Spring Special '26: Assessment as your best friend, with Kate Winn and Stephanie Stollar, Ph.D.
4/22/202652 min
In this episode of Science of reading: The Podcast, Susan Lambert, Ed.D., is joined by Kate Winn and Stephanie Stollar, Ph.D, coauthors of Reading Assessment Done Right, who explain how to use assessment to actually accelerate student progress and drive instructional decisions. Stephanie, Kate, and Susan also discuss how to cut through assessment overload and focus on what truly drives instruction, the four essential purposes of assessment, and how they work together within Multi-Tiered System of Supports framework, and the common misconceptions that lead to ineffective practices.
Show notes:
- Check out Reading Assessment Done Right.
- Learn more about Stephanie Stollar.
- Connect with Stephanie Stollar LinkedIn.
- Connect with Stephanie Stollar on Facebook.
- Connect with Kate Winn on LinkedIn.
- Connect with Kate Winn on Facebook.
- Listen to the podcast Reading Road Trip.
- Listen to Season 2 of the Amplify podcast Beyond My Years.
- Join our community Facebook group.
- Connect with Susan Lambert.
Quotes:
"Assessment is a tool for conversation. It's an investigation. It's uncovering what is known, and there are multiple purposes. All assessments are constructed to answer questions." —Stephanie Stollar
"If you don't have a question about your students, you don't need to do more assessment. This should not be a compliance activity." —Stephanie Stollar
"Progress monitoring is like the GPS for educators." —Stephanie Stollar
"We can actually do something with the information when you're using good assessments." —Kate Winn
"Believe it or not, reading assessment can be so exciting. It can also be empowering." —Kate Winn
"Having lots and lots of assessment data is not helpful. It can actually be counterproductive." —Stephanie Stollar
"When I use my universal screener, it tells me which students are meeting benchmark, which ones aren't, and then I know exactly what to work on with those students." —Kate Winn
Timestamps*:
00:00 Introduction: Assessment as your best friend
05:00 The need for practical assessment guidance
09:00 What is assessment and what is its purpose in education?
15:00 Understanding the differences between universal screening vs. diagnostic assessment
21:00 Progress monitoring: The GPS for educators
25:00 Building supportive systems and communities for teachers
28:00 The continuous improvement cycle of reading instruction
30:00 Addressing the "too many assessments" problem with an assessment audit
34:00 Misconceptions about assessment
40:00 The power of Tier 1 instruction
43:00 Why we need to screen all students multiple times per year
48:00 Final thoughts: Assessment as a tool for conversation and empowerment
*Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsSusan Lambert· Host0:00
[upbeat music] Hi, listeners. It's Susan. I'll cut right to the chase. I'm launching a Substack. I'll be sharing more insights and takeaways from my conversations with leading literacy researchers, and also some behind-the-scenes looks from my own travels through the world of literacy. My first post is up now, featuring some thoughts I shared during my session at the Plain Talk About Literacy and Learning Conference, as well as a wrap-up of our recent comprehension season. Check it out today and subscribe at scienceofreading.substack.com.
Stephanie Stollar· Guest0:34
Really, the driving force behind writing this book was to communicate to teachers how assessment can be useful to them.
Susan Lambert· Host0:47
[upbeat music] This is Susan Lambert, and welcome to Science of Reading, the podcast from Amplify. One of my favorite things on this podcast is interviewing scholars about their latest books. Another one of my favorite things is talking about assessment, and today we get to do both. Dr. Stephanie Stollar and Kate Winn recently authored a wonderful book titled Reading Assessment Done Right: Tools and Techniques for Data-Driven Instruction, and today we'll talk all about it. We'll discuss the real purpose of assessment, we'll talk about the different types of assessment and when to use each, and we'll address common misconceptions about assessment.