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Pencil Running for Oregon Governor Hopes to Make Its Mark on Education Issues

A literacy advocate is running as a Pencil in the race for Oregon governor to get candidates talking about education issues in the state.

J. Schuberth, a literacy advocate and one of the founders of Oregon Kids Read, launched a write-in gubernatorial campaign as a pencil to raise awareness about persistent reading challenges among the state鈥檚 students. (Alex Baumhardt/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

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Oregon鈥檚 low youth literacy rates spurred a new candidate to announce a write-in campaign for governor on Monday.

Most Oregonians have at least some experience with the candidate, but it鈥檚 never held elected office before. It鈥檚 not even human.

J. Schuberth, a former teacher for Portland State University鈥檚 general education program and one of the founders of reading advocacy group Oregon Kids Read, launched the Pencil for governor campaign Monday to raise awareness about persistent reading proficiency issues among the state鈥檚 students. To 鈥済et education on the ballot鈥 Schuberth created and funded the Pencil Political Action Committee in early February with $14,000 of their own money.

鈥淚t sends a message that if Pencil starts showing up in the primary, that the governors might want to pay attention to this issue and start doing something,鈥 Schuberth said. And if Pencil barely makes a mark, it will still be worth it, they added.

鈥淲e have a crisis. We want people to be talking about it,鈥 they explained. 鈥淚t is not children鈥檚 fault. It鈥檚 not their parents鈥 fault. The Department of Education in Oregon is failing our students. There鈥檚 a systemic problem that we need to address. And we can fix this.鈥

Oregon鈥檚 fourth and eighth graders scored in the bottom half of all states for reading proficiency in the 2025 National Assessment for Educational Progress, often referred to as. And despite hundreds of millions of dollars of investment during the last 25 years, those levels .

Despite making major investments in tutoring, curriculum overhauls and teacher training geared toward improving how reading is taught in Oregon, Gov. Tina Kotek鈥檚 Early Literacy Success Initiative has to address the most high-needs students, or to hold schools accountable, Schuberth said.

Calls to modernize reading instruction for kids to align with the large body of cognitive and neuroscience research, and evidence 鈥 often referred to as 鈥渢he science of reading鈥 鈥 have led some states to mandate certain literacy curriculum that can be used in schools, and to require new teachers pass an exam demonstrating knowledge of the science of reading in order to get licensed.

Oregon has not gone as far, but schools receiving Early Literacy Initiative grants must use the money on state-approved materials and teacher trainings.

Schuberth pointed to states including Mississippi, Louisiana and Colorado, which saw improvements in student reading proficiency when their education departments mandated schools use approved reading curriculum and began requiring teachers to demonstrate knowledge in the reading science to get licensed.

Pencil鈥檚 campaign also calls for ensuring kids in poverty were adequately counted in the state. Reporting from found the state has been using a formula that results in an undercount of such students for years.

Schuberth appeared in pencil costume Monday at Portland State University along with Sarah Dougher, associate executive director of Portland State鈥檚 General Education Program. Dougher said she sees the downstream effects of students鈥 reading struggles.

鈥淲e have majority students from the Portland area here and and we鈥檝e seen since COVID, a real sort of softening of some skill areas, especially persistence in reading and also in writing,鈥 she said.

The department has had to create an increasing amount of material responsive to a screen reader, or make videos of people reading material to share with students alongside the readings.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 have a reading center at Portland State. We expect that when students come here, they鈥檙e going to read,鈥 Dougher said.鈥淏ut the thing is that people鈥檚 orientation towards reading, because of their spotty background in the public system, they need more ways in, and it鈥檚 our responsibility to meet them where they鈥檙e at.鈥

Schuberth said the campaign is about taking advantage of the 鈥淧encil pulpit鈥 to make education one of the biggest issues in the governor鈥檚 race.

鈥淲hen we look around at so many of the other problems, education is where it starts. If you don鈥檛 know how to read, you cannot compete for jobs. Addiction issues, a lot of our homeless issues, a lot of these issues come from people who have not been given the education that they deserve,鈥 they said.

A write-in campaign for a pencil wouldn鈥檛 work 鈥 Oregon law requires write-in candidates to meet the same criteria as every other candidate. In Oregon, candidates for governor must be human, at least 30 years old and a U.S. citizen who has resided in Oregon for the past three years.

But Oregonians inspired to write in 鈥淧encil鈥 on their primary ballots can still do so 鈥 as long as they use a black or blue pen.

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Oregon Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Julia Shumway for questions: [email protected].

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