4.17.2025 Doran Elementary HDT Visit with Congressman Jake Auchincloss

Fall River Government TV Apr 17, 2025 YouTube Report Issue

The meeting at Doran Elementary in Fall River, Massachusetts, hosted Congressman Jake Auchincloss and focused on the High-Dosage Tutoring (HDT) model, specifically the Ignite Reading program. Ed, representing a business-led organization, highlighted the crisis in early literacy in Massachusetts, noting that nearly 50% of school districts do not use science-of-reading curriculum, though Fall River has embraced it. He presented data showing that 66% of first-grade students needing intensive intervention moved away from that need with HDT, gaining an additional 5.4 to 7.4 months of learning. Caleb Puriller from the 1A Foundation explained that their foundation has invested approximately $6 million annually to pilot the Ignite Reading program in 13 districts and 49 schools across the Commonwealth, funding over 2,000 seats. The program involves daily 15-minute one-on-one virtual tutoring with highly trained tutors using a research-based curriculum. Educators from Doran Elementary, including first-grade teacher Melanie and literacy coach Alicia Fernandez, shared positive experiences, noting significant student growth and engagement. They reported that 80% of students who started at a kindergarten reading level progressed to first-grade skills. Congressman Auchincloss raised questions about parent involvement, the potential for math tutoring, and early childhood interventions, emphasizing the need for fiscal stewardship and earlier preparation for children. Ed and school officials responded by detailing existing pre-K programs, community outreach efforts, and the long-term cost-effectiveness of early reading intervention, stating that a $2,500 per student investment protects hundreds of thousands in future educational spending. The discussion also touched on the legislative ask for $25 million from the state for the program, with the hope that it would be a temporary seed investment over four to five years to allow districts to integrate it into their budgets.

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