Teaching Literacy Podcast

Practices of Effective K-2 Teacher Teams with Dr. Jake Downs
Guest host Dr. Kristin Conradi Smith interviews Dr. Jake Downs about the ‘secret soup’ of highly effective K-2 teacher teams.
Link to Jake’s Study: https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/15/2/259
Downs, J., Martz, K., & Mohr, K. (2025). Exploring the Instructional Effectiveness of High-Growth K-2 Teacher Teams in Foundational Reading. Education Sciences, 15(2), https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15020259
Link to ULEAD Report: https://schools.utah.gov/ulead/uleadfiles/reports/ipr/Instructional%20Clarity%20Early%20Lit%20IPR.pdf
Please write a short impact statement for Jake’s USU review packet (and thank you!): https://forms.gle/QcUs8ciMcAy2yG6L6
Episode Outline & Show Notes
- 00:00 — Host Introduction & Listener Call-to-Action
- 01:23 — Guest Host Introduction
- 01:44 — Introducing Jake & Study Overview
- 02:20 — Defining Teacher Effectiveness
- 04:07 — Why Study Teams?
- 06:32 — District Background
- 09:00 — Study Methods: Quantitative Data
- 11:32 — Student Growth Results
- 13:43 — Mixed Methods & Qualitative Interviews
- 16:36 — Theme 1: Collaboration
- 21:23 — Theme 2: Affordances for Instruction
- 28:59 — Theme 3: Data Practices & Goal Setting
- 41:29 — Theme 4: Teacher Factors
- 44:57 — Key Takeaways & Reflections
- 53:21 — Assessment & Goal Setting in Practice
- 57:20 — Teacher Development
- 1:00:26 — Final Thoughts & Optimism
- 1:04:02 — Closing & Kristin’s Take
Jake asks listeners for impact statements to support his third-year review.
Kristin Conradi Smith introduces herself and the episode’s focus on effective K-2 teacher teams.
Kristin introduces Jake as the guest, outlines his research on high-growth teacher teams.
Jake discusses different ways to define “effectiveness” and the study’s focus on student growth.
Jake explains the importance of studying effective teams, not just individual teachers.
Jake describes the “Lincoln School District,” its shift in reading instruction, and its reputation for growth.
Jake explains how teams were identified using ACADIS data and effect sizes.
Jake shares impressive proficiency gains by grade level and discusses effect sizes.
Transition to focus group interviews with teacher teams and how themes were identified.
Teams engage in active, data-driven collaborative planning and shared student ownership.
Teachers describe autonomy, flexibility, and supportive professional development.
Regular data meetings, intentional goal setting at team/class/student levels, and actionable use of data.
Discussion of teacher knowledge, beliefs, and collective efficacy.
Jake and Kristin reflect on the “secret soup” of effective teams, the importance of systems, and actionable insights for schools.
How effective teams use assessment and goal setting to drive instruction.
The value of both top-down and bottom-up professional learning.
Jake and Kristin discuss optimism for the future of reading research and practice.
Kristin summarizes the study’s impact and calls for more collaborative, teacher-centered research.