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Governor Signs Bill That Advocates Declare ‘A Win For Wyoming Children’

Effort to revise, update and standardize the way Wyoming teaches K-12 students to read has been nearly a decade in the making.

Gov. Mark Gordon reaches for a pen while advocates of Senate File 59, 鈥淜-12 language and literacy program鈥 assemble behind him. He signed the bill into law March 6, 2026. (Tennessee Watson/WyoFile)

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While working as a long-term substitute teacher in a Cheyenne high school not long ago, retired reading specialist Gay Wilson taught a junior who was reading at a second-grade level. 

The school district had identified the student for an individualized education program and had provided additional support for years, she said. Despite that, 鈥渉e had just never gotten the correct reading instruction鈥 because teachers used a recently debunked method called Balanced Literacy to teach him, she recalled.

鈥淗ere鈥檚 a kid who鈥檚 going to graduate this year, and he鈥檚 going to get a diploma, but he鈥檚 probably going to be reading at a third-grade level,鈥 Wilson said. 

And his story? 鈥淚t鈥檚 common across the state.鈥

Anecdotes like these motivated Wilson to trek to the Wyoming Capitol every day of this session, where she and fellow literacy advocate Kari Roden took a crash course in lobbying. They tracked down legislators, handed out data sheets, quashed rumors and bent the ear of any lawmaker who would listen. They were among a loose collection of parents, guardians and educators who, unlike the professional lobbyists crowding the halls, were not there on behalf of a client. 

鈥淚t was a battle every day,鈥 Roden recalled.

Their work paid off Friday when Gov. Mark Gordon signed  into law. 

The bill aims to ensure that every K-12 Wyoming student develops strong language and literacy skills and that struggling readers do not fall through the cracks. It will establish an evidence-based system of instruction, intervention and professional development to provide teachers, families and students with comprehensive and effective tools for teaching reading. The bill also addresses deficiencies and aims to bring all Wyoming districts in line. 

鈥淩eading is the foundation for every child鈥檚 success in school and in life,鈥 Gordon said in a statement to WyoFile. 鈥淪enate File 59 keeps the focus where it should be, on Wyoming students.鈥

Governor signs literacy bill that advocates declare 鈥榓 win for Wyoming children鈥
Former teachers Kari Roden and Gay Wilson went to the Wyoming Capitol every day of the 2026 budget session to lobby on behalf of a statewide literacy bill. (Tennessee Watson/WyoFile)

Wilson and Roden, of course, were there to see Gordon ink his name on the bill.  

鈥淚t鈥檚 just such a win for Wyoming children,鈥 Wilson said. 

While the signing is only one action, advocates say it鈥檚 a monumental step in the effort to ensure children no longer get left behind to face the long-term uphill battles linked with low literacy skills, such as higher rates of incarceration and less economic mobility.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a historic day,鈥 said Annie McGlothlin, whose own experience with a dyslexic grandchild led to her co-found an organization called WYO Right to Read. 

鈥淵ou might think passing the law would be the end, but really it is the beginning,鈥 McGlothlin continued. 鈥淪o here we go.鈥

A long time coming

A group encompassing teachers, lawmakers, the University of Wyoming, literacy advocacy organizations and others has worked for nearly a decade to overhaul and improve how Wyoming teaches children to read. In that time, literacy instruction has emerged as a nationwide issue as American reading scores tick down. While Wyoming continues to rank comparatively high in national testing, literacy challenges are evident.

In 2024, 36% of the state鈥檚 fourth graders and 29% of eighth graders performed at or above the proficient level in reading on national standardized NAEP tests, lower than the previous five years. (2024 is the most recent year for which NAEP data is available.) Categories include below basic, basic, proficient and advanced. 

Some 32% of Wyoming fourth graders performed below basic levels, which was a slight increase from 29% in 2022. For eighth graders, 30% scored below basic levels in 2024, up one percentage point from 2022.

As  have shifted how the literacy field views reading instruction, many states have passed legislation to ensure evidence-based learning instruction is available to all students. 

Wyoming鈥檚 version resulted largely from the work of a literacy subcommittee with input from stakeholders including parents and educators focused on better identification and treatment of conditions like dyslexia. Superintendent of Public Instruction Megan Degenfelder made literacy review a top priority after she was elected in 2022, creating a cabinet of 40 elementary and secondary teachers that had input on the bill draft.

Governor signs literacy bill that advocates declare 鈥榓 win for Wyoming children鈥
Pinedale literacy specialist Faith Howard talks to teachers during a session she presented during the Wyoming Department of Education鈥檚 鈥淓mbracing Literacy鈥 conference in June 2025. (Zach Agee/WyoFile)

The Legislature鈥檚 Joint Education Committee finalized the draft over the legislative off-season. 

Once it hit the session, . 

Citing heavy constituent concern from educators, some wondered if the implementation would pile unnecessary professional development burdens on the already heavy workload of teachers. Others made efforts to limit it to K-6 or worried it would diminish local control. 

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anyone that is opposing this bill is saying that literacy isn鈥檛 fundamentally important,鈥 said Casper Republican Rep. Julie Jarvis during floor debate on the third reading of the bill. 鈥淲hat is being said is maybe this isn鈥檛 the right way to go about it 鈥 I鈥檓 not sure that this bill does what we think it does.鈥

Rep. Landon Brown, R-Cheyenne, argued that the benefits of passing it far outweigh any reasons to hold off any longer. Literacy has been an interim topic for seven years, Brown noted. 

Governor signs literacy bill that advocates declare 鈥榓 win for Wyoming children鈥
Rep. Landon Brown, R-Cheyenne, participates in the 2026 legislative session in Cheyenne. (Mike Vanata/WyoFile)

鈥淚 wholeheartedly understand the plight of the teachers,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut 鈥 ladies and gentlemen, it is about the kids.鈥

Improved literacy can help stanch mental health problems, avoid bad outcomes and address an issue of high school graduates ill-prepared for college or the workforce, other House proponents said. 

鈥淲e have a responsibility to make sure that when these kids are leaving our K-12 education, they are as equipped as they can possibly be to go on, if they so choose, to an institute of higher learning,鈥 Speaker of the House Chip Neiman, R-Hulett, said. Wyoming post-secondary institutions are reporting alarming rates of incoming freshmen who need remedial education, he said, and that doesn鈥檛 speak to the students who don鈥檛 attend college. 

Cheyenne Republican Rep. Steve Johnson worked in a trade that required the ability to read and comprehend highly technical manuals, he told his fellow legislators. 

鈥淚n my trade, I found a disproportionate number of young men who had high school diplomas, who were practically functionally illiterate,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very important that we provide for these older students the tools they need to propel them into a highly technical future.鈥

The House ultimately passed the bill, which it amended to loosen some teacher licensure requirements. Between the two chambers, SF 59 received 76 ayes and 15 nays on final readings. 

Personal stories

When 11-year-old Paul Pine died by suicide in 2023, his mother, Chandel Pine, initially resisted talking publicly about it. But Paul had severe reading difficulties, and the more she learned about literacy, she said, the more she realized that speaking out could help others.

Urged by her son鈥檚 former tutor, Pine testified to the Legislature. That led her into the literacy world, where she started  that has provided dyslexia screening and support to nearly 60 students. 

Governor signs literacy bill that advocates declare 鈥榓 win for Wyoming children鈥
A coalition of literacy advocates pushed heavily for a new K-12 literacy program bill during the 2025 legislative interim and the 2026 budget session. They include, clockwise from top left, Kari Roden, Gay Wilson, Megan Hesser, Annie McGlothlin and Chandel Pine. (Tennessee Watson/WyoFile)

Many of her fellow advocates have personal stories that opened their eyes and led them into the work. Stories of children whose learning disabilities went undetected, of parents hiring costly tutors, switching schools and engaging in lawsuits against school districts. 

While 58 students is an achievement, she said Friday, the bill represents an opportunity for system-wide change, which will have bigger ripples.

Megan Hesser, Pine鈥檚 former tutor, wishes the bill was stronger in some areas, but said 鈥渋t鈥檚 still a huge win.鈥

Hesser, who began lobbying in 2020, can鈥檛 help but think about the students who suffered unnecessarily in the meantime, she said. 

鈥淗ow many kids have we lost and left behind in the six years it鈥檚 taken us to get here?鈥 she asked.

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