LIVE Featured Sessions – February 3, 2026, 1:00 to 5:00 PM EST
Join us February 3 for LitCon LIVE, a special day of real-time learning and connection! These featured sessions bring educators together in the moment, creating a vibrant sense of community where you can engage with the experts, ask questions, and get insights tailored to your needs. These dynamic sessions respond to what’s happening in classrooms right now, offering timely, relevant content you can put to work immediately.
KEYNOTE: Reclaiming Science for Comprehensive Literacy Curricula
P. David Pearson
What does it really mean to take a scientific approach to teaching reading? According to P. David Pearson, it’s not just about phonics and foundational skills, but about balancing those essentials with the equally critical work of building meaning through language, vocabulary, background knowledge, and authentic engagement.
This keynote challenges educators and leaders to hold onto the “both/and” of literacy instruction—where systematic skill development goes hand-in-hand with meaning, cultural relevance, identity, and motivation. Teachers, principals, and policymakers alike will explore how to ensure that good intentions (“We know we have to do it all”) don’t get lost in the rush to “get the words right.”
Write from the Beginning: Supporting Strong Hands for Writing and Sharing Stories
Sinead J. Harmey
Learning to write is a complex developmental process that is about producing meaning. It involves language, cognition, and physical skills that occur within different contexts and different communities. Early writing instruction requires a noticing educator who can intentionally support the child based on their understanding of writing development and knowledge of the child. This session focuses on how early years educators can do this to best support young children to make meaning with text.
Informational Writing in the Primary Classroom
Jamie Lipp
Move over, “animal book report!” This session moves beyond the typical ways that informational writing occur within the primary classroom. Participants will engage in fun and innovative ways to teach our most emerging writers about informational texts and research, and will be challenged to think about these processes in the smallest, most practical steps to ensure our youngest students begin to value their role in creating and sharing factual information through composing print.
Mentor Texts in Action: Picturebooks for Reading Mini Lessons
Lisa Pinkerton
Discover how picturebooks can transform reading instruction into joyful, meaningful experiences. This session explores how exemplary picturebooks can serve as mentor texts for teaching reading standards while fostering curiosity, conversation, and connection within classroom literacy communities. Participants will explore practical strategies for designing mini lessons that authentically grow from interactive read-aloud experiences and celebrate the artistry of books themselves.
What School Leaders Need to Know About the Science of Reading
Matt Renwick
School leaders face tough decisions as they navigate literacy mandates. Should they implement state-approved programs with problematic content? What if “science-based” approaches prove less effective than promised? Former principal Matt Renwick shares five practical principles for leading literacy within the Science of Reading movement. Participants will understand the motivation behind state reading laws and receive a leadership toolkit for implementing effective, equitable literacy instruction school-wide.
Write with Confidence: Simple, Impactful Routines for Every Genre
April Severino
Make writing a powerful part of every school day! These energizing strategies complement your Writers Workshop with standards-aligned lessons that span genres and content areas. Join April as she shares practical, easy-to-implement techniques that help students write with clarity, structure, and confidence. Boost writing fluency and achievement as you integrate writing into science, social studies, math, expository, narrative, and more. Walk away with a treasure trove of ready-to-use writing tasks, anchor charts, and classroom routines designed specifically for K–8 learners. April will also model how to lead easy to implement guided writing groups, use formative assessments to inform instruction, and align writing tasks to Depth of Knowledge (DOK) levels, the five components of reading, and your state standards. Whether you’re looking to reignite your writing block or embed literacy throughout the day, this session will help you bring joy and rigor back to classroom writing—one purposeful routine at a time.
Meaning-Driven Fluency Instruction: Give Timers a Rest
Susan Vincent
We all know fluency and comprehension go hand in hand, but it’s easy to forget that comprehension can actually drive fluency, too. In this lively session, we’ll dig into practical, meaning-centered ways to help students read with confidence, expression, and purpose.
Together, we’ll look at how to teach students to spot meaningful word groups that support natural phrasing, how to use the action and emotion in a text to build prosody, and how these elements ultimately support a more efficient reading rate—without turning everything into a race against the clock.
You’ll walk away with ready-to-use instructional strategies, smart text-selection tips, and assessment approaches that keep the focus exactly where it belongs: on making meaning.