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Using knowledge-building curriculum doesn't guarantee 'robust' reading comprehension

Natalie Wexler delivers a sobering reality check for the education sector: simply buying a "knowledge-building" curriculum is not a silver bullet for reading comprehension. While the industry has pivoted toward content-rich materials, a new SRI study reveals that without a radical shift in how teachers are trained and evaluated, those same materials are being reduced to mere vehicles for skills drills. This is not just a pedagogical nuance; it is the difference between students who can decode a text and those who actually understand the world it describes.

The Implementation Gap

Wexler anchors her argument in a rigorous observational study conducted during the 2024-25 school year, which she describes as "methodologically one of the strongest observational studies of comprehension instruction in the last 50 years." The findings are stark. Despite using high-quality curricula like Core Knowledge Language Arts and Wit & Wisdom, researchers found that "most reading comprehension instruction—about two-thirds of the lessons observed—supported 'surface-level' rather than 'robust' understanding." This distinction is critical. Surface-level instruction treats reading as a series of isolated tasks, such as identifying the setting or finding evidence, whereas robust instruction prioritizes the overall meaning of the text.

Using knowledge-building curriculum doesn't guarantee 'robust' reading comprehension

To illustrate this, Wexler contrasts two third-grade lessons on the same book about the moon landing. In one classroom, the teacher stopped after having students identify literal and nonliteral language. In the other, the teacher pushed further, asking what Neil Armstrong meant by calling his step "one giant leap for mankind." The former checks a box; the latter builds a mind. This echoes the work of E. D. Hirsch, who long argued that reading comprehension is not a transferable skill but a function of background knowledge. Yet, as Wexler notes, even when that knowledge is present in the curriculum, it is often sidelined.

"The curriculum a district was using didn't determine how many comprehension lessons were surface-level rather than robust."

This finding dismantles the common assumption that a better textbook automatically yields better results. Wexler points out that in one district using Core Knowledge Language Arts, only 7 percent of lessons were robust, while another district using the same curriculum saw 30 percent. The variable isn't the book; it's the teacher's approach, which is often dictated by external pressures.

The Tyranny of Standards and Data

Why are teachers stripping the meaning out of rich texts? Wexler identifies a systemic confusion driven by "standards-based comprehension tests" and "data-driven instruction" (DDI). Teachers are often told to "unpack the standards" rather than engage with the text. A consultant quoted by Wexler describes professional learning sessions where educators are advised to modify a lesson on Don Quixote to focus on the abstract skill of "identifying character traits" rather than analyzing the character's actions in the specific chapter. The result is a lesson where students might talk about traits without ever discussing the text itself.

Wexler argues that this approach is fundamentally flawed because skills like "identifying character traits" cannot be mastered in isolation; they are entirely dependent on the complexity of the specific text being read. Furthermore, the data used to drive these decisions is often misleading. Standardized tests present passages unrelated to the curriculum, framing student performance as a lack of skill when it may actually be a lack of background knowledge. As Wexler writes, "Data-driven instruction makes sense only if the data are telling you something meaningful." When the data is divorced from the content students are learning, it leads to "unhelpful practices that reinforce surface-level instruction."

Critics might argue that standards exist to ensure equity and that abandoning them risks leaving some students behind without a common benchmark. However, Wexler suggests that the current interpretation of standards has become an obstacle to the very equity it claims to support, forcing teachers to prioritize testable mechanics over deep understanding.

"You can say a student has 'mastered' short vowel sounds or math facts. But anything conceptual, that's going to send you down the wrong path."

A Path Toward Robustness

The solution, according to Wexler and the SRI report, requires a return to the text itself. Districts must invest in deepening teachers' content knowledge, ensuring they understand the material they are teaching—whether it's the War of 1812 or the evolutionary adaptations of frogs. Professional learning should not be about how to remediate a skill gap but about anticipating where students might struggle with a specific text. As Wexler notes, when teachers read the text themselves and discuss "what will be tricky in it for kids," they can better guide students through the complexity.

This shift also requires a change in how assessments are viewed. Wexler highlights that content-rich curricula come with their own assessments designed to measure retention and reasoning, which are often more useful than generic standardized tests. In districts where leaders prioritize these curriculum-specific assessments, instruction naturally shifts toward meaning. The goal is to create classrooms where the text is in the foreground, and skills are the tools used to unlock it, not the end goal.

"Helping teachers engineer instruction that facilitates more robust understanding of texts might not only improve students' comprehension achievement but also create more joyful classrooms."

Bottom Line

Wexler's most compelling contribution is her refusal to let the education sector off the hook with a simple curriculum purchase; she exposes the deep structural inertia that turns rich content into shallow drills. The argument's greatest strength is its reliance on hard observational data that proves implementation matters more than the product, yet it leaves the reader with the difficult task of how to dismantle a testing culture that rewards surface-level compliance. The path forward is clear, but it demands a courage that few districts currently possess: the courage to trust the text over the test.

Deep Dives

Explore these related deep dives:

  • E. D. Hirsch

    Hirsch is the founder of the Core Knowledge curriculum mentioned in the article and the intellectual architect behind knowledge-building approaches to literacy. Understanding his cultural literacy theory provides essential context for why these curricula exist and what they're trying to accomplish.

  • Reading comprehension

    The article centers on the distinction between surface-level and robust comprehension instruction. The Wikipedia article covers the cognitive science of how comprehension actually works, including the role of background knowledge, which directly explains why skills-based instruction alone fails.

  • Outcome-based education

    The article describes how literacy standards are driving teachers to modify curricula in counterproductive ways. Understanding the history and theory of standards-based reform explains the systemic pressures teachers face and why 'unpacking standards' has become so prevalent.

Sources

Using knowledge-building curriculum doesn't guarantee 'robust' reading comprehension

by Natalie Wexler · Natalie Wexler · Read full article

Adopting a truly knowledge-building elementary curriculum—one that is rich in content, including topics in social studies and science—is crucial for improving students’ education outcomes. But no matter how well-constructed a curriculum is, it’s possible for districts and schools to implement it in a way that doesn’t work well. And that happens surprisingly often.

A new study from SRI analyzed reading instruction in four large districts that had been using effective knowledge-building curricula for several years, long enough to figure out how to implement a curriculum well. And yet the researchers found that most reading comprehension instruction—about two-thirds of the lessons observed—supported “surface-level” rather than “robust” understanding.

According to the definitions the researchers used, “surface-level” comprehension instruction focuses on “completing tasks”—often the kinds of tasks laid out in state literacy standards, like describing the setting in a story or explaining how an author uses evidence in an informational text.

“Robust” comprehension instruction, in contrast, might have students engage in some of those tasks, but the focus is on the overall meaning of the text. In other words, instead of using a text to teach a skill, a lesson that leads to robust comprehension puts the text in the foreground, bringing in whatever skills might help students understand and analyze that text.

As one illustration of the difference between surface-level and robust instruction, the study describes two third-grade lessons on the same book, One Giant Leap, about Neil Armstrong’s moon landing. In one classroom, the teacher guided students to identify literal and nonliteral language in the text—a skill matching a literacy standard—and stopped there. In the other, the teacher not only helped students identify literal and nonliteral language but also asked them what Armstrong meant when he described his first step on the moon as “one giant leap for mankind.”

The researchers observed comprehension lessons in 111 classrooms, nearly all of them third- to fifth-grade, focusing on a group of representative schools in each district. The study, conducted during the 2024-25 school year, also involved teacher surveys; interviews with teachers, district and school leaders, and instructional coaches; and observations of professional development sessions.

The study is “methodologically one of the strongest observational studies” of comprehension instruction in the last 50 years, according to the report, and its findings should be applicable nationwide. Those findings also echo a recent meta-analysis of observational studies of comprehension instruction done between 1980 and 2023, which found ...