Assess
Each child gets a short one-on-one reading check before sessions begin.
Output: baseline levelReading Corps How we work
Same grade. Different reading levels. Reading Corps starts by finding what each child can read today, then teaches from there.
Progress means moving up the ladder. Results are measured independently and published every cycle.
The Reading Corps model
The model is simple on purpose. Measure first, group by actual reading level, practice daily, coach tutors, then verify and publish the results.
Each child gets a short one-on-one reading check before sessions begin.
Output: baseline levelChildren work at Beginner, Letter, Word, Paragraph, or Story level.
Rule: level before gradeTrained local tutors run 45 minutes of structured practice every school day.
Routine: daily and repeatableA mentor-coordinator observes, supports tutors, and regroups children at midpoint.
Guardrail: quality does not driftChildren are reassessed. A random sample is independently re-tested.
Result: public report + spendingWhy this approach
Reading Corps adapts Teaching at the Right Level: assess children, group by level, teach daily, coach tutors, and measure again.
Level-based grouping plus daily targeted practice is one of the strongest education findings in the global evidence base.
The World Bank-backed evidence panel rates level-based instruction with structured guides as highly cost-effective.
TaRL has Ethiopia implementation history, and Oromia has experience with structured Afaan Oromo instruction and EGRA-style assessment.
Evidence trail: J-PAL case study TaRL Africa Ethiopia Pratham TaRL model
Why reading is the gateway
This section is intentionally simple: five numbers, five reasons early reading matters.
Reading is the skill every later subject assumes.
Early remediation is cheaper than late recovery.
Reading fluency helps children reach those additional years.
Reading gains compound across generations.
The earlier the intervention, the larger the window.
Sources used across this page include UNESCO education and literacy reports, World Bank education and learning poverty publications, ASER Ethiopia, RTI EGRA studies, Psacharopoulos & Patrinos on returns to education, UNICEF child wellbeing reporting, and J-PAL / Pratham / TaRL Africa materials.
What it costs to sponsor one child
$25/month covers one child's full Reading Corps year.
The reading cycle
A fixed cycle makes the work trackable: baseline, daily practice, midpoint regrouping, endline, public report.
Every child assessed. Groups formed by level.
45 minutes a day, five days a week.
Children move groups when ready.
Practice continues at each child's current level.
Reassess, verify a sample, publish results and spending.
Theory of change
The pilot is a testable chain, not a promise. Each step reaches the next one only if a condition holds. If a link breaks, we name it and fix it before expanding.
Follow the line down: from today’s classroom to a system that runs level-based reading on its own.
Grade-level teaching misses children who are not yet reading at grade level.
Funding, school access, trained tutors, and a tested instructional routine.
The same five moves in every school. Daily, all year.
Bureaus see checked results. Reading movement and actual spending published together.
The education system adopts what donors helped prove.
Each “only if” above is an assumption we track. Six in all. If one slips, we say so.
Accountability
Vetted adults. Open classrooms. Guardian consent for any child image. Aggregate reporting only.
Board oversight, second sign-off on larger payments, and public filings linked as they are available.
No transfer before the legal pathway is finalized. Reports show USD, birr, and the exchange rate used.
The first cycle shows growth and cost. It does not overclaim causality. Limits are published with the results.