January Masterclass

January Masterclass

Beyond The Reading Wars: Reclaiming Meaning, Engagement, and Balance in Early Literacy

A Masterclass for early childhood educators seeking a balanced, evidence-informed approach to teaching reading and writing without losing meaning or motivation.

when

8:30 AM UTC 
31st January, 2026 

LIve Online

Dr. Jo Fahey

LIve Online

Dr. Jo Fahey

WHAT

A 60 minute Masterclass for early childhood educators who feel uneasy about “what works” narratives and are committed to evidence-informed practice that balances systematic instruction with rich, meaningful literacy experiences.

Are you:

Struggling to find balance between mandated phonics instruction and rich, engaging literacy experiences children genuinely connect with?

Concerned that Structured Literacy dominates the day while storytelling, play, and authentic language experiences are pushed aside?

Noticing children appear disengaged, their eyes wander and their little bodies are restless and you're left wondering what that’s telling you about your literacy approach?

Are you:

Struggling to find balance between mandated phonics instruction and rich, engaging literacy experiences children genuinely connect with?

Concerned that Structured Literacy dominates the day while storytelling, play, and authentic language experiences are pushed aside?

Noticing children appear disengaged, their eyes wander and their little bodies are restless and you're left wondering what that’s telling you about your literacy approach?

Join us to discover:

Why relying on narrow interpretations of “what works” limits literacy practice, and what the broader evidence-based research actually tells us.

How examining a wider body of research helps counter the justification used for one-sided literacy methodologies

Why learning to read and learning to write are deeply interconnected and should not be taught in isolation

Why disengagement is a signal to rethink pedagogy

Join us to discover:

Why relying on narrow interpretations of “what works” limits literacy practice, and what the broader evidence-based research actually tells us.

How examining a wider body of research helps counter the justification used for one-sided literacy methodologies

Why learning to read and learning to write are deeply interconnected and should not be taught in isolation

Why disengagement is a signal to rethink pedagogy

Meet your Presenter

Jo Fahey

Dr Jo Fahey has over 35 years’ experience as a teacher, researcher, curriculum writer, and professional learning leader around the world. Her work spans early childhood settings, schools, universities, and large-scale professional learning.

A former curriculum developer for the International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme, Jo’s doctoral research led to the publication of Ways to Learn Through Inquiry: Guiding Children to Deeper Understanding (IB, 2012).

Dr Jo Fahey is deeply committed to upholding children’s rights to learn in ways that honour their development in the early years. A strong advocate for play-based learning, Jo believes that children learn most powerfully when literacy is embedded in meaningful, engaging, and playful experiences.

She understands the significant pressure many early childhood educators face to teach reading and writing in highly prescriptive ways, often in conflict with their professional beliefs, values, and instincts.

Jo advocates for a balanced middle ground, drawing on research and practice, she challenges the current overemphasis on decontextualised phonics.  She highlights how such approaches can be detrimental for many children when disconnected from meaning, context, and authentic literacy experiences.

Meet your Presenter

Jo Fahey

Dr Jo Fahey has over 35 years’ experience as a teacher, researcher, curriculum writer, and professional learning leader around the world. Her work spans early childhood settings, schools, universities, and large-scale professional learning.

A former curriculum developer for the International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme, Jo’s doctoral research led to the publication of Ways to Learn Through Inquiry: Guiding Children to Deeper Understanding (IB, 2012).

Dr Jo Fahey is deeply committed to upholding children’s rights to learn in ways that honour their development in the early years. A strong advocate for play-based learning, Jo believes that children learn most powerfully when literacy is embedded in meaningful, engaging, and playful experiences.

She understands the significant pressure many early childhood educators face to teach reading and writing in highly prescriptive ways, often in conflict with their professional beliefs, values, and instincts.

Jo advocates for a balanced middle ground, drawing on research and practice, she challenges the current overemphasis on decontextualised phonics.  She highlights how such approaches can be detrimental for many children when disconnected from meaning, context, and authentic literacy experiences.

Reclaim balance.
Reclaim meaning.

Reclaim professional confidence.

Children deserve learning experiences that are systematic yet flexible, structured yet meaningful, and grounded in evidence.

This Masterclass will help you find the middle ground, one that supports strong literacy outcomes as well as nurturing children’s motivation, agency, and love of learning.

Transforming education starts with you.