Reading instruction is the most legislated area of education and the
most frequently referenced metric for measuring educational progress.
This book traces the trajectories of policy issues with direct
implications for literacy teaching, learning, and research in order to
illustrate the dynamic relationships between policy, research, and
practice as they relate to perennial issues such as: retention in grade,
remediation, intervention, instruction for English learners, early
literacy instruction, coaching, and leadership. Using policy documents
and peer-reviewed articles published from the 1960s to the present, the
editor and authors illustrate how issues were framed, what was at stake,
and how policy solutions to persistent questions have been understood
over time. In doing so, the book link a generation of scholars with
research that illustrates trajectories of development for ideas,
strategies, and solutions.