Title: Essential Question:
1Essential Question Is the DIBELS a useful
tool for screening and progress monitoring of
basic early literacy skills?
Judy Moody Differentiation Project April 29, 2006
2- The DIBELS targets fluency with four basic skills
that contribute significantly to childs success
when beginning to read - isolating the beginning sound (phoneme) of a
word - teasing out the beginning, middle and ending
sounds of words - mastering the Alphabetic Principleletters
represent speech sounds and strings of
sounds are blended into word units, and - oral reading rate.
3Initial Sounds Fluency
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8VideoISF.mov Clips\ISF.mov
9Initial Sounds Fluency
10(No Transcript)
11(No Transcript)
12(No Transcript)
13Letter Naming Fluency
14Video LNF.movClips\LNF.mov
15(No Transcript)
16Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
Video CliPSF.movpPSF.movs\PSF.mov
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20Nonsense Word Fluency
21(No Transcript)
22Video Clips\NNWF.movWF.mov
23(No Transcript)
24Oral Reading Fluency
VideORFEstablishedReader.movo Clips\ORFEstablished
Reader.mov
Handouts
25- Learning Targets
- Teachers become familiar with the DIBELS and the
skills it measures - Teachers consider and refine current assessment
and instructional practices
26What is the impact of test administration on
students? On teachers?
27Do the measures identify the same students and
different kids? How does the data compare with
other early literacy data we collect?
28Do the measures identify the same students and
different kids? How does the data compare with
other early literacy data we collect?
Phon. Proc. Assessment PLSS / Moody Phon.
Proc. Monitoring Clay Observational Survey
Letter Identification Word Test Concepts
About Print Writing Vocabulary Dictation
Task Running Record
29One Kindergartener and one first grader who
scored small risk and low risk on all other
subtests, scored at risk on Letter Naming
Fluency. Four second graders who scored
low risk or small risk on Oral Reading and whom
teachers reported as average readers, scored
deficit on Non-word Fluency.
30Box Plots How spread out is the group? How much
did the whole group move?
Kindergarten
31First Grade
Second Grade
32How do teachers respond to this information?
33How can many sources of information be viewed
simultaneously?
34- Learning Targets
- Teachers become familiar with the DIBELS and the
skills it measures - Teachers consider and refine current assessment
and instructional practices - Evidence of Success
- Early literacy conversations contain more
references to phonemic awareness and letter
naming fluency - Drafts exist for follow-up monitoring of skills
measured in K screening and Observational Survey
which are easier to access
35(No Transcript)