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Features of Structured Literacy Instruction

  • Writer: National Center on Improving Literacy
    National Center on Improving Literacy
  • Mar 17
  • 3 min read

Updated: Mar 22

Structured Literacy is an approach to reading instruction that explicitly teaches systematic word-identification and decoding strategies. This brief outlines the key features of Structured Literacy and tips for delivering this approach.

Students raising their hands in a classrom

Defining Structured Literacy


Structured Literacy is an approach to reading instruction that explicitly teaches systematic word-identification and decoding strategies. It is informed by the Science of Reading. Structured Literacy is most effective when instruction in the six elements is integrated appropriately to emphasize their relationship in our language system. All six elements work together and are important to read, write, listen, and speak successfully.


The phrase Structured Literacy was first coined by the International Dyslexia Association.


Key Features of Structured Literacy


There are four key features to a Structured Literacy approach:


1.     EVIDENCE-BASED: A Structured Literacy approach includes instruction in six evidence-based elements. These elements - phonology, sound-symbol association, syllables, morphology, syntax, and semantics – work together to provide students with the tools they need to learn to read.

 

2.     DIAGNOSTIC: Structured Literacy must be tailored to meet each student’s needs. The instruction is based on careful and continuous assessment. The content presented must be mastered to the degree of automaticity. For example, using assessment data as evidence of student proficiency with essential knowledge, understanding, and skill in the elements; providing opportunities for additional instruction or practice when assessment results indicate that need; and providing opportunities to advance or extend knowledge when assessment results indicate mastery.

 

3.     SYSTEMATIC: Structured Literacy instruction follows the logical order of language. For each element, the teaching sequence begins with the easiest and most basic concepts and progresses methodically to the more difficult. It is okay to teach more than one element at a time or integrate the elements in instruction. Systematic is a feature of time. For example, connecting a series of related lessons over time, a set of simple to complex instructional tasks, moving from explicit to implicit instruction as students demonstrate proficiency, and incorporating cumulative review of skills and processes previously learned with new learning.

 

4.     EXPLICIT: Structured Literacy teaching requires direct teaching of concepts, skills, and processes with a fast pace of student-teacher interaction to keep students engaged. It is not assumed that students will naturally deduce these concepts on their own. Instruction is delivered in an explicit manner.  For example, setting the purpose for the instruction; making connections to previously learned material; and gradually releasing responsibility to students through the “I do, we do, you do” process. This means introducing concepts, skills, and processes in a direct manner with modeling, providing guided practice with students with immediate corrective feedback, and having students independently practice while continuing to monitor their progress and reteaching when necessary.


Teachers who employ Structured Literacy ensure learning tasks align with the knowledge, understanding, and skill in instruction; all students reason and work at high levels; and all students have equally engaging and interesting learning tasks.


Tips:


To engage students, gain their attention before initiating instruction, pace the lesson appropriately to hold attention, maintain close proximity to students, transition quickly between tasks, and intervene with off-task student to redirect their focus.


If students experience difficulty with independent application, revert to guided practice with the teacher working through tasks with students at the same time, step-by-step, and providing corrective feedback. Provide opportunities for practice after each step of instruction, and provide extra practice based on accuracy of student responses.


If guided practice is breaking down, revert to teacher explanation and modeling. Use explicit language in the demonstration of skills, speak clearly and make eye contact with students while modeling skills, and continue to model as needed—once is often not enough.


Engage students in meaningful interactions with language during instruction by providing and eliciting background information, emphasizing the distinctive features of new concepts, making relationships among concepts overt, engaging students in discussion about new concepts, and elaborating on student responses.


Adjust task difficulty by moving from simple to more complex tasks, breaking down tasks into smaller steps, or going back to the simpler task, firming up, and then moving forward.

Features of Structured Literacy Instruction Infographic

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Suggested Citation


National Center on Improving Literacy (2024). Structured Literacy. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education, Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, Office of Special Education Programs, National Center on Improving Literacy. Retrieved from https://www.improvingliteracy.org/

 

References

Cowen, C.D. (2016). What is Structured Literacy? International Dyslexia Association. https://dyslexiaida.org/what-is-structured-literacy/


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The research reported here is funded by a grant to the National Center on Improving Literacy from the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, in partnership with the Office of Special Education Programs (Award #: H283D210004). The opinions or policies expressed are those of the authors and do not represent views of OESE, OSEP, or the U.S. Department of Education. You should not assume endorsement by the Federal government. 

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