Beyond the Science of Reading

Type: Article
Topics: Curriculum & Assessment, School Administrator Magazine

August 01, 2025

How a Louisiana school district used a method of writing instruction to boost literacy and learning across the curriculum
A selfie of three adults and a group of teenage students
Natalie Wexler (center), co-author of The Writing Revolution, visited Monroe City Schools in Louisiana to observe the implementation of The Writing Revolution method. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE WRITING REVOLUTION

Teachers and administrators in Monroe, La., knew they had a problem: Many students couldnt write.

If there was a test question that required writing, recalls secondary supervisor Jerry Mayhall, who at the time taught current events to high school students, they most likely just wouldnt do it. I was just, like, Write something just put something down. Rochelle Williams, director of special education, says if her students were given a writing prompt, they would just copy the prompt.

Students did not have a clue where to start, says Serena White, Monroes former director of curriculum and instruction and later its chief academic officer. Even on standardized tests, where it was high stakes, they would freeze up and put down very little or nothing at all and turn it in. So what I saw, as a district leader walking around, was students who werent prepared for the task given to them.

Monroe, a city of about 48,000, has a challenging student population. Median household income is less than half the national average, and about 80 percent of the districts 8,500 students are economically disadvantaged. About the same percentage are Black. As in many districts with similar challenges, reading and writing scores were low.

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