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Published byShawn Lee Modified over 9 years ago
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Fluency
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What is Fluency? The ability to read a text _______, _________, and with proper __________ –_________: ease of reading –_________: ability to read without errors
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Why is Fluency Important? Research says: Successful readers… orely primarily on the __________ in the word rather than context or pictures to identify familiar and unfamiliar words. oprocess virtually every letter. ouse ______________________ to identify words. ohave a reliable __________ for decoding words. oread words for a sufficient number of times for words to become automatic.
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Automaticity with Code Definition: –Reading words with no noticeable cognitive or ____________. It is having mastered word recognition skills to the point of overlearning. Fundamental skills are so “____________” that they do not require conscious attention. –Skills that are automatic: shifting gears on a car writing your name playing a musical instrument
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Students who are automatic with the code… Identify ________________________ accurately and quickly. Identify familiar spelling ________________ to increase decoding efficiency. Apply maximum resources to the difficult task of blending together isolated phonemes to make words. Apply knowledge of the ______________ to identify words in isolation and connected text fluently.
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What do fluent readers look like? More fluent readers… Need to direct relatively little effort to the act of reading, allowing them to focus active attention on ________ and ________________. Less fluent readers… Must direct considerable effort to the act of _____________, leaving little attention for reflecting on its meaning and message.
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How Fluent? It is not enough for students to simply meet a goal; they must meet the goal by a specified time period so that they can make the necessary progress they need to develop into lifelong readers. –End of 1 st grade: ___ cwpm (correct words per minute) or more –End of 2 nd grade: ____ cwpm or more –End of 3 rd grade: ______ cwpm or more
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Instructional Approaches _________________ –Repeated reading procedures –Paired reading _______________ –Silent reading Accelerated Reader Drop Everything And Read (D.E.A.R.) ** Research has not yet confirmed independent silent reading as a means of improving fluency and overall reading achievement
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Teaching Fluency: Critical features of Fluency instruction
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Effective Fluency Instruction Three decisions: –Selecting appropriate __________________(i.e., letter sounds students can produce accurately but not fluently). –Scheduling sufficient ____________ (multiple opportunities per day). –Systematically increasing the ________ of response.
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Passage Reading Structured activity in which students can read stories or connected text designed to provide practice and application of ____________ and ________________ skills. Passage reading provides students the ____________ to become accurate and fluent.
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Levels of Challenge Independent Level: ____% Instructional Level: _________% Frustration Level: _____% or lower For fluency building, materials should be at ________________ level or above. (Modified from Hasbrouck, 1998)
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How to Determine Appropriate Level Text Select text that students read with 95% accuracy # of words read correctly total words read Example: 100 words read correctly 125 total words read 80% accuracy ________________ be appropriate for fluency building % accuracy 80% accuracy
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Fluency programs and materials What you should look for in materials to build fluency: –Are passages within the learner's decoding range? (95% accuracy or higher) –Is there an ______________ strategy for teaching students to transition from accuracy to fluency? –Is there _____________ opportunity for fluency building? –Is there ____________ in words (i.e., words show up multiple times in different text)? –Are target rates identified?
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Oral Reading Fluency Programs Reading Mastery (focus on fluency checkouts) –Individual oral reading fluency checkouts scheduled every 5 lessons beginning at lessons 108, Level 1. –Target rates and error limits are established systematically –Student performance is graphed every 5 lessons documenting whether students reached reading criterion.
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What is PALS for Beginning Readers? Peer Assisted Learning Strategies A ___________________ program to practice beginning reading skills All students work in _________ several times each week for reading practice activities
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Purpose of PALS To develop important ________________ skills for young children To provide teachers with a practical and effective means of meeting early literacy needs for all students in _________________________
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PALS Peer Assisted Learning Strategies –K PALSK PALS –1 st grade PALS –2 nd -6 th grade PALS2 nd -6 th grade PALS –High School Pals FLUENCY & COMPREHENSION!
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Important Features of PALS ______________ (Coaches and Readers) _______________ activities _______________ support More time engaged on task Includes __________ students Opportunities for ___________ for all students Encourages positive ________________ Practical AND effective Opportunities to _________ student progress
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Benefits of PALS Meets the needs of increasingly diverse population in classrooms Strengthens general education’s capacity to meet academic needs of broader range of children Uses empirically validated instructional practices
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Read Naturally (supplemental fluency building program for grades mid 1-6) –A supplemental tape-recording program that build on three primary practices: model oral reading, repeated readings, and progress monitoring. –Students are place in appropriate level text and practice listening to and reading with tape-recorded passages. –Comprehension questions are included for each passage.
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