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  • Sara Gonzalez Flechas
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    Meet the Guest Editor: A Q&A With Sara Gonzalez Flechas

    ILA Staff
     | Nov 24, 2025
    Sara Gonzalez FlechasThe October/November/December 2025 issue of Literacy Today, ILA’s member magazine, explores the importance of literacy coaching and how it ties in with curriculum and community.

    Our guest editor for this edition, Sara Gonzalez Flechas, is a founding member of GL Books and the Literacy Center. A passionate literacy coach and advocate for bilingual students, Sarah currently serves as the national academic director leading curriculum design, teacher training, and literacy implementation across public and private institutions.

    “Literacy work is never done in isolation. It thrives when we learn from one another, when we take risks, and when we keep students at the center of everything we do,” she wrote in her opening note to readers.  

    Read on to learn more about the issue, how Sara approached its curation, and what she hopes readers take away from it.

    Tell us how you developed your vision for this issue.

    My vision for this issue was shaped by what is happening right now in Colombia. Over the past few years, we’ve been intentionally positioning literacy—not traditional EFL approaches—as a powerful and evidence-based alternative for teaching English. It has been a slow but meaningful process, and every step reinforces that the strongest results emerge when we move away from methods that, after many years, have not produced the outcomes our students deserve.

    For this reason, I wanted this issue to spotlight the Colombian context and the people driving these changes. I invited Claudia González and Alberto Lozano because they have been central to rethinking English teaching in Colombia and are actively advancing research-based practices. In addition, Lauren Hegarty, Diego Garzón, Mariana Ocampo Hernández, and Carolina Caipa’s work shows what is possible when schools embrace literacy and coaching as long-term commitments—small-scale transformations that can grow into national impact. Their articles reflect a continuum: From early childhood to primary and secondary school, and even, as I mentioned in my article, system-wide implementation in public education. Together, they portray a country in motion.

    How did you approach selecting contributors? What important thread ties them together?

    I chose contributors whose work reflects the real challenges—and real possibilities—of doing things differently in Colombia. While each author comes from a distinct context and perspective, they share a common thread: They are practitioners who are courageously reshaping English teaching through literacy and coaching.

    Their collective contributions offer a full panorama of the impact literacy can have. Tatiana Charry’s article brings us into kindergarten classrooms, while John Oyuela’s piece extends to professional development and systems-level change. Each one helps build a wide-angle view of the essential work happening across levels, regions, and school types. Together, they show a unified story: Literacy matters, and it is transforming learning in Colombia.

    Your opening letter mentions how essential it is that literacy work is "never done in isolation." Can you expand upon that thinking?

    In Colombia, talking about literacy immediately implies collaboration, because no part of the system can shift on its own. Real change requires participation from teachers, principals, coordinators, and families—and even students themselves.

    Tatiana highlights this beautifully in her article, showing how young learners thrive when teachers and families work together. Mariana and Carolina describe how implementing a reading program was only possible because coordinators, teachers, and the principal approached the process as a shared challenge and a shared responsibility. Across schools and communities, we see that literacy grows when everyone involved understands that there is an alternative way to approach English.

    This is why I intentionally included voices from all sectors and all grade levels—from pre-kindergarten to professional educators. Literacy truly is collective work.

    What are some of the biggest misconceptions about literacy coaching in your experience, and how does this issue address them?

    One of the biggest misconceptions is that a coach is simply an observer whose role is to evaluate or judge. In Colombia, the term “literacy coach” is not commonly used in schools, and the role is often misunderstood or, in many cases, nonexistent. In my recent work in schools in El Salvador, I found the same challenge—so much so that I recommended creating the position as part of the school structure. A coach is not there to critique from the sidelines; a coach is an active partner in the learning process.

    Another misconception is that coaching is limited to supporting teachers. Literacy coaching must be present in the classroom, working directly with instruction, with students, and with the school’s curricular decisions. It is hands-on, collaborative, and centered on improving practice in real time.

    This issue illustrates these ideas by showing coaches and teachers working side-by-side, reflecting together, and transforming everyday classroom interactions

    What do you hope readers will take away from this issue of Literacy Today, and how do you envision it sparking further conversation about literacy coaching?

    I hope readers walk away with at least two things: A renewed willingness to question traditional approaches to language teaching, especially in multilingual or bilingual contexts, and a collection of practical, realistic ideas they can bring into their schools, classrooms, or teacher training programs.

    I also hope this issue encourages educators to talk more openly about literacy coaching—not as an extra role or a luxury, but as a central component of instructional transformation. My wish is that readers begin asking:

    • What would change if we saw literacy coaching as essential, not optional?
    • How can coaching help us break long-standing patterns and move toward evidence-based teaching?
    • What might English education look like if literacy were the foundation rather than an add-on?
    If this issue sparks these conversations—and inspires teams to explore literacy as a path to more equitable, effective English learning—then it will have done exactly what I hoped.

    Learn More

    Defining and Refining Equitable Vocabulary Instruction for English Language Learners

    Literacy Today magazine: Coaching Across Borders
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  • Barbara J. Walker
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    In Memoriam: Remembering Barbara J. Walker

    ILA Staff
     | Nov 21, 2025
    Barbara J. WalkerBarbara J. Walker, a compassionate teacher and influential scholar whose lifelong devotion to literacy touched countless educators and students, died on November 12, 2025. She was 79.

    Walker served as the president of the International Reading Association (IRA; now the International Literacy Association) from 2008–2009. She began her work as a reading specialist in Oklahoma before serving in various roles that reflected her belief in the global importance of literacy. 

    Walker earned her PhD in Curriculum Studies at Oklahoma State University (OSU) and went on to lead the Reading Clinic at Montana State University Billings before returning to OSU as a professor of reading. Her research centered on reading difficulties, teacher development, and literacy coaching—areas in which she became widely recognized for both her expertise and compassion.

    A prolific author, Walker wrote extensively on diagnostic reading instruction, literacy coaching, and effective intervention for struggling readers. To this day, her books and teaching frameworks continue to guide reading specialists and classroom teachers. She also received numerous honors for her scholarship, including the College Reading Association’s A.B. Herr Award and distinction as a Regents Distinguished Professor for Research.

    As president of IRA, Walker provided steady leadership during a time of evolving literacy practices. She supported the growing recognition of modern literacies and reaffirmed IRA’s commitment to equitable reading instruction for all learners.

    Walker’s legacy continues to endure in the educators she mentored, the readers whose lives she helped change, and the professional community she served with integrity and compassion. Her impact will continue to shape literacy education for years to come.

    You may make a donation in Walker’s honor here.
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  • Shireen Al-Adeimi
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    Meet the Guest Editor: A Q&A With Shireen Al-Adeimi

    ILA Staff
     | Aug 22, 2025
    shireenThe July/August/September 2025 issue of Literacy Today, ILA’s member magazine, underscores the importance of thinking critically in a time of increasing disinformation.

    Our guest editor for this edition, Shireen Al-Adeimi, is an assistant professor of language and literacy at Michigan State University. Her research explores how dialogic discussions strengthen middle school students' literacy skills, how students and teachers engage with justice-oriented topics, and how practical tools can help educators foster meaningful, inclusive conversations in their classrooms. 

    “Even amid the face of today's educational and societal pressures, it's possible to create classrooms where students are invited to think deeply, speak freely, and engage meaningfully with the world around them,” she wrote in her opening note to readers.  

    Read on to learn more about the issue, how Shireen approached its curation, and what she hopes readers take away from it.

    Tell us how you developed your vision for this issue. What were your goals? How did you choose your authors and topics?

    In this issue, I wanted to center critical thinking both as a literacy goal and as a necessary practice for students navigating an increasingly complex world. I aimed to highlight work that connects reading, writing, and dialogue to students’ lives, their identities, and the pressing social issues around them. Across these articles, readers will find examples of how educators are supporting students’ agency, argumentation, and analytical skills. They do so through a range of practices, including student-led discussions, disciplinary translanguaging, project-based learning, metalinguistic inquiry, and the evaluation of digital texts.

    I curated this issue by inviting scholars whose work I admire while trying to ensure a range of perspectives and contexts. I was especially interested in contributors whose research bridges classroom practice and equity. Together, these researchers and educators help us think more deeply about what it means to take critical thinking seriously in literacy education.

    Your research focuses on enhancing students’ literacy outcomes through classroom discussion. How does that experience inform your views on fostering critical thinking?

    Whether structured or spontaneous, dialogue is central to every classroom and shapes how students think and learn. My research examines how specific forms of talk—like dialogic or academically productive discussions—can support students’ engagement, comprehension, and writing. I also study how teachers and students navigate difficult but necessary justice-oriented conversations. That work has shown me that critical thinking isn’t developed in isolation. It grows through meaningful interaction and relies on recognizing students’ knowledge and agency. That’s why I wanted this issue to highlight how educators use talk to stretch students’ thinking across disciplines—from literacy to science to digital media. Dialogue becomes the bridge between what students read and what they come to understand about themselves, each other, and the world.

    Your opening letter mentions how essential it is to teach literacy while honoring students’ experiences. What do you think are the most pressing considerations for educators looking to do this successfully while fostering critical thinking?

    We, as educators, must recognize students’ home literacies (e.g., oral language, vocabulary, and bi/multilingualism) as rich knowledge bases, not deficits. Sometimes those experiences overlap with what’s emphasized in school, and other times they don’t. Either way, it’s our responsibility to learn about and from our students, and to make sure their knowledge and experiences help shape what happens in the classroom. Fostering critical thinking means treating students as active participants whose insights and questions matter. That also means stepping back to listen carefully and create space for students to make meaning in ways that reflect both their lives and the academic tools we offer.

    What are some of the biggest misconceptions educators have about teaching critical thinking, and how does this issue of Literacy Today aim to address them?

    Critical thinking is sometimes misunderstood as teaching students what to think. While there’s often no single right answer, we need to support students in learning how to think: To analyze, question, connect, critique, and imagine. Educators should also recognize that critical thinking also doesn’t just happen through explicit instruction in logic or argument, especially when it’s detached from students’ lives, cultures, and language practices.

    This issue challenges those assumptions. Across these articles, authors show how critical thinking is developed through dialogue, through identity and language, through disciplinary meaning-making, and through inquiry into the world around us. Mari Zaru’s piece, “The Moon Traveled With Us,” is a reminder that critical thinking is also personal and political. It grows when students see their stories and questions as meaningful, and their language practices as worthy of classroom attention.

    Your graduate advisee, Rebecca Lee, co-authored the article “Talk That Matters” with you, which discusses cultivating “a climate where every students’ voice matters” in order to support true dialogic talk. Why is this work so important to you both?

    This work is deeply important to both of us because it reflects a shared commitment to creating classrooms where students are not expected to absorb information; rather, they are invited to co-construct it. Dialogic talk requires more than strategic questioning or other talk moves that invite students to express themselves in the classroom. It requires a climate of trust, mutual respect, and authentic curiosity. Rebecca and I believe that when students see their voices as valued, they are more likely to take intellectual risks, engage with their peers’ and teachers’ ideas, and grow as thinkers and communicators. This is especially vital in classrooms where students’ identities and experiences have too often been overlooked or marginalized. We view this centering of students’ voices as a matter of justice.

    Mari W. Zaru’s article, “The Moon Traveled With Us,” uncovers the transformative power of “supporting students in viewing literacy as personal, cultural, and political.” Why did you find this a compelling topic to feature?

    Mari’s piece powerfully demonstrates that literacy is never neutral. It is always intertwined with identity, history, and power. Her work with immigrant and refugee mothers from Palestine, Mexico, South Africa, Syria, and Bolivia shows how storytelling can bridge generations, preserve cultural memory, and center linguistic and cultural identities. As Mari writes that, “Literacy is also about memory, cultural survival, and the right to be heard.”

    Freirean ideals, Mari reminds us, that to “read the word” meaningfully, students must also learn to “read the world.” Hers is a model of critical, healing, and justice-oriented literacy education that I was honored to include and feature in this issue.

    What do you hope readers will take away from this issue of Literacy Today, and how do you envision it sparking further conversations about fostering critical thinking?

    I hope readers walk away with a richer, more expansive understanding of what it means to support critical thinking across literacy instruction. Each article in this issue that I curated offers a unique lens:

    • Jennie Baumann highlights how peer-led, text-based discussions build student agency and engagement.
    • Renata Love Jones shows how metalinguistic awareness can deepen students’ critical reflection about language.
    • Emily Phillips Galloway reminds us not to overlook language development as a central component of critical thinking.
    • Samuel Lee’s piece illustrates how multilingual students make sense of science content through translanguaging.
    • Yunfeng Ye and Wenjuan Qin explore how scaffolding argumentative writing supports higher-order thinking among EFL students.
    • Sarah McGrew pushes us to move beyond surface-level reading when teaching students to evaluate online information.
    • Crystal Wise demonstrates how project-based learning creates space for inquiry, analysis, and reflection.
    • Mari Zaru powerfully illustrates how storytelling, particularly among immigrant mothers and their children, can serve as a personal, cultural, and political act.
    • And in my own co-authored piece with Rebecca Lee, we advocate for building dialogic classrooms where every voice matters and where literacy serves justice.
    Together, these pieces challenge narrow definitions of critical thinking and offer tools for cultivating it in ways that are rigorous, relational, and rooted in justice.
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    Announcing the ILA 2025 Book Award Winners

    ILA Staff
     | Jul 11, 2025
    Every year, the International Literacy Association (ILA) recognizes emerging voices in children’s and young adult literature through the Book Awards program. Winners are selected by a committee of ILA member volunteers from around the world for their exceptional talent, powerful voice, and authentic stories that resonate with readers.

    “Choosing from such an exceptional field of books was no easy task,” said Margaret Opatz, chair of the ILA Children’s and Young Adult Book Awards Committee. “The selected titles stood out for their originality, artistry, and the meaningful ways they reflect the diverse lives of young people today.”

    Join us in celebrating the 2025 award winners:

    Primary Fiction 

      I Lived Inside a Whale by Xin Li book cover 
    • Winner: Xin Li, I Lived Inside a Whale (Little, Brown Ink)
      A stirring and visually captivating story of transformation and discovery that invites young readers to explore feelings of belonging and change.
    • Honor: Alex Killian, This Table (Greystone Kids)This Table by Alex Killian book cover
      A lyrical tribute to intergenerational connection, memory, and the everyday magic of shared spaces.

    Primary Nonfiction

      One Day This Tree Will Fall by Leslie Barnard Booth book cover 
    • Winner: Leslie Barnard Booth, One Day This Tree Will Fall (Simon & Schuster)
      A meditative, richly illustrated ode to the natural cycle of life, grounded in science and wonder.
    • The Girl Who Figured It Out by Minda Dentler book coverHonor: Minda Dentler, The Girl Who Figured It Out: The Inspiring True Story of Wheelchair Athlete Minda Dentler Becoming an Ironman World Champion (Sourcebooks)
      An empowering account of perseverance, athleticism, and disability representation from an acclaimed athlete and advocate.

    Intermediate Fiction

      Kwame Crashes the Underworld by Craig Kofi Farmer book cover 
    • Winner: Craig Kofi Farmer, Kwame Crashes the Underworld (Square Fish)
      A bold and inventive adventure inspired by myth and cultural legacy, brimming with humor and heart.
    • Mani Semilla Finds Her Quetzal Voice by Anna Lapera book coverHonor: Anna Lapera, Mani Semilla Finds Her Quetzal Voice (Levine Querido)
      A poignant coming-of-age story steeped in cultural tradition and personal awakening.

    Intermediate Nonfiction

      Tales of Ancient Egypt by Hugo D. Cook book cover 
    • Winner: Hugo D. Cook, Tales of Ancient Egypt: Myths & Adventures from the Land of the Pyramids (Neon Squid)
      A beautifully packaged introduction to Egyptian mythology, weaving scholarship and storytelling.
    • Hike It by Iron Tazz book coverHonor: Iron Tazz, Hike It: An Introduction to Camping, Hiking, and Backpacking through the U.S.A. (Magic Cat Publishing)
      An engaging guide to the great outdoors that encourages curiosity, confidence, and respect for nature.

    Young Adult Fiction

      Libertad by Bessie Flores Zaldivar book cover 
    • Winner: Bessie Flores Zaldívar, Libertad (Penguin Young Readers)
      A searing, lyrical novel that navigates political unrest, personal identity, and the meaning of freedom.
    • A Second Chance on Earth by Juan Vidal book coverHonor: Juan Vidal, A Second Chance on Earth (Peachtree Publishers)
      A redemptive tale of growth, grief, and self-discovery that challenges the boundaries of forgiveness.

    Young Adult Nonfiction

      Bless the Blood by Walela Nehanda book cover 
    • Winner: Walela Nehanda, Bless the Blood: A Cancer Memoir (Penguin Young Readers)
      An unflinching and poetic account of illness, activism, and survival from one of today’s most resonant voices.

    Free Virtual Event

    A live webinar with some of the winners will be held on Wednesday, August 20, 2025, at 5:00 p.m. ET. The webcast may be accessed on ILA’s website and will be available on-demand. For more information and a full list of past winners, visit literacyworldwide.org/awards.

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    Every Page Has a Purpose: Join the Movement for International Literacy Day 2025

    ILA Staff
     | Jul 08, 2025
    Young teacher with elementary students at a laptop
    International Literacy Day, held annually on September 8, marks a global moment to recognize literacy as a fundamental human right and a cornerstone of equity, opportunity, and social justice. This year, the International Literacy Association (ILA) is launching an exciting month-long campaign that celebrates this important effort through our Children’s Rights to Read initiative

    About the Campaign

    Anchored in the belief that “Every Page Has a Purpose,” we are championing every child’s fundamental right to access, enjoy, and benefit from reading. Through the lens of ILA’s Children’s Rights to Read, our campaign will unfold over five themed weeks in September. 

    We’re preparing to roll out events that include “Readers in the Wild,” where you can share sightings of people reading in everyday places, and #MyBookVoice, which spotlights book recommendations from kids themselves. Other activities will include assembling community book bags filled with stories and projects, and a call to action in support of vital public and school libraries during the run up to the American Library Association’s Banned Books Week (October 5–11, 2025).

    How to Get Involved

    Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn to be notified when our activities kit is live in August. Participation can be as simple as sparking conversation in the comments, amplifying our message on your own social platforms, and using the event hashtags.

    This International Literacy Day, we invite you to commit to our campaign. Every child deserves not just to read, but to love reading. Start today by partnering with us to advocate and celebrate literacy, equity, and the transformative power of reading.

    Learn More

    Right To Read: 4 Advocacy Organizations With Resources To Fight Book Bans

    Literacy Today 
    magazine: Thinking Critically
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