Twin Cities startup Cascade Reading wants to use technology to reimagine the skill and boost comprehension for struggling learners.
Cascade is not publishing books or creating its own content. Instead, existing material goes into the Cascade system for its patented algorithm to rearrange in a column format readers can scan from top to bottom instead of left to right. It’s no longer a block of text. Given the vertical display, the words look like lines of poetry that appears to cascade down the screen.
A Gallup analysis of U.S. Department of Education data in 2020 found 54% of American adults read below a sixth-grade level, but Cascade believes its tech can improve literacy. The company studied fourth and fifth graders in the Milwaukee area and found students performed better on comprehension assessments after using Cascade. They also found that students with the lowest reading scores said they felt more confident using Cascade. More than half of the students said Cascade helped them to read more carefully.
Another study found people with the first language of Korean or Mandarin fared better with English comprehension when using Cascade. Cascade recently completed three different studies, including an eye-tracking study at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign that Jack Dempsey, Cascade’s director of research, said will help improve the product by understanding “how the eyes are moving across text.”
Julie Van Dyke is chief scientist for Cascade as well as a senior scientist with Haskins Laboratories, part of the Yale Child Study Center. She has been doing reading research for 25 years. She said there’s a chance Cascade could help people with reading disabilities, such as dyslexia or developmental language issues.
“People who have difficulty with comprehension are going to have the best benefit from Cascade because it’s giving these visual cues to the way the sentence is structured,” Van Dyke said.
She added: “It’s really allowing kids to not be so stressed about reading.”
Edtech boom

The onset of COVID-19 helped drive a boom for “edtech” companies like Cascade, but today’s market is much tougher.