The Infrastructure of Belonging: Building the Reading Brain SLIDE DECK
CHAPTER Eighteen
The Twenty-Day Slumber Party
On pizza, popcorn, plushes, and
why belonging is the infrastructure reading runs on
Twenty days cannot finish
the job. It can make a child believe the job is finishable.
The first day of Reading Boot Camp did not look like school. The room had
cushions on the floor. Some students were seated Japanese-style at low tables;
others had claimed the couch or the chairs arranged in a circle near the
window. Everyone had been asked to bring a pillow. Everyone had a plush — a
stuffed animal assigned to their cubby, present whether they wanted one or not,
which most of them did once they saw that everyone else had one too. The social
permission of the universal plush is something I have never seen fail: even the
sixth grader who has spent three years performing toughness will hold a stuffed
animal if holding one is what everyone does.
There was popcorn. Harry Potter popcorn, technically — the kind you make
with Jelly Belly's Bertie Bott's Every Flavour Beans scattered through it, the
weird and wonderful flavors that fit the world we were about to enter. There
was Mexican pizza — cheese crisps with pepperoni, made together, eaten
together. There were handicraft materials on every table. There was music.
There was no worksheet. There was no workbook. There was no computer.
The children who walked in expecting the first day of school walked into
something that felt more like a slumber party. That was deliberate. Everything
about the room had been designed to produce one specific emotional experience
before a single text was opened: I am safe here, and I want to be here.
That experience is not decoration around the reading instruction. It is the
condition the reading instruction requires.
Why the Pizza Is Not Optional
I want to be precise about what I am claiming, because it is easy to
misread the argument. I am not claiming that food and cushions and stuffed
animals make children learn to read. I am claiming that children who have spent
years associating reading with failure, with shame, with the specific social
exposure of being wrong in front of peers — those children have built a
conditioned response to the reading situation that operates before instruction
begins. The anxiety activates before the text opens. The avoidance strategies
are already running. The self-protective distance from the material is already
in place.
You cannot instruct through that. You can push the material in, and some
of it will get through, and most of it will be lost to the noise of the
activated threat response. What you can do — what the slumber party
architecture was designed to do — is change the emotional context before the
instruction begins, so that the instruction arrives in a nervous system that is
open rather than defended.
The Bento box was the first test. In the first week of camp, students
were taught to fold an origami Bento box — a multi-step, precise,
visual-spatial task that required listening carefully to each instruction and
executing it before the next one arrived. Students who were paying attention
had a Bento box by the end of the session. The Bento box was your snack
container for popcorn time. Students who had not been listening — who had
decided that the first week of school was a good time to establish their social
position by showing off, by performing indifference, by being the one who was
too cool to follow directions — did not have a Bento box.
They noticed. The D&D dice were on the table. The popcorn was in the
bowl. Everyone else was eating and playing, and they were sitting with an
unfolded piece of paper and a dawning understanding that the social calculus
they had been running — where performing indifference earned status — had just
been inverted. In this room, the students who followed directions, who listened
carefully, who engaged fully, were the ones with the Bento boxes. They were the
ones chosen first to go to other classrooms for read-alouds and singing. They
were the ones with the most interesting activities, the best seats, the first
pick of the handicraft projects.
The students who wanted to flex for their buddies were chosen last. Every
time. Consistently and without drama, as a structural feature of how the room
worked, not as a punishment delivered with anger. The room rewarded engagement.
It did not reward performance of disengagement. This was the grace and courtesy
curriculum in action: not as a set of rules posted on a wall, but as a set of
consequences embedded in the daily experience of what it meant to be in this
particular community.
The room rewarded engagement. Not rules on a
wall — consequences embedded in the daily experience of what it meant to be in
this community.
◆
The Science: Belonging, Psychological Safety, and the Reading Brain
Research on belonging and
learning — particularly the work of Gregory Walton and Geoffrey Cohen on social
belonging interventions — shows that students who feel they belong in an
academic community perform significantly better than students with equivalent
prior achievement who do not. The effect is not mediated by instruction quality
alone; it is mediated by the student's belief that the academic space is one in
which people like them succeed, and that struggle is a normal part of the
process rather than evidence of fundamental incapacity.
For students with
histories of reading failure, this belonging dimension is especially critical.
Research on reading anxiety — the conditioned negative emotional response to
reading situations that develops in students who have repeatedly experienced
failure in those situations — shows that anxiety impairs performance
independently of skill level. A student whose reading skill has improved but
whose reading anxiety has not been addressed will continue to underperform
relative to their actual ability, because the anxiety consumes cognitive
resources that reading requires.
Creating an environment
that is explicitly safe — where failure is expected, where the social stakes of
getting a word wrong are low, where the association between reading and
pleasure is being actively built rather than merely assumed — addresses the anxiety
at its source. The pizza and the popcorn and the plushes are not bribes. They
are the systematic construction of a new conditioned response: reading happens
here, and here is a place where I am comfortable and valued and part of
something.
Grace, Courtesy, and the Leader Within
The first twenty days were not primarily a reading intervention. They
were a community-building intervention that reading ran through. The
distinction matters because community-building done well creates the conditions
that make the reading instruction possible — and community-building done badly,
or skipped entirely, leaves the teacher trying to run instruction through a
social environment that is actively resistant to it.
We read Sean Covey's The Leader in Me — the adaptation of his
father's seven habits framework for children — because the book gave us a
shared vocabulary for talking about what we were building together. What does
it mean to be proactive rather than reactive? What does it mean to think win-win?
What does it mean to seek first to understand, and then to be understood? These
are not abstract ethical principles in a classroom where students are working
in Kagan cooperative structures all day, where their success depends on their
partners' success, where the choice to disengage costs not just yourself but
the people who were counting on you.
Every morning began with a meeting. Steve Hartman's On the Road segments
— the ones that became Kindness 101 — played on the screen: ordinary people
doing extraordinary things with no resources except their willingness to show
up for someone else. The Thai life insurance commercials I loved for the same
reason: a common person, no special power, just kindness, making a difference
that rippled outward in ways the person never saw. These were the texts of the
morning meeting. We discussed them. We asked what they were really about. We
practiced the same close reading and inferential thinking that we would bring
to Harry Potter and to the myths — the same skills, applied to a two-minute
video about a stranger helping a stranger.
The students who came in having hated school had usually hated it for a
specific reason: the school they had experienced was a place where their
weaknesses were measured and their strengths were called fluff. The art was
fluff. The drama was fluff. The handicraft was fluff. The discussion was fluff.
The things that made them feel capable and seen and part of something were
systematically identified as extracurricular, as reward, as what you got to do
after the real work was done — which meant that for many struggling students,
they never got there.
In my classroom, what most teachers called fluff was the curriculum. The
art and the handicraft and the morning meeting and the read-aloud and the
singing were the core. The basal reader was the supplement, when it existed at
all. The Ed tech app was not in the room. And the students who arrived having
hated school found, usually within the first week, that they did not hate this
— that this was something they wanted to come to, wanted to stay in, wanted to
bring their friends and their siblings to see.
What DEAR Gets Wrong, and What Would Fix It
Drop Everything And Read — DEAR, or SSR, sustained silent reading, in its
various institutional forms — is the school's most common attempt to build a
reading culture, and it fails with remarkable consistency for the students who
need it most. The premise is that if you give children quiet time with books of
their choosing, love of reading will develop. For children who already love
reading, this is true. For children who have spent years associating reading
with failure, fifteen minutes of quiet isolation with a text is fifteen minutes
of sitting alone with the thing that has most reliably made them feel
inadequate.
The problem is not the reading time. It is everything surrounding the
reading time — or rather, the absence of everything. No community. No shared
text to discuss. No social permission to struggle, because struggling in
silence is just sitting there looking like you can't read. No sense of
belonging to a group of people who are all in the same text and all working
toward the same thing. No Harry Potter popcorn. No Bento box.
For DEAR to work for struggling readers, it would need to be restructured
almost entirely. The time would need to be longer and the books would need to
be discussed. The reading would need to happen alongside other people, in a
room where the social norms around reading had been explicitly and deliberately
constructed — where getting a word wrong was a normal part of the experience
rather than an exposure of inadequacy. There would need to be read-alouds
alongside the independent reading, so that students who could not yet read
independently could still participate fully in the experience of the text.
There would need to be food, honestly, or something equivalent — some sensory
signal that this time is pleasurable, that this is the part of the day we look forward
to.
What I am describing is Reading Boot Camp. The twenty-day version is
intensive, but the principles it embeds can run year-round: read aloud every
day, discuss every day, build the vocabulary in situ every day, make the room
feel like a place worth being in every day. DEAR, transformed by these
principles, stops being a fifteen-minute holding pattern and becomes something
that actually builds readers.
For DEAR to work for struggling readers, it
would need to be restructured almost entirely. What I am describing is Reading
Boot Camp.
What the Twenty Days Cannot Do
I want to be clear about the camp's limits, because overclaiming for it
would be dishonest and would set up the teachers and parents who try it for a
disappointment they do not deserve.
Twenty days does not produce a finished reader. It does not close a
four-year reading gap. It does not replace the systematic, explicit phonics
instruction that children with significant phonological deficits need, or the
ongoing progress monitoring that identifies when an intervention is working and
when it needs to change. It does not substitute for a well-designed,
well-resourced reading program running through the rest of the school year.
What it does — what it was designed to do, and what it consistently
produces when the conditions are right — is a shift in the child's relationship
with reading. Not mastery. Not fluency. A shift. The child who walked in
believing they could not read walks out having experienced, briefly and
incompletely, the feeling of text opening up. They have had the Eureka moments
Chapter Sixteen described. They have excavated words from texts that mattered
to them. They have performed and sung and discussed and laughed and made things
with their hands, and all of it happened in the presence of print, and the
print was connected to all of that instead of being isolated from it.
That connection is the thing that has to survive the twenty days. Not the
specific words mapped, though those help. Not the specific books read, though
those matter. The connection between reading and belonging, between reading and
pleasure, between reading and the specific social world of a classroom where
everyone was in it together and everyone was valued — that connection has to
carry forward into the weeks and months that follow, or the twenty days will
fade like any other intensive experience that is not reinforced.
This is why the after-camp structure matters as much as the camp itself.
The students who made lasting gains from Reading Boot Camp were the students
whose teachers continued the read-alouds, continued the vocabulary discussions,
continued treating the things most teachers call fluff as the core of the
curriculum. The students who went from camp back into a classroom of worksheets
and basal readers and fifteen minutes of silent DEAR were more likely to slide
— not all the way back, but enough to remind them that the camp had been an
exception rather than a new normal.
◆
The Science: Consolidation, Transfer, and the Environment After the
Intervention
Research on learning and
memory consolidation consistently shows that the environment following an
intensive learning experience is as important as the experience itself. New
neural representations formed during intensive learning are initially fragile; they
require subsequent activation — encountering the same words, concepts, and
patterns again in varied contexts — to consolidate into durable long-term
memory. An intensive intervention that is not followed by a consolidating
environment produces temporary gains that decay at rates similar to any other
unreviewed learning.
For reading specifically,
research on summer learning loss demonstrates this principle at scale: gains
made during the school year are subject to significant erosion over summers
without structured reading engagement. The same principle applies at the level
of the individual intervention: a twenty-day intensive camp that is followed by
an environment rich in read-alouds, discussion, and continued vocabulary
development will produce sustained gains. The same camp followed by a return to
minimal print engagement will produce temporary gains.
The implication for
teachers and schools considering Reading Boot Camp is direct: the twenty days
are the beginning, not the program. The program is the full year — or ideally
the full career — of treating reading as something that happens in community, in
joy, with real books and real discussion and real stakes. The camp jump-starts
that program. It does not replace it.
What Stays
Many parents requested my classroom after their children had been in it.
Not because I was the best credentialed teacher on the faculty, or because my
test scores were the highest, or because the district had identified my
classroom as a model of best practice. Because their children had come home
talking about what they were reading. Because their children had woken up on
school mornings without the particular dread that had previously accompanied
the first day of school. Because their children had said, in whatever words
children use to say such things, that they did not hate reading anymore.
That is a transformation I will take over any test score. Not because
test scores don't matter — they do, and the vocabulary instruction and the
read-alouds and the Socratic discussions produced real gains on real
assessments, and I am proud of that. But because a child who does not hate
reading anymore will keep reading after the camp ends, after the school year
ends, after they leave my classroom and move on to teachers who may not share
the same philosophy. A child who has learned that reading is the thing that
happens when you're in a room with popcorn and a plush and people you trust,
working on something worth working on — that child has a fighting chance.
A child who still hates reading when they leave my classroom — which
happened, I will not pretend otherwise, because twenty days cannot reach
everyone — is a child I think about. What did I miss? What condition did I fail
to create? What specific thing about this specific child would have required a
different approach, a different text, a different entry point? Those questions
are the ones that kept me teaching for twenty-six years, and that keep me
writing now.
I shared stories constantly — Yvette and her Clifford, Otmar and his
Harry Potter, my own dyslexia and the theater and the D&D rulebook. Not as
entertainment. As evidence. As the accumulated proof that the thing that felt
impossible had been done, by people who had been told it was impossible,
through conditions that could be built and rebuilt and offered again. I shared
them to give hope and purpose and persistence — to make the twenty days feel
like the beginning of a story rather than another chapter of a story that had
already been written about them.
Twenty days cannot finish the job.
It can make a child believe the job is finishable.
That belief is, in the end, the whole point. Everything else — the
orthographic mapping, the academic vocabulary, the fluency gains, the test
scores — follows from a child who has decided that they are, in fact, the kind
of person who reads. Not someday. Now. In this room. With the popcorn and the
plush and the people they trust.
✦ Chapter Takeaway ✦
Twenty
days cannot finish the job. It can make a child believe the job is finishable.
The pizza and the popcorn and the plushes are not decoration — they are the
systematic construction of a new relationship between a struggling reader and
the act of reading. Belonging is not a nice-to-have. It is the infrastructure
reading runs on. Build the community first, and the instruction has somewhere
to land. Skip the community, and the best instruction in the world arrives in a
nervous system that is already defended against it.
In the classroom described in the sources, engagement was rewarded through "consequences embedded in the daily experience" rather than through abstract rules or external prizes. These rewards were designed to invert the "social calculus" where students might previously have gained status by performing indifference or being "too cool" to follow directions.
Specific consequences used to reward students who engaged fully and followed directions included:
- The Bento Box: During the first week, students who listened carefully to instructions were able to successfully fold an origami Bento box. This served as their snack container for popcorn time; those who did not engage were left with an unfolded piece of paper while others ate and played.
- Priority for Special Opportunities: Engaged students were the ones chosen first to go to other classrooms for activities like read-alouds and singing.
- Access to Preferred Activities: These students received the "most interesting activities" available in the classroom.
- Seating Preferences: Engagement earned students the "best seats" in the room.
- Project Selection: They were given "first pick" of materials for various handicraft projects.
Conversely, students who chose to "flex" for their peers or perform disengagement were chosen last for these opportunities. This system was implemented "consistently and without drama" as a structural feature of the environment to ensure the room actively rewarded engagement rather than the performance of disengagement.
When community-building is skipped in reading instruction, even the highest quality teaching often fails to reach the student because it arrives in a "nervous system that is already defended against it".
According to the sources, skipping this foundational step leads to several specific negative outcomes:
- Activation of the Threat Response: For students with a history of failure, the act of reading is often associated with shame and anxiety. Without community-building to neutralize these feelings, a "conditioned threat response" activates before a book is even opened. This creates cognitive "noise" that prevents instruction from getting through.
- Depletion of Cognitive Resources: Research shows that reading anxiety impairs performance regardless of a student's actual skill level. When a sense of safety and belonging is absent, anxiety consumes the cognitive resources that the brain needs to perform the complex task of reading.
- Instruction in a Resistant Environment: Without deliberate community-building, teachers find themselves trying to deliver instruction through a social environment that is actively resistant to it. In such environments, students may perform indifference or "toughness" to protect their social status, rather than engaging with the material.
- Isolation and Inadequacy: The sources point to practices like traditional "Drop Everything and Read" (DEAR) as examples of skipped community-building. For struggling readers, this results in "fifteen minutes of sitting alone with the thing that has most reliably made them feel inadequate" without any social permission to struggle or shared support.
- Failure of Instruction to "Land": Ultimately, skipping the "infrastructure" of belonging means the instruction has "nowhere to land". The information cannot penetrate the self-protective barriers a student has built to shield themselves from the pain of failure.
In short, the sources suggest that attempting reading instruction without first building a community is like trying to run a program on a system without the necessary operating infrastructure; the "job" of reading remains feeling unfinishable to the child.
Reading anxiety affects a student’s cognitive resources by consuming the mental energy required to perform the complex task of reading. This depletion occurs independently of a student's actual skill level, meaning a student may possess the necessary skills but still underperform because their cognitive capacity is being used to manage their emotional state.
According to the sources, this process works in the following ways:
- Activation of a Threat Response: For students with a history of failure, reading can trigger a "conditioned threat response" before a book is even opened. This response creates cognitive "noise" that prevents instruction from being processed effectively by the brain.
- Performance Impairment: Because the brain is preoccupied with anxiety and self-protective strategies, it has fewer resources available for the actual cognitive work of decoding and comprehension.
- Persistent Underperformance: The sources note that even if a student’s reading skills improve through instruction, they will continue to underperform if their anxiety is not addressed. The anxiety continues to "consume" the resources the brain needs, leading to a gap between a student's actual ability and their performance.
- Creation of Self-Protective Barriers: Anxiety leads to the development of avoidance strategies and a "self-protective distance" from the material. These barriers make it difficult for even high-quality instruction to "land" or reach the student's nervous system.
By building a sense of belonging and safety, educators can neutralize this threat response, effectively "freeing up" these cognitive resources so they can be applied to learning.
Belonging is considered the "infrastructure" for the reading brain because it creates the necessary emotional and neurological conditions for instruction to be successful. Rather than being a mere decoration or "nice-to-have" feature, belonging serves as the foundation that allows a child's nervous system to remain open to learning rather than defended against it.
According to the sources, belonging acts as infrastructure in the following ways:
- Neutralizing the Threat Response: Students who have a history of reading failure often associate the act of reading with shame, anxiety, and social exposure. This creates a conditioned threat response that activates before a book is even opened, creating "noise" that prevents instruction from getting through. A sense of belonging and safety changes the emotional context, ensuring the instruction arrives in a "nervous system that is open rather than defended".
- Managing Cognitive Resources: Research on reading anxiety indicates that the negative emotional response to reading impairs performance independently of a student's actual skill level. This is because anxiety consumes the cognitive resources that the brain requires for the complex task of reading. By creating an environment where a child feels comfortable and valued, these cognitive resources are freed up for learning.
- Normalizing Struggle: A sense of belonging in an academic community fosters the belief that struggle is a normal part of the learning process rather than evidence of "fundamental incapacity". When students feel they belong, they are more likely to perceive the academic space as one where people like them can succeed.
- Shifting Identity and Belief: The ultimate goal of building this infrastructure is to change a child's relationship with reading. It moves a student from believing they cannot read to believing they are "the kind of person who reads". This shift in belief is what makes the "job" of learning to read feel finishable to a child who has previously given up.
- Creating a Pro-Learning Social Environment: Without a community-building intervention, teachers may find themselves trying to deliver instruction through a social environment that is actively resistant to it. Building a community where engagement is rewarded and social norms explicitly allow for failure ensures that the "instruction has somewhere to land".
In summary, the sources argue that you must "build the community first" because skipping this step leaves even the best instruction struggling to penetrate the self-protective barriers of a struggling reader.


