
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Community Calendar
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Community Calendar
January 14, 2026
If you would like to list your meeting or event in the Community Calendar, please email all the information to jerry@cookson.news, call the Indian Journal at 918-689-2191 or drop the information off a...
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Sulli Mariah Lee grew up in Eufaula’s Native American boarding school from 1954 to 1965 when she graduated from Eufaula High School. A Muscogee (Creek) Nation citizen with Cherokee and Choctaw heritag...
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