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Literacy Interventions for Older Students

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Balance the student, not the curriculum. Test enabling skills, not just outcomes ... has to focus on student progress with curriculum. Teacher observation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Literacy Interventions for Older Students


1
Literacy Interventions for Older Students
  • Timothy Shanahan
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • www.shanahanonliteracy.com

2
Some Basic Premises
  • Substantial amounts of literacy instruction must
    be provided to all students at all levels of
    achievement (PreK-12)
  • This instruction generally should be disciplinary
    in character and infused throughout the
    curriculum

3
Some Basic Premises (cont.)
  • No matter how well we teach literacy some
    students will need extra help
  • By definition, intervention work will be more
    challenging than regular classroom instruction
    (for the teacher and the student)

4
Teach the Literacy Curriculum
  • Teach ALL of the key elements of literacy based
    on student needs vocabulary, oral reading
    fluency, reading comprehension, writing, decoding
  • The role of diagnosis
  • Balance the student, not the curriculum

5
Use Assessment Data
  • Test enabling skills, not just outcomes
  • There are useful screening, accountability,
    diagnostic tests for older students
  • Monitoring usually has to focus on student
    progress with curriculum
  • Teacher observation
  • Data considered collaboratively

6
Intervene early (and often)
  • Anticipate problems (dont wait) freshmen
    academies, etc. are a good idea
  • Even earlier is better work with feeder schools
  • Teaching is not an inoculation keep intervening

7
Interventions Should Increase Amount of
Instruction
  • Time is the major correlate of school learning
  • In-class interventions
  • Pull out programs
  • After-school (and before school) programs
  • Summer programs

8
Teaching is required
  • Clear purposes and planning
  • Modeling
  • Guided practice
  • Clear explanation
  • Shared independent practice
  • Independent practice

9
Dont Neglect Reading and Writing
  • Teachers get caught up in teaching literacy and
    fail to have students practice literacy
  • Practice without teaching is just an assignment,
    but teaching without practice is unproductive
  • Reading or writing at least 50 of each
    intervention lesson

10
Implementation intensity is key
  • Thorough teaching to close gap
  • Lots of repetition
  • Lots of scaffolding
  • Fast paced (not much down time)
  • Matched to level(s)
  • Lots of review

11
Individualized instruction does not mean
individual instruction
  • Individual teaching (tutoring?)
  • Group instruction works well (even when students
    are far behind)
  • Value of multiple response routines

12
Dont Forget Language with ELL Students
  • Second-language learners have learning problems
    in the same proportion as native speakers
  • However, they struggle with learning to read more
    often
  • Enabling skills include English oral language
  • It does not help just to provide basic reading
    skills

13
Motivation Matters
  • Challenging learning can be frightening,
    confusing, off-putting
  • Need to make sure sessions are purposeful,
    well-planned, fast-paced, active, involving
  • Make progress obvious
  • Make the value obvious

14
Timothy Shanahan
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • www.shanahanonliteracy.com
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