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Effective Interventions for Struggling Readers Fluency

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Title: Effective Interventions for Struggling Readers Fluency


1
Effective Interventions for Struggling Readers
Fluency

Your name here Date, location, etc.
2
Agenda
  • Goals and Objectives
  • Research Terms and Components
  • Students Who Struggle
  • Assessment
  • Strategies

3
Goals and Objectives
  • Goal To promote knowledge understanding of
    effective interventions in fluency for students
    who struggle with reading.
  • Objectives
  • Participants will
  • Articulate research on fluency instruction.
  • Outline the importance of assessing fluency
    progress.
  • Identify components of fluency.
  • Implement research-based fluency instructional
    strategies that can be used to teach struggling
    readers.
  • Handout 1

4
The Connections Between Reading Interventions,
NCLB, and YOU!
5
Gap
Benefit Students Teachers Schools Districts
States
6
The Five Components
  • Phonemic Awareness
  • Phonics
  • Fluency
  • Vocabulary
  • Comprehension
  • FLUENCY

7
Why Fluency?
  • Fluency is a critical skill
  • Good reading comprehension rests on a foundation
    of fluent reading of words.
  • Good readers rapidly recognize words without
    having to think about what the words are, and
    automatically activate the meaning of the words
    they are reading.

8
Research Base for Fluency InstructionKey Findings
  • Fluency is
  • Improved through guided repeated oral reading
    procedures.
  • Strengthened by feedback and guidance
  • Effective for both good and struggling readers.
  • Critical for students to process meaning and
    build comprehension skills.
  • Neglected in many reading programs.
  • National Reading Panel (2002)

9
Common Terms
  • Fluencythe ability to read text automatically,
    accurately, and effortlessly.
  • Irregular wordswords that cannot be decoded.
  • Letter-sound fluencythe ability to produce
    sounds of letters quickly.
  • Irregular word fluencythe ability to identify
    irregular words automatically.
  • Oral reading fluencythe ability to identify
    words in a passage accurately.
  • Prosodythe intonation and expression used in
    reading.

10
Fluency Components
11
Students Who Struggle
  • Approximately 40 percent of American 4th grade
    students cannot read fluently.
  • National Assessment of Educational Progress
    (2002)
  • Handout 2

12
Discussion Question
  • What are some behaviors you may observe in the
    classroom that indicate some students are
    struggling with fluency?

13
Possible Observations
  • Student has difficulty and grows frustrated when
    reading aloud.
  • Student does not read aloud with expression.
  • Student does not chunk words into meaningful
    units.
  • Student doesnt pause at meaningful breaks within
    sentences or paragraphs.
  • Reading Rockets. Target the Problem (2006)

14
Assess the Problem
  • Use multiple types of assessments formal and
    informal.
  • Measure speed, comprehension, types of errors,
    and expression.
  • Select and administer assessment tools that are
    valid and reliable in the measurement of fluency.
  • Monitor student progress regularly to ensure
    student achievement in fluency is progressing.
  • Administer assessments one on one.
  • Use screening and progress monitoring assessment
    to form flexible instructional groups.
  • Good Kaminski (2002)

15
Discussion Question
  • What type of assessment procedures do you
    currently use for fluency?

16
Measuring Fluency
  • Informal
  • Informal reading inventories (IRI)
  • Running records
  • Miscue analysis
  • Reading speed calculations
  • Formal
  • Gray Oral Reading Test (GORT-4)
  • Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills
    (DIBELS)
  • Handout 3

17
Average Fluency Rates
  • Grade Level
  • 2.5 121 words per minute
  • 3.5 135 words per minute
  • 4.5 149 words per minute
  • 5.5 163 words per minute
  • 6.5 177 words per minute
  • 7.5 191 words per minute
  • Mather Goldstein (2001)

18
What Is Your Fluency Rate?
  • Find a partner.
  • Read your assigned passage to your partner.
  • Record your fluency rate.
  • Handouts 4 and 5

19
Charting Progress
  • What do you see as possible advantages for having
    students chart their own progress?

20
Student Progress Monitoring
  • National Center on Student Progress Monitoring,
    American Institutes for Research
  • Mission To disseminate practices proven
    effective in grades K5.
  • http//www.studentprogress.org/
  • Handout 6

21
Effective Strategies for Teaching Fluency
  • Guided Reading
  • Books on Tape
  • Explicit and Systematic Instruction
  • Opportunities for Practice
  • Appropriate Text Level

22
Guided Reading
  • Steps
  • Teacher reads passage aloud.
  • Students reread same passage silently.
  • Students read the passage aloud.
  • Students reread the same passage aloud.
  • Handout 7

23
Books on Tape
  • Provides students with a model for reading with
    expression and punctuation.
  • Fun and independent activity to support fluency
    development.
  • Effective strategy but not a substitute for
    direct instruction.

24
Explicit and Systematic Instruction
  • Model Provide explicit examples of new material.
  • Practice Provide ample opportunities for
    students to practice new material. Ample is
    defined by the individual needs of each student.
  • Assess (ongoing) Check students understanding
    of the new material throughout the lesson.
  • Feedback Immediately correct any incorrect
    student responses by repeating the teacher model.

25
Tips for Providing Feedback
  • Be positive.
  • Be attentive.
  • Be precise.
  • Be mindful.

26
Opportunities for Practice
  • Daily
  • Model fluent reading
  • Phrasing
  • Following along with a tape
  • Readers theater
  • Choral reading
  • Repeated reading chart
  • Reading buddies
  • Self-recordings
  • Amplification

Hudson, Lane, Pullen (2005) Partnership for
Reading (2004) Handout 8
27
Appropriate Text Level
  • How to determine
  • Have student read aloud from a book at the level
    you feel is appropriate for him/her.
  • Calculate the number of words read correctly and
    divide by the total words read.
  • Higher than 97 accuracy independent reading
    level
  • 9097 accuracy instructional level
  • 89 or below frustration level
  • Five Finger Rule

28
Summary
  • Mastery of Phonemic Awareness and Phonics is
    necessary before working on fluency.
  • Fluency is often left out of reading instruction,
    but it is an essential component.
  • Assessment is critical to inform fluency
    instruction.
  • Fluency must be taught explicitly and
    systematically.
  • The essential components of early reading must be
    mastered before vocabulary and comprehension
    skills can be developed.

29
  • CLOSING QUESTIONS
  • COMMENTS

30
  • THANK YOU!
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