Breaking the Poverty-Reading Cycle
Across the United States, schools serving low-income communities often struggle with reading results. Research has long shown a direct connection between poverty and literacy outcomes (Neuman & Celano, 2012). Yet one Ohio district has proven that this cycle can be broken.
For more than 20 years, Steubenville City Schools have delivered some of the highest reading results in the nation. As APM Reports noted, “Between 2005 and 2019, between 93 percent and 100 percent of Steubenville’s third graders were proficient on the state reading exam” (Butrymowicz, 2025, https://www.apmreports.org/story/2025/02/20/steubenville-ohio-reading-success-for-all).
Steubenville’s Outstanding Reading Results
In 2024, 100 percent of Black students, 99 percent of low-income students, and 92 percent of students with disabilities in Steubenville reached reading proficiency (The 74 Million, 2025, https://www.the74million.org/article/why-steubenville-ohio-might-be-the-best-school-district-in-america).
Stanford researcher Sean Reardon called the district’s success “five standard deviations above what we would predict based on poverty rates” (The Statehouse News Bureau, 2025, https://www.statenews.org/section/the-ohio-newsroom/2025-04-10/how-a-rust-belt-city-is-beating-the-literacy-odds). Simply put, Steubenville is doing something extraordinary.
How Steubenville Teaches Reading
Steubenville’s approach is built on three pillars:
1. Curriculum Stability
For over 25 years, the district has used Success for All, a research-based reading program developed at Johns Hopkins University. Superintendent Melinda Young explained, “We have had the same curriculum for 25 years. That stability has been key to helping students succeed” (Governing, 2025, https://www.governing.com/policy/this-ohio-school-district-might-be-the-best-in-the-country).
2. Early Learning
Children begin subsidized preschool at age three, often for free if they qualify. Teachers focus on oral language development by requiring full-sentence responses, which builds strong language foundations (Butrymowicz, 2025).
3. Targeted Support
All elementary staff help with reading instruction. Students are grouped by reading ability, not grade level. Struggling students receive one-on-one tutoring and daily 90-minute reading blocks (Butrymowicz & D’Urso, 2025).
Why Aren’t All Schools Doing This?
With such strong results, why do not more districts follow Steubenville’s lead?
Cost: Success for All requires upfront investment in materials, training, and tutoring staff. Some districts hesitate to fund long-term solutions (APM Reports, 2025).
Leadership Turnover: Many districts switch programs when superintendents or school boards change. Steubenville’s success shows the power of long-term stability.
Teacher Training: The program requires all staff, including specialists, to participate in literacy instruction. Not all districts are able to provide the necessary professional development.
Politics and Priorities: Education policy often shifts based on trends. Districts may overlook models that do not align with current state initiatives.
As researcher Robert Slavin argued, “The biggest barrier is not that it doesn’t work—it’s that schools don’t stick with it long enough to see results” (Butrymowicz, 2025).
Lessons for Other Districts
Steubenville proves that poverty does not have to determine reading outcomes. Its model highlights the importance of:
Choosing a proven curriculum and sticking with it
Investing in early childhood education
Using flexible, ability-based grouping
Providing consistent tutoring and support
Maintaining high expectations for all students
Final Thoughts
Steubenville’s story is more than a local success. It is a model for districts across the country. With the right curriculum, early intervention, and commitment to consistency, schools can achieve the same results.
As Butrymowicz (2025) concluded, “Steubenville shows us that with the right tools, high expectations, and consistent practice, virtually all children can learn to read.”
References
Butrymowicz, S. (2025, February 20). How Steubenville, Ohio, achieved reading success for all. APM Reports. https://www.apmreports.org/story/2025/02/20/steubenville-ohio-reading-success-for-all
Butrymowicz, S., & D’Urso, J. (2025, March 1). Why Steubenville, Ohio, might be the best school district in America. The 74 Million. https://www.the74million.org/article/why-steubenville-ohio-might-be-the-best-school-district-in-america
Butrymowicz, S. (2025, July 24). Success for All gets kids reading. Why don’t more schools use it? APM Reports. https://www.apmreports.org/story/2025/07/24/success-for-all-gets-kids-reading-why-dont-more-schools-use-it
Governing. (2025, February). This Ohio school district might be the best in the country. https://www.governing.com/policy/this-ohio-school-district-might-be-the-best-in-the-country
The Statehouse News Bureau. (2025, April 10). How a Rust Belt city is beating the literacy odds. https://www.statenews.org/section/the-ohio-newsroom/2025-04-10/how-a-rust-belt-city-is-beating-the-literacy-odds
Neuman, S. B., & Celano, D. (2012). Giving our children a fighting chance: Poverty, literacy, and the development of information capital. Teachers College Press.
Snow, C. E., Burns, M. S., & Griffin, P. (Eds.). (1998). Preventing reading difficulties in young children. National Academy Press.






