Reading Advantage - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Reading Advantage

Description:

a division of Houghton Mifflin Company. Laura Robb, author and presenter ... Laura Robb, Powhatan School, Boyce, VA. James Baumann, University of Georgia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1478
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: hmc3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Reading Advantage


1
Reading Advantage
  • Published by Great Source Education Group,
  • a division of Houghton Mifflin Company
  • Laura Robb, author and presenter

2
Reading Advantage is a literacy intervention
program for adolescent learners
  • Builds background knowledge and vocabulary
  • Improves comprehension
  • Develops students ability to think about and
    analyze texts

3
Reading Advantage (RA) was developed by
experienced educators
  • Laura Robb, Powhatan School, Boyce, VA
  • James Baumann, University of Georgia
  • Carol Fuhler, Iowa State University
  • Joan Kindig, University of Virginia
  • Avon Cowell, New York City schools
  • Jo Worthy, University of Texas/Austin
  • R. Craig Roney, Wayne State

4
Reading Advantage reaches middle and high school
students reading below grade level.
  • Level A, grades 23
  • Level B, grades 34
  • Level C, grades 45
  • Level D, grades 56
  • Three new levels in late 2005/early 2006 will
    expand the top and bottom ranges

5
Teachers can use Reading Advantage in a wide
range of learning situations
  • Self-contained class
  • Small group of special education students
  • Pull-out or push-in tutorial
  • Small group of students receiving extra
    instruction
  • Afterschool and summer school programs

6
Reading Advantage buildson motivation research.
  • High-interest reading materials are on topics
    that interest students in middle and high school
  • Students had input into magazine themes

7
The reading materials are accessible to
struggling readers.
  • Every selection has a Lexile measure
  • The reading level of each of the four magazines
    in a kit increases at a rate that builds
    students reading confidence
  • Each magazine contains 70 nonfiction and 30
    fiction
  • Magazines include a mixture of short selections
    and longer texts

8
Design contributes to accessibility and
motivation.
  • Great Source researched popular teen magazines to
    develop the RA magazine design
  • Information presented in ways that are visual, as
    well as textual, allows students different access
    pointsphotos, captions, maps, diagrams, bold
    headings, bulleted lists

9
Design contributes to accessibility and
motivation, cont.
  • Students will also encounter these visual
    features in textbooks and nonfiction trade books

10
Reading Advantage develops students emotional,
social, and text confidence.
  • Placement Tests place students at levels where
    they experience success and ultimately progress
  • Magazines and paperbacks are motivating students
    will want to read
  • Lesson design offers opportunities for small
    group instruction and self-reflection

11
Reading Advantage develops students emotional,
social, and text confidence, cont.
  • Teachers Editions include models of key reading
    and thinking strategies

12
The authors and editors of Reading Advantage have
crafted an intervention program that focuses on
these areas
  • Vocabulary
  • Word knowledge (phonics, structural analysis)
  • Comprehension
  • Reading fluency
  • Writing
  • Assessment

13
Reading Advantage builds vocabulary knowledge
with skills and strategies such as
  • Association
  • Word relationships
  • Context

14
Strong context in the magazine text
  • Expands students word knowledge
  • Develops automaticity

15
Strong context in the magazine text, con.
  • Is developed by teacher think-alouds in the
    Teachers Edition

16
Word knowledge is built mainly through word sorts.
  • Hands-on word sorts focus attention on sound and
    spelling patterns
  • Pattern knowledge builds phonemic awareness and
    analogous thinking if you know the ain pattern
    in main, you can read rain, gain, regain,
    maintain
  • Word study also incorporates prefixes, suffixes,
    roots, multi-syllabic words, and special kinds of
    words (homophones, eponyms)

17
Students response
  • iC
  • clip
  • nip
  • pink
  • strip
  • flick

iCe rice strive mice gripe mine bride spine
Y cry try by
oddball eye
18
Comprehension
  • Before/during/after reading strategies and
    learning experiences
  • Guided reading lessons
  • Application of reading strategies to text

19
Comprehension, cont.
  • Focus on vocabulary and meanings of words
  • Discussion questions develop students ability to
    read critically and connect ideas and concepts
    between texts

20
The Teachers Edition supports improving
students comprehension.
  • Research support is included with model strategy
    lessons

21
The Teachers Edition supports improving
students comprehension, cont.
  • Five key reading strategies form the focus of
    strategy instruction
  • Monitor understanding
  • Summarize
  • Understanding text structure
  • Engage
  • Critical reading

22
Writing
  • Students write to deepen their knowledge of
    vocabulary and comprehension

23
Writing, cont.
  • Students learn to write in a variety of forms
    such as letters, diary entries, and
    well-constructed paragraphs opinion,
    information, descriptive, compare-contrast

24
Reading fluency
  • Plays, interviews, poems, etc. create real
    reasons for rereading and practicing fluent
    reading
  • Students build fluency with material they CAN
    read
  • Aspects of fluency include observing punctuation,
    using appropriate expression, and reading at an
    appropriate pace

25
Word study contributes to reading fluency.
  • Word study supports fluency by helping students
    see pattern and meaning relationships
  • Word sorting develops fluency as students sort
    only words they can pronounce and understand
  • A knowledge of roots, prefixes, and suffixes
    enables students to examine an entire word
    de/con/struc/tion

26
Teachers support reading fluency
  • By pre-teaching tough words, making sure students
    can pronounce them
  • By reading aloud so that students hear a model of
    expressive reading

27
Independent reading
  • Twelve original paperback books come with each
    level, and the Teachers Edition (TE) provides
    strategies for engaging students with each book

28
Independent reading, cont.
  • Each eZines CD-ROM has twenty additional articles
  • A bibliography of theme-related books appears in
    each TE magazine overview

29
Assessment
  • There are two kinds of placement tests
  • Group reading inventory

30
Assessment, cont.
  • Individual reading inventory

31
Assessment, cont.
  • Progress tests check students understanding of
    comprehension and vocabulary
  • mid-magazine tests
  • magazine tests

32
Assessment, cont.
  • Student surveys and checklists encourage teacher
    observation and support instructional decision
    making
  • Questions in the Teachers Edition prompt
    frequent, informal checks on how well students
    comprehend the material and the strategies
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com