Alberta’s Early Reading Screening Program Needs Better Teacher Support to Help Students
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If you’ve watched your child go through school screening tests only to wonder what happens next, you’re sensing something real. That instinct—that testing alone isn’t enough—is exactly what thousands of Alberta teachers are now confirming. The disconnect between identifying which children need reading support and actually providing that support is leaving families in limbo.
TL;DR
Dyslexia Canada calls on Alberta schools to use reading screening as an instructional tool, not a compliance checkbox.
A survey of 3,500+ Alberta educators reveals time demands and uneven support access are undermining screening effectiveness.
Bill 6 will codify mandatory screenings in law starting 2026-27, extending requirements to grades 4 and 5.
More than half of teachers continue using outdated assessments alongside new provincial measures, creating conflicting data.
Recommendations include protected screening time for teachers and equitable resource access across all schools.
Educators Call for Practical Screening Reforms
Dyslexia Canada has released new commentary on Alberta’s mandatory early reading screening program, urging schools to treat assessment as a tool for informing instruction rather than a compliance exercise. Una Malcolm, Dyslexia Canada’s Chief Academic Officer, points to survey results from over 3,500 Alberta educators showing significant implementation challenges—including substantial time demands and uneven access to support services across schools.
The commentary comes as Alberta moves to codify mandatory literacy and numeracy screening into law through Bill 6. Starting in the 2026-27 school year, screenings will extend to grades 4 and 5, with the legislation granting statutory authority to requirements first introduced in 2022 for kindergarten through grade 3.
The core issue isn’t whether schools should screen for reading challenges—three provincial human rights commissions have identified universal screening as essential to students’ right to learn to read. The problem emerges when screening becomes disconnected from meaningful follow-up. Survey results show more than half of Alberta teachers continued using outdated assessment practices alongside new provincial screening measures, creating conflicting data that complicates instructional decisions.
Research consistently shows that children developing reading skills differently can build the same neural reading networks as their peers—but only when systematic, explicit instruction follows identification. Without protected time for teachers to analyze results and implement targeted interventions, screening data sits unused while children continue to fall behind.
Author Quote"
When screening data are connected directly to instruction, it supports all learners.
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What Parents and Teachers Need
Dyslexia Canada’s recommendations focus on practical fixes: providing teachers with protected time and substitute coverage during screening windows, discontinuing outdated assessment practices that create data conflicts, and ensuring equitable access to support resources across all schools. When screening data connects directly to instruction, Malcolm notes, it supports all learners—not just those who score below benchmarks.
For families, understanding that screening is just the first step matters. A child identified through screening isn’t broken—they’re a developing reader whose brain needs specific, targeted input to build phonological awareness and decoding skills. Parents often sense their child needs different support before any formal screening occurs. That instinct deserves follow-through, whether from schools or through home-based approaches that build reading skills systematically.
Key Takeaways:
1
Alberta survey reveals screening gaps: Over 3,500 educators report time constraints and uneven access to support services undermine reading screening effectiveness.
2
Data must connect to instruction: Dyslexia Canada emphasizes that screening only helps when results directly inform targeted teaching strategies for developing readers.
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Practical reforms proposed: Protected teacher time, discontinued conflicting assessments, and equitable resource access are key to making universal screening work.
Building Systems That Follow Through
Alberta’s $11 million investment in math and reading instruction—increasing to $15 million by 2027-28—signals recognition that screening alone isn’t sufficient. The challenge now is ensuring those resources translate into classroom-level support rather than additional administrative burden for teachers already stretched thin.
The Alberta Teachers’ Association has echoed these concerns, with association president Jason Schilling noting that survey results align with the union’s own research showing teachers frustrated by inadequate preparation time and resources. As more provinces consider mandatory screening policies, Alberta’s experience offers a clear lesson: identification without intervention is a promise without follow-through. Children developing reading skills need both—and so do the families waiting for real support.
Every child developing reading skills differently deserves more than a screening score—they deserve instruction that builds the neural pathways research shows are possible. The gap between identifying struggling readers and actually helping them represents systemic failure, not individual limitation. When schools screen without follow-through, they’re essentially identifying which children need lifeboats and then walking away from the water. Your child’s brain is capable of remarkable change with the right input. If you’re ready to stop waiting for a system that tests without teaching, the Learning Success All Access Program offers a free trial that includes a personalized Action Plan—and you keep that plan even if you decide it’s not the right fit.
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