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Unprepared: The Broken Pipeline Teaching Oregon’s Teachers

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Unprepared: The Broken Pipeline Teaching Oregon’s Teachers


This story was produced by the Oregon Journalism Project, a nonprofit newsroom covering the state.

Jim Green says one solution for Oregon’s worst-in-the-nation reading scores is a governor’s executive order away.

Green should know. For 25 years, he worked the halls of the Capitol, first as a lobbyist and then as executive director of the Oregon School Boards Association, which represents 1,400 elected members across the state’s 197 school districts. A lawyer, Green also served two terms on the Salem-Keizer School Board.

Now retired, Green has regrets. In particular, he rues some of the victories his group (alongside the teachers union and the Council of School Administrators) achieved over the past two decades. Among them: undercutting state reading assessments by helping pass perhaps the nation’s strongest testing opt-out law and beating back efforts to require phonics-based reading instruction in elementary schools.

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“We went too far in saying, ‘Don’t mandate anything,’” Green says.

Today, only 40.3% of Oregon third graders are proficient in reading, as measured by state tests. Green says his group’s success contributed to what he concedes is a statewide disgrace.

The governor could spark a turnaround, Green insists, if she did one thing: issue an executive order that every new Oregon elementary teacher must pass a standalone exam in the science of reading. Nearly 20 states require such a test for teachers, including Colorado, Louisiana, California, and Mississippi—and all of them have higher reading scores than Oregon.

(Oregon currently uses a test for its elementary education license that national experts says is “weak” because it combines reading and social studies in one 90-minute multiple-choice test. You could bomb the reading part, ace social studies, and scoot by with a passing grade.)

Kotek is uniquely empowered to issue such an order. Unlike any other state, Oregon’s superintendent of public instruction is the governor. And when she’s motivated, Kotek can act decisively to make changes in Oregon schools. This past summer, for example, Kotek used her executive powers to ban student cellphones during school hours. She acted after lawmakers failed to pass such a ban.

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If a distraction in the pocket warrants an executive order, a failure to correctly teach future teachers deserves nothing less: “She’s just got to say, ‘If you want to be an approved program in the state of Oregon so that your higher-ed students can be licensed [to teach] in the state, this is how it’s going to be.’”

Literacy advocates and educators acknowledge a rigorous reading test for aspiring elementary teachers would not by itself fix Oregon’s literacy crisis. But it is a critical tool that could reassure the public that teachers have been properly trained to teach children to read.

Kotek told OJP in a statement that she is “open to future requirements from the Teacher Standards and Practices Commission,” but would not commit to an executive order.

An executive order would be a pivotal step in reversing a pattern the Oregon Journalism Project has chronicled in its series “Oregon Schools: What Went Wrong”: the state’s abdication of its responsibility to ensure that every school district and classroom follows best practices when teaching students to read. Allowing students to opt out of tests and districts to shrug off phonics are part of that lax oversight. So is ignoring whether universities adequately train educators to teach reading.

While other states have pivoted to evidence-based instruction, Oregon’s educational gatekeepers—from the governor’s office to university deans—have allowed a pipeline of inadequately trained teachers to flow into classrooms, leaving 3 out of 5 of the state’s third graders unable to read proficiently. Now, advocates like Green and others say one way to break this cycle is to bypass the bureaucracy, special interests, and the Legislature and mandate a rigorous, standalone “science of reading” exam for every new teacher in the state.

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“The state spends a lot of money at the colleges, and students spend a lot of money going through college,” says Rob Saxton, former director of the Oregon Department of Education and superintendent of the Tigard-Tualatin School District. “Then school districts turn around and spend a lot of money having to retrain recent graduates in the science of reading.”

It’s not the teachers’ fault, he tells OJP. It’s the training.

What went wrong

The results of Oregon’s flawed reading instruction are hard to overlook. Not only have statewide reading scores been slipping for years, but a research and advocacy nonprofit, the National Council on Teacher Quality, released a state-by-state report in 2014 that slammed Oregon’s teacher prep programs. The report called out Oregon schools and universities for failing to effectively educate budding elementary teachers in direct, phonics-based reading instruction, which the National Reading Panel, after synthesizing 40 years of research, concluded was the best method for teaching all children to read.

The 2014 report, endorsed by the top education official in 21 states but not Oregon’s, analyzed syllabuses and instructional materials used to train teachers.

Not one of the Oregon programs evaluated met the five accepted standards for “preparing teacher candidates in effective, scientifically based reading instruction”: phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension.

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In other words, the teachers graduating from Oregon’s universities most likely could not pass a more rigorous elementary reading exam.

That failure came as no surprise to Edward Kame’enui, a special education professor at the University of Oregon’s College of Education, who has researched and taught science of reading methods for more than 30 years. Kame’enui says he often battled with his general education colleagues, many of whom thought teaching letter sounds, phonics and decoding was only needed for special education students.

“So people in the College of Education interpret their position as, ‘I have academic freedom to promote my expertise, not somebody else’s expertise or what the research shows,’” he says.

In 2020, the National Council on Teacher Quality again reviewed Oregon’s teacher training programs and again found most failing. All of the programs received D’s or F’s, except for Warner Pacific University’s undergrad program, which received an A, and Eastern Oregon University’s grad program, which got a B. (Some Oregon colleges–Western Oregon University, Lewis & Clark College and the University of Portland—wouldn’t participate in the study and so were not graded.)

Oregon’s marks haven’t improved, a finding both the Oregon Capital Chronicle and The Oregonian explored in 2023.

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In the most recent, 2023 report card, all of the state teacher training programs earned F’s, except for Oregon State University’s undergraduate program, which was given a C, and Eastern Oregon, a bright spot, which received an A for its undergraduate program. (None of Oregon’s private education programs, including Warner Pacific, shared course materials with the National Council on Teacher Quality. Ron Noble, chief of teacher preparation for the council, said Oregon is one of the more uncooperative states his group assesses. Some states have 100% participation.)

The fact that one public university in Oregon is turning out highly trained elementary reading teachers is largely due to the dogged work of Ronda Fritz.

Fritz is a former elementary school teacher who got her education degree in 1992 at Boise State University, where professors trained education majors in “whole language,” a then-popular but since discredited method to teach reading by having students guess the meaning of words by looking at nearby pictures rather than sounding out letters. After years teaching in Union County’s tiny North Powder School District, she almost quit the profession in 2000, blaming herself when many of her students weren’t learning to read.

A turning point came after a teacher said Fritz’s son, who struggled to read, might be dyslexic. Based on her professional training, Fritz didn’t believe it.

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Then, in 2003, she attended a teacher training session put on by the International Dyslexia Association and learned about the science of reading. “By the time that was over, to be honest, I was in tears,” Fritz says. The training showed her why her son and some students in her classes hadn’t learned to read.

Then her grief took a turn. “It was a lot of anger, like, ‘Why did I go through a teacher preparation program and get a master’s degree in reading and never learn any of this?’”

Imbued with purpose, Fritz earned a doctorate in education, landed a position at Eastern Oregon, and gradually revamped the education college’s reading courses.

Online teacher programs

While Fritz has successfully overhauled the curriculum for new teachers at Oregon’s smallest public university, literacy advocates point to a huge unaddressed problem elsewhere: the growing ranks of teachers in Oregon who get their education degrees at less intensive online colleges such as Arizona’s Grand Canyon University, with more than 100,000 online students, and Utah-based Western Governors University, which has 37,000 students in its education school alone.

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In 2023, nearly half of newly licensed Oregon teachers—729 out of 1,518—earned their degrees from out-of-state universities, according to data obtained by OJP from the Oregon Longitudinal Data Collaborative (see graph).

Most of those 729 new teachers completed their programs at Grand Canyon or Western Governors, says Kevin Carr, a Pacific University education professor who has studied the issue. The schools are less expensive than brick-and-mortar universities, he explains.

The rapid growth of Oregon teachers trained at online schools is a development that the Oregon Legislature’s top education leader was unaware of. “I had no idea,” said state Sen. Lew Frederick (D-Portland), who chairs the Senate Committee on Education.

Graduates of online schools may be contributing to Oregon’s literacy crisis. In 2023, the National Council on Teacher Quality gave Western Governors an F grade in “reading foundations.” And Grand Canyon’s reading courses received no grade because it did not provide course materials for the council to analyze. This means perhaps up to half of Oregon’s new teachers were trained by online institutions that have either failed a national reading instruction standard or been unwilling to cooperate with such an assessment.

In 2023, the U.S. Department of Education fined Grand Canyon $37.7 million for misrepresenting its costs to 7,500 students. (The Trump administration later revoked the record fine.)

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Western Governors didn’t reply to OJP’s requests for comment. GCU said in an email “our licensure programs are fully approved by the Arizona Department of Education which includes training on the Science of Reading.”

OJP asked the Oregon Teacher Standards and Practices Commission how many teachers currently working in Oregon earned degrees from online schools, but the agency says it doesn’t track that information. The reason: “It wasn’t a priority [when] the current database…was developed 11 years ago.”

Rachel Alpert, TSPC’s executive director, who makes $184,392 a year to run the 26-employee agency, declined several interview requests for this story. The mission of the agency is “to ensure Oregon schools have access to well-trained, effective and accountable education professionals.”

Alpert’s predecessor at the commission, however, was willing to talk.

“We need to shut down this pipeline to Grand Canyon and Western Governors,” Melissa Goff, TSPC’s former interim executive director, tells OJP. She also believes teachers with online degrees disproportionately end up in some of the state’s least affluent school districts.

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“There needs to be a solution to turn that spigot off,” Goff says, “and provide Oregonians opportunities to stay in rural communities” and access a teacher prep program “where they live.”

OJP reached out to both the Oregon Education Association and the Council of School Administrators to ask whether they supported a science of reading test before a teacher may be licensed. Neither organization responded. When OJP asked the Oregon School Boards Association about such a test, a spokesman said the agency would not answer a hypothetical question.

Retooling the prep schools

To be fair, Oregon has made some effort to improve teacher training. In 2023, Gov. Kotek unveiled an Early Literacy Initiative. She also created the Early Literacy Educator Preparation Council, which recommended precisely how Oregon universities should retool their teacher training to address the science of reading. The recommendations were not mandates, however.

The deadline for realigning the programs is fall 2026. OJP spoke to college of education deans at three of the state’s largest teacher prep programs, Portland State University, Lewis & Clark College and George Fox University. All said their programs are on track to meet the fall deadline.

Shawn Daley, the George Fox dean, acknowledges that his program historically taught the now-discredited “balanced literacy” approach. He says, however, that George Fox’s curriculum over the past decade “has steadily shifted toward a science of reading framework.”

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But Daley opposes a mandated science of reading exam. “I don’t believe the situation requires the governor to use her executive authority in that way,” he says. Daley would rather that Kotek require out-of-state and online colleges to demonstrate they prepare students in the science of reading.

Heading for a likely failure?

GONE FISHIN’: Green jokes that he probably won’t be having coffee anymore with his friends in “the alphabets,” as people refer to the Capitol’s three large educational lobby groups–OEA, OSBA and COSA. (Courtesy of Jim Green)

Jim Green realizes his call for Kotek to mandate a science of reading licensing test may fail for at least one big reason: It would almost certainly provoke resistance from the teachers union, which has 40,000-plus members.

“Gov. Kotek would make her natural constituency at OEA extremely upset” with an executive order, Green says. “But I can tell you this, it would make a huge sea change in educational outcomes for kids for generations to come.”

Green jokes that he probably won’t be having coffee anymore with his friends in “the alphabets,” as people refer to the Capitol’s three large educational lobby groups–OEA, OSBA and COSA. But no matter. He’ll have more time for flyfishing and his two grandchildren.

“I’ve become a grandparent,” he says, “and I don’t want my grandkids to be stuck in that system.”

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Read More In This Series:

Why are Oregon’s schools failing? Who is responsible for the failures? And, most importantly, how do we dig ourselves out of this? If you are a student, parent, taxpayer, teacher or former teacher, school administrator or policymaker with ideas on how to answer these questions, we want to hear from you. Please share your thoughts and how to reach you by clicking on this link.





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Texas man wanted for child sex crimes, theft arrested in SW Oregon

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Texas man wanted for child sex crimes, theft arrested in SW Oregon


CURRY COUNTY, Ore. (KPTV) – A Texas man wanted for child sex crimes was arrested in Curry County on Tuesday afternoon.

The Curry County Sheriff’s Office says Kenneth Leatherwood of Bastrop, Texas, was arrested with the help of Oregon State Police and U.S. Marshals just after 12:30 p.m.

Kenneth Leatherwood(Curry County Sheriff’s Office)

Leatherwood, who is accused of sex-related crimes involving a child in Texas, was reportedly found camping in a heavy wooded area near Lucas Lodge in Agness.

Investigators say Leatherwood has been on the run from Curry County law enforcement since June 16 after reports that he had been seen with a stolen car in the Agness area.

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Leatherwood was also believed to have stolen weapons with him.

His dog was also found and returned to the suspect’s family in good shape, according to the sheriff’s office.

Copyright 2026 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.



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Fireworks on sale in Oregon until July 6

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Fireworks on sale in Oregon until July 6


PORTLAND Ore. (KPTV) – Fireworks are on sale in Oregon until July 6, but state and local rules limit where they can be used and what types are allowed.

In Portland, fireworks use and sales are banned year-round.

Fireworks are also banned on beaches and in state and national parks.

Statewide, fireworks that fly into the air, explode, act unpredictably or move more than 12 feet horizontally are illegal. Banned fireworks include sky lanterns, missiles, rockets, Roman candles, firecrackers, cherry bombs and M-80s.

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Fountains, sparklers, ground spinners and smoke devices are among the fireworks allowed under state rules.

Officials said people should not call 911 to report illegal fireworks. They said reports should go to the non-emergency line for the area.

First responders said there were 263 fires across Portland during last year’s fireworks season, and 27 were caused by fireworks.

For more details about fireworks regulation in Oregon, click here.

In Washington, fireworks sales legally begin Sunday and run through July 4.

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Copyright 2026 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.



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Gray whale carcass washes ashore in Gearhart on Oregon coast

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Gray whale carcass washes ashore in Gearhart on Oregon coast


Another gray whale washed up on the Oregon coast last week, this time in Gearhart, according to Seaside Aquarium.

The 41-foot-long male had been dead for months before washing up on the beach, Seaside Aquarium general manager Keith Chandler said.

He noted that there have been 19 total whale strandings or carcasses washing up on beaches just this year on the Oregon coast region.

The Cascadia Research Collective is reporting at least 30 on Washington coastline alone. | TIMELINE

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Of those deaths, more than half were at least partially attributed to malnutrition. That could have been the cause in more strandings, however, necropsies were not performed in roughly a dozen of the 30 strandings.

Chandler said strong wind from the west this year has been contributing to why coastal towns are seeing a lot of whales and other things washing up on shore. However he also noted that many of the Grey whales washed ashore were emaciated with necropsies showing signs of malnourishment.

“The food sources have been compromised. The warmer water means the nutrients that they’re getting aren’t as good, so the whole food chain is kind of not as healthy,” Chandler said.

He pointed to the warming waters with climate change as the main reason noting that warm water plankton–Grey Whale’s main food source–is thinner and has fewer nutrients than plankton in cooler waters.

Chandler says this whale will not have a necropsy done because of its level of decomposition.

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“The fresher ones, the team from Portland State [University] will come down and they’ll go in and do measurements, take samples and stuff, measurements of the internal organs. But on one this decayed, you won’t gain anything from it scientifically. And it’s just kind of a mess to do when they’re this rotten,” he said.

KATU VAULT | The Exploding Whale of 1970: ‘Should a whale ever wash ashore again’

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You can report a whale stranding to the West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network Hotline by calling 1-866-767-6114.



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