Choosing a Reading Curriculum with Dr. Maria Murray, Founder & CEO of The Reading League

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In today’s episode, I sit down with the incredible Dr. Maria Murray, founder and CEO of The Reading League, to talk about one of the most consequential decisions schools make: choosing a reading curriculum. If you’ve ever felt overwhelmed by programs, sales pitches, reviews, or state requirements, this conversation is a breath of fresh air.

Dr. Murray shares her story—from researcher to reading scientist to starting The Reading League—and explains why knowledge-building and ongoing support are essential for schools implementing evidence-aligned reading instruction. Together, we unpack what curriculum decision-makers really need to know, what red flags to watch for, and why implementation matters just as much as the curriculum itself.

🎙️ In This Episode, We Cover

Maria’s Journey & Why The Reading League Exists

  • How real school intervention studies sparked the creation of The Reading League

  • Why teachers’ “unfinished learning” drives the mission

  • What it means to be a “knowledge broker” for educators

What Schools Should Clarify Before Reviewing Any Curriculum

  • Understanding whether you need instruction for foundational skills, language comprehension, or both

  • Why a review team must have at least a baseline understanding of the science of reading

  • The misconception that any program will be a “magic bullet”

The Reading League Curriculum Evaluation Guidelines

  • How the Compass tools support decision-makers

  • Why red flags must be the first step in reviewing programs

  • How to differentiate between non-negotiables and “wishlist” features

  • Why the fewest red flags should guide curriculum approval

Red Flags to Watch For in Curriculum Materials

Dr. Murray shares the big ones teachers and leaders should never ignore:

  • Practices that contradict research on word recognition and language comprehension

  • Overreliance on memorization strategies

  • Misalignment between assessments and instructional goals

  • Programs that require heavy supplementation from the start

Curriculum ≠ Success Without Strong Implementation

  • Why a program is “only as good as the teacher standing behind it”

  • The danger of over-adoption and overwhelming teachers with too many programs

  • Balancing fidelity with student needs

  • Using progress monitoring to guide ongoing adjustments

Building Teacher Buy-In During Curriculum Shifts

  • The importance of transparency, shared ownership, and strong leadership

  • Why professional development must be ongoing—not a one-and-done training

  • How beliefs, knowledge, and practices align to improve student outcomes

Navigating Social Media & TPT in the Science of Reading Era

  • What teachers should be cautious about when seeking answers online

  • Why confirmation bias can mislead well-intentioned educators

  • How to begin a trustworthy learning journey

  • Recommended Reading League resources for accurate guidance

What Gives Dr. Murray the Most Hope

  • Success stories from classrooms, districts, and entire states

  • Why she predicts a tipping point in reading instruction this decade

  • Her dream that one day The Reading League will “work itself out of a job”

💡 Key Takeaways

  • Choosing a curriculum is high-stakes work and requires thoughtful, evidence-aligned review.

  • Red flags should guide your initial filtering process—don’t try to “fix” programs that fundamentally conflict with research.

  • Implementation, coaching, and professional development are just as important as the program you choose.

  • Teachers deserve support, clarity, and the knowledge needed to make instruction effective.

  • The future of reading instruction is hopeful—and getting brighter every year.

🔗 Resources Mentioned

Explore more Science of Reading PD, decodables, small-group planning tools, coaching sessions, and literacy resources at Route2Reading inside the Literacy Edventures Membership.

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Resetting your Literacy Block for the New Year with Lindsay Kemeny