Georgia Howard

Georgia Howard Photo

The teaching of reading first caught my attention back in elementary school. One of my dearest classmates, despite his intelligence and exceptional maturity, struggled with reading. As we went up through the grades, I kept hoping that this year's teacher would be able to help him. It never happened, and I wondered why.

I lost sight of my friend when I went to an all-girl's high school, but I had been blessed with a baby brother. Already seeing myself as a teacher, I now saw this little preschooler as my very own class of one. He was a learning sponge and moved quickly through my math and natural science lessons (Today I can say, "My brother, the doctor.") - but I could not teach him to read. Why? 

When my youngest child went to school, I went to college. This delay of more than a decade was life's timing to bring me a wondrous gift, someone who would teach me how to teach reading. In the early seventies the research had begun to filter into graduate schools, but an undergraduate teacher-training program steeped in research into the development of reading was a rarity! Iona College did not offer a major in elementary ed., so I majored in speech pathology and minored in elementary education. Dr. Dorothy Albanese, the force shaping this teacher-training program and thus my wondrous gift, did not differentiate between major and minor. I ended up doing diagnostic/prescriptive work in both the speech clinic and the reading clinic.

When choosing the area for my master's degree, I was at a crossroads. I was fascinated by both, the child's development of speech and of reading. I chose reading but knew that I was embedding the speech pathology training into the reading. I thoroughly enjoyed my classes of students, but early in my career I left the classroom to become an elementary school reading resource teacher.

After seven years I found myself at the other end of the country - and in high school - as a reading resource teacher. For the first couple of years my diagnostic/prescriptive work was individualized, but then I was happily asked to reach more students through intervention classes. Now began a journey to marry diagnostic/prescriptive teaching with the demands of whole classes, and to do it at the secondary level where a student's reading needs are pitted against the state's graduation requirements. The program had to race both the growing schedule crunch of the student's need to repeat failed core classes, whose textbooks he could not read, and his right to drop out at sixteen. He, the student, had to see growth in his reading and see it fast.

STReamlined Intensive Phonics for Secondary Students (STRIPSS) developed through more than two decades spent meeting the needs of a wide range of students in need of decoding skills at both middle school and high school levels, in diverse and numerous classrooms, as an intervention teacher and a mentor to intervention teachers. It has been a journey of shared struggles and ever-increasing hope for these young adults and their wonderful teachers.


Professional Service

  • Member of the NAEP Commission Secondary Reading Committee  1992
  • Florida Reading Association District Director, District Six  1991-93
  • Member of the Literacy Task Force, Volusia County, FL  1994-95
  • Board Member, Reading Council, Volusia County, FL  2006-09
  • Member of Florida State Instructional Materials Committee, K-12 Reading Adoption 2007-08
  • Presenter, Workshops for Reading EndorsementCompetencies 4 and 5, Volusia, FL  2005-06
  • Presenter, Workshops on Reading Intervention Strategies, Volusia, FL  2004-12
  • Presenter, IRA Regional Conference, Savannah, GA  2000
  • Presenter, FL Secondary Reading Teacher Annual Conference, Panama City, FL  2008
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Five Bridges to Higher Words, Syllable Power

Five Bridges to Higher Words, Syllable Power

Five Bridges, the main component of STRIPSS, uses syllabication as a decoding intervention. Experience shows that about eighty percent of students struggling with word decoding at the secondary level know their phonics but cannot use it because they perceive multisyllabic words as strings of letters. Along with the five rules for breaking words into syllables, the basic phonic and morphemic elements are developed from fundamental level to application at high school level in multisyllabic words.

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High Powered Phonics, Word Structure

High Powered Phonics, Word Structure

High Powered Phonics, which is used with students who have completed Five Bridges to Higher Words, uses the decoding strategy of structural analysis to develop word decoding from middle school to college level. HP Phonics fosters the application of the five syllable rules with the visual patterning of multiple prefixes and suffixes.

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The Power of Three, Multisensory Phonics

The Power of Three, Multisensory Phonics

The Power of Three uses integrated visual-auditory-kinesthetic strategies and covers the entire phonic scope, with a perspective especially designed for the secondary student still weak in the basic development of phonics. The Power of Three includes a multisensory spelling intervention.

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Flash Power, Photographic Phonics

Flash Power, Photographic Phonics

Flash Power uses flashcard strategies, in the teacher's choice of PowerPoint presentations or flashcards, to further develop the visual-auditory aspects of long and short vowels, final e, the open-closed syllable, and hard-soft c and g, for secondary students still weak in the basic development of phonics. Flash Power is especially applicable to the cooperative-group game format.

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About Us

Through our workshops and presentations at reading conferences, these materials have been successfully and enthusiastically used by teachers in Volusia County, and other areas of Florida, for more than ten years. The Howard Reading Service was established in 2007 as a vehicle for sharing our work more widely.

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Contact us for information on:

  • -Workshops for Teachers
  • -Modeling of Lessons Right in Your Classroom
  • -Questions, Comments
  • Requests for Assistance in:
    1.  1. Tailoring Lessons to Your Students and Class Schedule
    2.  2. Modifying Lessons for Your Students
    3.  3. Additional Scaffolding Strategies
    4.  4. Additional Multisensory Strategies
    5.  5. Additional Reinforcement Lessons

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