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What the Research Tells Us December 4, 2012 Presenter: Stephen Dolainski 1
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WEBINAR OVERVIEW ◦ Research ◦ Findings ◦ Classroom and operational implications ◦ Resources ◦ Questions 2
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WHAT IS READING? ◦ What are the elements involved in reading? ◦ What does it take to be a good reader? 3
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THE RESEARCH Adult Literacy Research Working Group (ALRWG) ◦ NIFL, NCSALL, OVAE ◦ Adult reading instruction=low-literate adults, 16+ ◦ Focus: crucial components (alphabetics, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension) ◦ K-12 research Adult Education Literacy Instruction: A Review of the Research (NIFL, 2010) * Applying Research in Reading Instruction for Adults: First Steps for Teachers (NIFL, 2005) * *See Resources 4
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Fluency (P) Alphabetics (P) Vocabulary (M) Comprehension (M) READING The Four Components of Reading 5
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WHAT THE RESEARCH TELLS US assessment in components instruction based on assessment systematic, sequenced instruction direct and explicit instruction (research-based reading instruction) 6
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READING ASSESSMENT PROFILES Adult Basic Education (ABE—0 through 8 GLE) Adult Secondary Education (ASE) English Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) 7
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SYSTEMATIC, SEQUENCED INSTRUCTION Short, focused lessons Multiple lessons Frequency 8 Edgar Alphabetics: 8GLE Fluency: 3 Vocabulary: 4 Comprehension: 4
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DIRECT, EXPLICIT INSTRUCTION Explanation Modeling Guided practice Independent practice/application Monitoring 9
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CLASSROOM IMPLICATIONS Assessment Instruction based on assessment Managing groups Teacher-directed instruction Short, focused, frequent lessons 10
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OPERATIONAL IMPLICATIONS Managed enrollment Attendance-absentee policy Class size Staff development 11
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RESOURCES Beck, I.L., McKeown, M.G., & Kucan, L. (2002). Bringing words to life: Robust vocabulary instruction. New York: The Guilford Press. Kruidenier, J. R., MacArthur, C.A., & Wrigley, H.S. (2010). Adult education literacy instruction: A review of the research. Washington, DC: National Institute for Literacy. http://lincs.ed.gov/publications/pdf/adult_ed_2010.pdf. (Retrieved Nov. 20, 2012). http://lincs.ed.gov/publications/pdf/adult_ed_2010.pdf McShane, S. (2005). Applying research in reading instruction for adults: First steps for teachers. Washington, DC: The Partnership for Reading, National Institute for Literacy. http://lincs.ed.gov/publications/html/mcshane/index.html. (Retrieved Nov. 20, 2012). http://lincs.ed.gov/publications/html/mcshane/index.html 12
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RESOURCES Rasinski, T. (2003). The fluent reader: Oral reading strategies for building word recognition, fluency, and comprehension. New York: Scholastic Professional Books. Strucker, J. (2007). Managed enrollment and evidence-based reading instruction. Washington, DC: Office of Vocational and Adult Education, Division of Adult Education and Literacy. http://www.startoolkit.org/assets/files/Issue_Mgd EnrollPols.pdf. (Retrieved Nov. 21, 2012) http://www.startoolkit.org/assets/files/Issue_Mgd EnrollPols.pdf 13
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RESOURCES Online: ◦ California Adult Literacy Professional Development Project (CALPRO), http://calpro-online.org/ (go to Virtual Workroom)http://calpro-online.org/ ◦ STAR Toolkit, www.startoolkit.org (go to Resources/Research and Guides)www.startoolkit.org Reading Horizons archived webinars: ◦ http://readinghorizons.com/community/webinars/index. aspx http://readinghorizons.com/community/webinars/index. aspx ◦ The Power of Explicit Instruction (Shantell Berrett) ◦ Developing Fluent Readers (Dr. Neil J. Anderson) 14
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