• Episode 4: Structured Literacy and Purposeful Assessment with Kate Winn
    Jan 21 2026

    The Reading Symphony Podcast helps families and caregivers understand how reading develops and what truly supports reading success, with clarity, compassion, and evidence-based guidance. Host Katie Megrian (educator, parent, and literacy advocate) interviews experts who translate research into practical next steps for home and school.

    In this episode, Katie is joined by Kate Winn, an Ontario educator, literacy advocate, and co-author of Reading Assessment Done Right: Tools and Techniques for Data-Driven Instruction. With 25+ years of experience across K–8, Kate breaks down what structured literacy looks like in real classrooms and how families can spot strong instruction.

    They cover the essentials of evidence-based reading instruction (phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, and writing), green flags parents can look for (explicit phonics, decodable texts, letter-sound practice, rich read-alouds), and red flags to avoid (predictable/leveled readers that encourage guessing, and level-based assessment language). Kate also explains a clear K–3 assessment system—universal screening, diagnostic assessment, and progress monitoring—and offers time-efficient ways families can support reading at home, including oral language, read-alouds, and short practice routines.

    Books mentioned: Zoe and Sassafras series; Dog in Boots by Greg Gormley
    Find Kate: Instagram @katethismomloves; Reading Road Trip podcast (IDA Ontario)
    More from Katie: Substack katiemegrian.substack.com; Instagram @thereadingsymphony

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    40 min
  • Episode 3: From Reading Research to Classroom with Dr. Julia B. Lindsey
    Jan 14 2026

    In this episode of the Reading Symphony Podcast, host Katie Megrian interviews Dr. Julia B. Lindsey, a literacy expert and author of 'Reading Above The Fray.' They discuss how reading develops, the importance of evidence-based practices in literacy instruction, the role of phonics and comprehension, and the use of small group instruction. Dr. Lindsey shares her insights on the prerequisites for reading comprehension, ongoing professional development for teachers, and the integration of technology in reading instruction. She also emphasizes the significance of making reading instruction practical and actionable for educators and families. Throughout the conversation, the importance of clarity, explicitness, and coherence in teaching literacy is highlighted, with Dr. Lindsey providing practical tips for parents and educators. The episode concludes with recommendations on resources and ways to support children's reading development at home.

    https://www.juliablindsey.com/

    https://www.beyonddecodables.com/

    email: hello@juliablindsey.com

    https://www.instagram.com/juliablindsey/

    00:00 Introduction to the Reading Symphony Podcast

    00:26 Meet Dr. Julia B. Lindsey: Literacy Expert

    03:22 The Journey from Classroom to PhD

    04:42 Writing 'Reading Above the Fray'

    07:51 Understanding How Children Learn to Read

    13:46 A Day in the Life of an Early Elementary Classroom

    22:08 Red Flags in Reading Instruction

    30:04 Improving Teacher Training and Professional Development

    33:23 Effective Small Group Instruction

    37:00 The Role of Technology in Reading Education

    39:38 Looking Forward: The Future of Reading Education

    43:31 Conclusion and Final Thoughts



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    51 min
  • Epidsode 1: Why this podcast exists
    Jan 6 2026

    Episode 1: Why Reading Feels So Hard (and Why It Doesn’t Have to)

    Welcome to the first episode of The Reading Symphony Podcast. I’m your host, Katie Megrian—educator, literacy leader, and mom to two very different readers.

    In this episode, I break down the current state of reading in the U.S., why so many children struggle, and the hopeful truth that at least 95% of kids can learn to read with the right instruction. You’ll learn why reading isn’t natural, how it actually develops in the brain, and why all parts of reading—phonics, vocabulary, knowledge, and comprehension—must work together.

    New episodes drop every Wednesday morning. Starting with Episode 2, I’m joined by leading literacy experts who help translate the science of reading into clear, practical guidance for parents and educators.

    If you’ve ever felt unsure about your child’s reading, you’re in the right place.

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    6 min
  • Episode 2: Making Words Stick in the Brain and Leveraging Read Alouds with Dr. Molly Ness
    Jan 1 2026

    🎙 Episode: Making Words Stick and Read-Alouds for All Learners (with Dr. Molly Ness)

    In this episode of The Reading Symphony Podcast, Katie Megrian sits down with Dr. Molly Ness, former classroom teacher, reading researcher, teacher educator, and author of six books (with a seventh on the way). Molly is known for translating research into practical, usable moves for teachers and families, and this conversation is packed with exactly that.

    Together, Katie and Molly dig into two big questions families ask all the time:

    1. How do we help words actually “stick” so kids become fluent readers?
    2. What can we do at home to build language and comprehension in ways that feel doable?

    You’ll learn why memorizing word lists often fails, what “orthographic mapping” really means in plain language, and how read-alouds can be one of the highest-leverage tools for building vocabulary, knowledge, and comprehension at any age.

    In this episode, we cover:

    • Molly’s path from Teach For America to reading research and why she’s passionate about closing the research-to-classroom gap
    • The concept of orthographic mapping and why it matters for fluency and comprehension
    • Why flashcards and rote memorization often don’t lead to lasting word learning
    • The difference between sight words, high-frequency words, and heart words, and how to think about them at home
    • Why spelling is one of the best windows into a child’s literacy development
    • A parent-friendly way to support tricky patterns, including r-controlled vowels
    • How to talk to teachers with curiosity, not conflict, when homework or instruction doesn’t feel aligned
    • Molly’s best read-aloud advice for families, including:
      • The “decline at nine” and why you should keep reading aloud well past third grade
      • Why reading informational text matters more than most people realize
      • How to use think-alouds (instead of constant questions) to model comprehension
    • Why kids benefit when we expand beyond the books we loved growing up and how to find high-quality diverse book recommendations
    • Molly’s simple framework for getting kids to read more: ARC (Access, Relevance, Choice)

    Book and author shout-outs from the conversation:

    • Making Words Stick (Molly Ness & Katie Pace Miles)
    • Read Alouds for All Learners (Molly Ness)
    • Authors mentioned: Matt de la Peña, Chris Van Dusen, Jarrett Lerner

    Connect with Dr. Molly Ness:

    Molly’s website: mollyness.com (resources, videos, and contact info)

    Want more support from Katie?

    📩 Subscribe to Katie’s free weekly Substack: katiemegrian.substack.com
    📱 Follow on Instagram: @thereadingsymphony

    If this episode helped you, it would mean a lot if you would follow the show, leave a quick 5-star rating or review, and share it with a parent, teacher, or caregiver who cares deeply about helping kids become joyful, confident readers.


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    53 min
  • The Reading Symphony Podcast Trailer
    1 min