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Schoolwide Reading: Day 3

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Title: Schoolwide Reading: Day 3


1
Schoolwide Reading Day 3
  • Winter 2009

2
Agenda
  • Importance of a Core Program
  • Core Program Analysis Target Skill Review
  • Instructional Modifications (Fidelity Plus)
  • Communication and Integration
  • Schoolwide Reading Program Evaluation
  • PET-R
  • Action Planning

3
Core ProgramsAddressing the Needs of All
Learners
4
Purpose
  • Today is not about
  • Realigning your core
  • Replacing your core
  • An endorsement or condemnation of any particular
    basal program

5
Purpose (cont)
  • Today is about
  • Understanding the importance of a core program
  • Modeling a process whereby
  • You are looking at your data to determine areas
    of instructional need and focus
  • You are teaching the elements of your core
    explicitly and providing sufficient practice for
    the vast majority of your students to have mastery

6
Why Focus on a Reading Program?
  • The research literature on critical skills
    children need to be successful readers is
    compelling.
  • Much classroom practice is shaped by reading
    programs
  • Publishers have responded to the research and
    redesigned programs.
  • A program provides continuity across classrooms
    and grades in approach.
  • Many state standards are using research to
  • guide expectations.

7
Core ProgramA Core Instructional Program of
Validated Efficacy Adopted and Implemented
Schoolwide
  • A core program is the base reading program
    designed to provide instruction on the essential
    areas of reading for the majority of students
    schoolwide. In general, the core program should
    enable 80 or more of students to attain
    schoolwide reading goals.

8
Understanding the Purpose of Different Programs
  • Programs are tools that are implemented by
    teachers to ensure that children learn enough on
    time.

9
Programs Implemented with High Fidelity
  • Programs are only as good as the level of
    implementation. Not all programs are written to
    provide the guidance to do the following well.
  • To optimize program effectiveness
  • Implement the program everyday with fidelity
  • Deliver the instruction clearly, consistently,
    and explicitly (e.g., model skills and
    strategies)
  • Provide scaffolded support to students (e.g.,
    give extra support to students who need it)
  • Provide opportunities for practice with
    corrective feedback (e.g., maximize engagement
    and individualize feedback)

10
Two Basic Questions
  • Are we teaching the right things at the right
    time?
  • Are we teaching the right things well such that
    all students are learning?

11
Looking at the data
  • Always start with your data.
  • What does it say about your core instruction?
  • in terms of percent of students in the low risk
    and established categories (80 or above)
  • in terms of sustaining appropriate growth? (95)
  • If you are meeting the above criteria and other
    data substantiates your findings, there is very
    little need to do a comprehensive analysis of
    your core.

12
Kindergarten Alphabetic Principle
Approximately 40 of students are consistently
not making benchmark.
Cohort 2 2005-2006 N1,644 End of
year at Benchmark 53 2007-2008 N1,504 End of
year at Benchmark 67
13
1st Grade Alphabetic Principle
Again, approximately 40 of students did not
make the benchmark .
Cohort 2 2005-2006 N1618 Percent at Benchmark
Mid Yr 41 End of Yr 65 2008-2009 N999
Percent at Benchmark Mid Yr 58
14
Second Grade Alphabetic Principle
Yet again, fall of 2nd grade approximately 40 of
students are consistently not established in A.P.
Cohort 2
15
First Grade Alphabetic PrincipleRates of Growth
2 sounds per week
2 sounds per week
1.3 sounds per week
1.7 sounds per week
0.5 sounds per week
1.5 sounds per week
To have all become proficient, the lowest 20
would need a rate of 2 or more correct sounds
per week.
16
Data Summary
  • Spring Kindergarten and Fall First Grade are
    critical times for phonetic instruction.
  • Current core program is leaving approximately 40
    of the students behind.
  • The students left behind fall further behind.

17
Core Program AnalysisTargeted Skill Review
18
Question 1Are we teaching the right things at
the right times?
  • Points to consider
  • Sequencing of skills
  • Preskills taught before the strategy itself
  • Instances that are consistent with the strategy
    are introduced before the exceptions
  • High utility skills are introduced before less
    useful ones
  • Easy skills are taught before more difficult ones
  • Strategies and information that are likely to be
    confused are not introduced at the same time.

Carnine, Silbert, Kameenui, Tarver, 2004
19
Question 1 (continued)Are we teaching the right
things at the right times?
  • Tools that are helpful
  • Curriculum Maps
  • Oregon Reading First
  • Florida Center for Reading Research
  • A Consumers Guide to Analyzing a Core Reading
    Program

20
Curriculum Maps (Oregon Reading First 180 day
pacing guide)
21
How to Read Curriculum Maps
Months
X Instructional Emphasis
22
Deb Simmons talks about the development of the
Oregon Reading First Curriculum Maps
23
What to do if your core is completely inadequate?
  • Cry
  • Purchase a new core
  • Provide a series of supplemental instruction
    programs to replace or augment the core
  • Important reminder Review the scope and
    sequence of each supplemental program and its fit
    to an overall instructional plan.

24
Question 2Are we teaching the right things well
such that all students are learning?
  • Points to consider
  • Are the lessons
  • Explicitly taught?
  • Modeled?
  • Scaffolded?
  • Practiced to mastery?
  • Reviewed across time?
  • Are we maximizing instructional engaged time by
    attending to
  • Focus on Big Ideas?
  • Use of time?
  • Classroom management?
  • Increasing the opportunities for students to
    respond and receive corrective feedback?

25
Question 2Are we teaching the right things well
such that all students are learning?
  • Helpful Tools
  • Training information from Schoolwide Reading Day
    2 (i.e. Systematic Explicit Instruction
    Definitions Guidelines)
  • A Consumers Guide to Analyzing a Core Reading
    Program

26
Targeted Skill ReviewKindergarten Phonics
27
Steps for Targeted Review
  • Respond to your data
  • Gather appropriate materials
  • Clarify subjective terminology and concepts
  • Use advance organizers from the basal if
    available
  • Designate a note taker to document findings
  • Summarize key findings
  • Identify instructional enhancements
  • Establish an action plan

28
Respond to Your Data
  • Data Summary
  • Spring Kindergarten and Fall First Grade are
    critical times for phonetic instruction.
  • Current core program is leaving approximately 40
    of the students behind.
  • The students left behind fall further behind.

29
Gather Appropriate Materials
  • Core teacher materials
  • A Consumers Guide to Analyzing A Core Reading
    Program
  • District and Oregon Reading First Curriculum Maps
  • Sticky notes, pens, pencils
  • Action Plan

30
Center on Teaching and LearningCollege of
Education, University of OregonA Consumers
Guide to Analyzing a Core Reading Program Grades
K-3 A Critical Elements AnalysisAugust,
2006Deborah C. Simmons, Ph.D.Texas AM
University Edward J. Kameenui, Ph.D.University
of Oregon
http//oregonreadingfirst.uoregon.edu/inst_curr_re
view.html
31
Focus of the Consumers Guide
  • A key assumption of a core program is that it
    will (a) address all grade-level content
    standards and (b) ensure that high priority
    standards are taught in sufficient depth,
    breadth, and quality that all learners will
    achieve or exceed expected levels of proficiency.
    All standards are not equally important. Our
    critical elements analysis focuses on those
    skills and strategies essential for early
    reading.

(August 2006, p. 4)
32
Critical Elements by Grade Level
  • Kindergarten
  • Phonological and Phonemic Awareness
  • Letter-Sound Association
  • Decoding
  • Irregular Words
  • Vocabulary
  • Listening Comprehension
  • Third Grade
  • Phonics and Word Analysis
  • Text Reading and Fluency
  • Vocabulary
  • Reading Comprehension

A review of the criterion for third grade
reveals that the essential elements hold true
for fourth through sixth grade.
33
Using This Tool Today.
Used for whole program analysis prior to adoption
For this task, the criterion are guiding
statements to look critically at systematic and
explicit teaching elements
These columns represent equally distributed
points in time later in the year for
each criterion statement. For example if the
initial instruction for criterion 1 is in week
10 and there are 30 total weeks of instruction
in the year, the middle column would look at
week 20 and the final column would look at week
30.
34
Kindergarten ExampleAlphabetic Principle
35
Clarification of Terminology
Need to agree on the definitions of subjective
terminology.
36
Clarification of Terminology
  • Explicit
  • Teacher Models and Explains
  • I do it.
  • We do it. We do it. We do it.
  • Teacher provides frequent feedback to students.
  • You do ituntil it is automatic.

37
Clarification of Terminology
  • Frequent and Cumulative Review
  • Ongoing sufficient practice such that skills are
    not lost across time.
  • Practice that allows for integration of the skill
    into more complex tasks.

38
Modeling the Targeted Skill Review
39
Modeling Kindergarten Letter-Sound Associations
40
Modeling KindergartenDecoding Instruction
41
Summarization of Key Findings
42
Summarization of Key Findings (continued)
43
Your Turn Gathering Materials and Getting
Organized
  • Basal Teachers Editions for First or Fourth
    Grade
  • Handout Entitled A Consumers Guide
  • Identify a recorder for this mornings work

44
Your Turn
Team Time
  • Read through the Phonics and Word Analysis
    Instruction elements and note possible subjective
    terms and instructional concepts
  • Develop common specific descriptions of these
    terms and concepts.

45
First Grade Phonics and Word Analysis Instruction
Need to agree on subjective terminology.
46
Clarification of Terminology
  • Systematically
  • Preskills of a strategy are taught before the
    strategy itself is presented.
  • Instances that are consistent with strategy are
    introduced before exceptions.
  • High utility skills (the ones students are going
    to use more often) are introduced before less
    useful ones.
  • Easy skills are taught before more difficult
    ones.
  • Strategies and information likely to be confused
    are not introduced at the same time.

47
Clarification of Terminology
  • Explicit
  • Teacher Models and Explains
  • I do it.
  • We do it. We do it. We do it.
  • Teacher provides frequent feedback to students.
  • You do ituntil it is automatic.

48
Clarification of Terminology
  • Repeated Opportunities
  • Ongoing sufficient practice such that skills are
    not lost across time.
  • Practice that allows for integration of the skill
    into more complex tasks.

49
Helpful HintsReviewing the Teacher Manuals
  • Look for advance organizers such as
    Theme-at-a-glance and Weekly Lesson Overview
    to aid in determining what is taught when.
  • Most basals have 30 weeks of instruction divided
    into themes or units. You need to identify the
    first time a skill or routine is introduced and
    then find two other equally spaced lessons
    (mid-year, end-of-year) to check for continuity
    across the year.

50
Team Time
  • Complete numbers 2, 3, 8 on the Phonics and
    Word Analysis Instruction Section of the
    Consumers Guide for First Grade

Fourth Grade do numbers 1, 2, 3 on the Phonics
and Word Analysis Instruction Section of the
Third Grade Section of the consumers guide.
51
FIDELITY PLUSInstructional Enhancements
52
Guiding Questions
  • What did you find?
  • Are the instructional routines systematic,
    explicit, appropriately sequenced?
  • Is there sufficient modeling, practice,
    opportunities for feedback, and ongoing review?
  • If so but your data suggests that too many
    students are not getting it, are they being done
    with fidelity?
  • How do you know?
  • Has there been adequate training and professional
    development?

53
Instructional Enhancements
54
Action Plan
55
Team Time
  • Target skills, routines, and sequencing for
    instructional enhancements.
  • Develop enhancements
  • Commit enhancements to an action plan

56
Communication and Integration
57
Communication Flow Chart
  • SIT provides priorities for action
  • Work Groups provide monthly data and
    action reports to SIT.

Central Office
Lit. wk. Group
Math wk. Group
School Improvement Leadership (incl. MiBLSi
team, work group chairs, etc.)
  • SIT identifies and passes along GL issues to
    appropriate GL.
  • GL reports back on action taken, results, needs.

Beh. wk. Group
  • SIT provide info, training, and reminds staff of
  • priorities.
  • Staff informs SIT of needs

All Staff
GRADE LEVELS
58
Team Time
  • During Schoolwide Reading Day 2, your team
    continued to work on your schools communication
    and integration plan.
  • Today, focus on the communication and integration
    plan that will occur between the Leadership Team
    and grade levels.
  • How will you involve teachers in the process of
    conducting a targeted skill review?

59
Schoolwide Reading Program Evaluation
60
Goal of a Schoolwide Reading Program
  • Build the capacity, communication, and commitment
    to ensure that all children are successful
    readers.

61
Teaching Reading Requires Expertise
  • Quality in Education
  • Quality is never an accident it is always the
    result of high intention, sincere effort,
    intelligent direction, and skillful execution it
    represents the wise choice of many alternatives.
  • Willa A. Foster

62
Teaching Reading Should be Guided by a Scientific
Knowledge Base
  • Base educational decisions on evidence, not
    ideology (Learning First Alliance, 1998)
  • Promote adoption of programs based on what works.
  • If there is little evidence about a particular
    program, rely on the evidence regarding the
    approach to instruction.

63
Teaching Reading Should be Guided by a Scientific
Knowledge Base
  • Three Major Sources of Scientific Knowledge
  • Beginning To Read Thinking and Learning About
    Print (Adams, 1990).
  • Preventing Reading Difficulties In Young Children
    (National Research Council, 1998).
  • Teaching Children To Read An Evidence-based
    Assessment of The Scientific Research Literature
    On Reading And Its Implications For Reading
    Instruction (National Reading Panel, 2000).

64
Other Resources
65
What We Know From Science and Research
  • We know more about reading difficulties than all
    other learning difficulties put together
    (Stanovich, 1999).
  • We have a solid and converging knowledge base
    about what works.
  • We know that early intervention can prevent or
    ameliorate the effect of early reading risk for
    most students (National Reading Panel, 2000).
  • We know the skills that enable successful
    readers. Moreover, we know that these skills can
    be taught!

66
Summary
What do we know and what guidance can we gain
from scientifically based reading research?
  • Teaching reading is both essential and urgent.
  • Teaching reading is complex.
  • Teaching reading requires expertise.
  • Teaching reading should be guided by a scientific
    knowledge base.

67
A School-wide Beginning Reading Model
  • Is for ALL Students
  • Research into Practice
  • Build internal capacity
  • Building specific
  • Maximize Readers by end of 3rd grade

68
Objectives What You Will Learn and Do
  • The objectives of this section are to
  • Understand the components of the Schoolwide
    Beginning Reading Model
  • Understand the features and procedures of the
    Planning and Evaluation Tool (PET-R)
  • Identify critical goals and outcomes in beginning
    reading
  • Evaluate current reading goals, objectives, and
    priorities by school using the PET-R
  • Use DIBELS data from each schools Fall
    Assessment Collection in development of
    schoolwide Reading Plan

69
Using the PET-R to Evaluate and Plan a Schoolwide
Reading Programs
70
Planning Evaluation Tool(Simmons Kameenui,
2003)
  • The Planning and Evaluation Tool-Revised (PET-R)
    is designed to help schools take stock of their
    strengths and areas of improvement in developing
    a schoolwide beginning reading plan.
  • The items and criteria in the PET-R represent the
    ideal conditions and total to 100 points.
  • Score reflects how you are currently doing as a
    school in your instructional practices. This tool
    is designed to assist in your planning and
    implementation.

71
Overview of the PET-R
  • Evaluation Sections reflect critical components
    of a Schoolwide Model
  • Goals, Objectives, Priorities
  • Assessment
  • Instructional Program and Materials
  • Instructional Time
  • Differentiated Instruction/Grouping/Scheduling
  • Administration/Organization/Communication
  • Professional Development

72
Completing the PET-R
  • PET-R can be completed individually or in school
    teams
  • Evaluation criteria Each item has a value of 0,
    1, or 2 to indicate the level of implementation
  • Some items are designated with a factor, (e.g.,
    x2). Items with this designation are considered
    more important in the overall reading program.
    Multiply your rating by the number in parentheses
    and record that number in the blank to the left
    of the item.
  • Documentation of Evidence In the right-hand
    column of the table for each section, document
    the evidence to support your rating for each
    item.
  • Ex. What does it look like? How would an outsider
    know?

73
PET-RSection 1 Goals, Objectives, Priorities
  • Goals for reading achievement are clearly
    defined, anchored to research, prioritized in
    terms of importance to student learning, commonly
    understood by users, consistently employed as
    instructional guides by teachers of reading.

74
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75
Goals, Objectives, and Priorities
  • Example Statement
  • I have the same expectations for a students
    reading skills as my peers who teach the same
    grade.
  • Nonexample Statement
  • I am not sure what my fellow teachers are doing.
    I assume they do the same things that I do.

76
Example and Nonexample Statements(Can you tell
which are which?)
  • I know exactly what my students should be able to
    do at each point of the school year and can
    describe what that looks like to anyone who asks.
  • I believe that each child learns differently and
    that they will all eventually learn at their own
    pace.
  • I know what to expect a child to be able to do
    when they enter my room in the fall and I know
    what the next years teacher expects them to come
    in with as well.
  • I understand the urgency and importance of having
    all students reach the goals at the right time.
  • I teach the curriculum but some kids are just
    better readers than others.

77
GoalsA Set of Strategic, Research-Based,
Measurable Goals to Guide Instruction,
Assessment, and Learning
  • Specific goals that include targeted, measurable,
    outcomes with a precise time frame.
  • Reading and literacy goals aligned with big
    ideas in beginning reading.
  • Curriculum-based or standards-based 180-day
    pacing maps.
  • Clear goals and expectations for each grade
  • Reliance on research to determine what to teach
    and when to teach it

78
Goals
  • Goals that are specific include targeted,
    measurable outcomes (how much/how well)
  • Goals that are specific include a precise time
    frame (by when)

I will complete 80 of my report cards by the
time The Amazing Race begins.
79
Goals Aligned with Big Ideas in Reading
  • Phonemic Awareness
  • Alphabetic Principle
  • Accuracy and Fluency with Connected Text
  • Vocabulary Development
  • Comprehension

80
Team Time
Activity Complete Section 1 of the PET-R Use the
PET-R to Evaluate a Schoolwide Reading Program
Objectives, Goals, Priorities Review and Complete
each item As a school team, report one common
score for each item and document the information
sources available to substantiate the score
reported.
81
PET-RSection II Assessment
  • Instruments and procedures for assessing reading
    achievement are clearly specified, measure
    essential skills, provide reliable and valid
    information about student performance, inform
    instruction in important, meaningful, and
    maintainable ways.

82
Section II Assessment
83
Assessment
  • Example Statements
  • I receive and use the results of assessments
    promptly to differentiate instruction.
  • Nonexamples statements
  • All of my students are assessed but I rarely see
    the resulting data.

84
Examples and NonexamplesCan you tell which are
which?
  • I assess my students but I am not sure how to use
    the information to adjust my instruction.
  • I only use assessments that are efficient and
    maximize my teaching time.
  • I only use assessments that measure meaningful
    student outcomes.
  • I assess my students in lots of skills but I am
    not sure which ones are most important.

85
Purposes of Assessment in the Schoolwide Model
  • Teaching without assessment is like driving
    a car at night without headlights.
  • Assessment for all children must
  • Focus on essential, important skills
  • Be instructionally relevant
  • Be efficient to administer
  • Be sensitive to change in skill performance
  • Measure fluency of performance

86
Reading Assessment For Different Purposes
  • An effective, comprehensive reading program
    includes reading assessments for four purposes
  • Outcome Provides a bottom-line evaluation of
    the effectiveness of the reading program in
    relation to established performance levels.
  • Screening Designed as a first step in
    identifying children who may be at risk for
    delayed development of academic failure and in
    need of further diagnosis of their need for
    special services or additional reading
    instruction.

87
Reading Assessment for Different Purposes
  • An effective, comprehensive reading program
    includes reading assessments for four purposes
  • Diagnosis -- helps teachers plan instruction by
    providing in-depth information about students
    skills and instructional needs.
  • Progress monitoring Determines through frequent
    measurement if students are making adequate
    progress or need more intervention to achieve
    grade-level reading outcomes

88
Relation of DIBELS to Purposes of Assessment
  • Utility of DIBELS

89
The Need for Results-Focused Assessment
  • Instructional Time is Precious
  • DIBELS measures do not assess all aspects of
    reading
  • Short duration fluency-based measures
  • Some Skills are More Important Than Others
  • Assesses skills predictive of later reading
    proficiency
  • Provides timely feedback to enable responsive
    intervention
  • Allows early identification of students who need
    instructional support

90
Team Time
Complete Section II of the PET-R 1. Review and
Complete each item 2. As a school team, report
one common score for each item and document the
information sources available to substantiate the
score reported.
91
PET-R
  • Section III
  • Instructional Programs and Materials
  • The instructional programs and materials have
    documented efficacy, are drawn from research
    based findings and practices, align with state
    standards and benchmarks, and support a full
    range of learners.

92
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93
Instructional Programs and Materials
  • Example Statement
  • We analyzed the core basal as it relates to
    important skills and timelines and are sure it is
    systematically laid out to explicitly teach the
    important skills at the right time and in the
    right sequence.
  • Nonexample Statement
  • I am not sure how the skills and sequencing of
    the program we use match research recommendations

94
Examples and NonexamplesCan you tell which is
which?
  • I use the curriculum that is provided but I am
    not aware of any information on how effective it
    is.
  • We have identified and acquired programs of
    proven effectiveness to accelerate learning in
    areas where students skills are lagging.

95
Schoolwide Reading Support Prevention/Interventi
on
based on Kame'enui, Simmons, Coyne, Harn (2003)
96
Why Focus on Big Ideas?
  • Intensive instruction means teach less more
    thoroughly.
  • If you dont know what is important, everything
    in.
  • If everything is important, you will try to do
    everything.
  • If you try to do everything, you will be asked
    to do more.
  • If you do everything you wont have time to
    figure out what is important.

97
Evaluating Core Programs Instructional Content
  • Essential elements of scientifically based
    programs include
  • Phonemic awareness instruction
  • Systematic, explicit phonics instruction
  • Fluency instruction
  • Vocabulary instruction
  • Comprehension instruction

98
Changing Emphasis of Big Ideas
99
How Do We Enhance Instruction and Learning?
Alter the fewest number of factors possible that
provide the greatest return.
  • Remember
  • The focus must be on factors over which you have
    jurisdiction
  • Program program emphasis
  • Time (opportunities to learn)
  • Grouping structures
  • Quality of instruction program implementation

100
How Do We Enhance Instruction Learning?
  • Caution If you change the research based
    elements of the program, your students may not
    achieve the same results as the students in the
    research you hope to replicate.
  • For example, the 3 research based strategies of
    Read Naturally are
  • Teacher Modeling, Repeated Reading, and Progress
    Monitoring.
  • What might we expect
    if the teacher
  • decided not to have the students
    listen to the tape?
  • decided not to have the students
    read the story more than once?
  • decided to have the students
    read the stories but not time
  • them before and
    after they practice?

101
How do we enhance instruction and learning?
  • Features of well-designed programs include
  • Explicitness of instruction for teacher and
    student
  • Making it obvious for the student
  • Systematic supportive instruction
  • Building and developing skills
  • Opportunities for practice
  • Modeling and practicing the skill
  • Cumulative Review
  • Revisiting and practicing skills to increase
    strength
  • Integration of Big Ideas
  • Linking essential skills

102
PET-RSection IV Instructional Time
  • A sufficient amount of time is allocated for
    instruction and the time allocated is used
    effectively.

103
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104
Instructional Time
  • Example Statement
  • I know that I can keep focused on instruction
    during our reading block because that time is
    protected from all interruptions.
  • Nonexample Statement
  • It is not uncommon for someone to knock on my
    door or make an announcement over the intercom
    when I am teaching reading.

105
Examples and NonexamplesCan you tell which are
which?
  • All teachers in our school provide at least 90
    minutes of literacy instruction daily.
  • I minimize downtime and time spent in transitions
    and provide students with many opportunities each
    day to practice important skills.
  • I dont get to teach reading everyday because of
    interruptions or other things in the schedule.
  • I know the most effective methods to teach the
    important skills.

106
Instruction Time
  • Schoolwide plan established to allocate
    sufficient reading time and coordinate resources
  • Reading time prioritized and protected from
    interruption
  • Provides a clear and consistent message that
    reading improvement is important and a schoolwide
    priority
  • Maximizes the likelihood that students will
    receive uninterrupted (and therefore engaged)
    reading time
  • Ensures that all students get sufficient time
    scheduled for reading instruction
  • Ensures that time for reading instruction is
    consistent for students across classrooms
  • Increases the ability to use and coordinate
    resources and staff

107
Instruction Time
  • Instructional time allocated to reading should be
    dictated by the schoolwide plan
  • Examples of this may be the schoolwide decision
    to allocate additional time beyond the 90 minute
    reading block
  • A schoolwide plan reduces the variance in
    instructional time among teachers

108
Sample Time Allocations Grade 2
109
Maximizing students reading engaged time is
the biggest single indicator of reading
achievement.
Time as a factor on student learning
110
A Schoolwide Beginning Reading Model
  • Ongoing progress monitoring and instructional
    adjustments that allow for differentiated and
    individualized instruction for EACH student
  • Schoolwide framework or infrastructure that
    supports comprehensive and coordinated reading
    goals, assessment and instruction for ALL students

111
Team Time
Complete Sections III-IV of the Planning
Evaluation Tool 1. Review and Complete each
item 2. As a school team, report one common score
for each item and document the information
sources available to substantiate the score
reported.
112
PET-RSection V Differentiated
Instruction/Grouping/Scheduling
  • Optimize learning for all students by tailoring
    instruction to meet current levels of knowledge
    and prerequisite skills and organizing
    instruction to enhance student learning.

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Differentiated Instruction/Grouping/Scheduling
  • Example Statement
  • I teach using a combination of whole group and
    small group settings based on the needs of the
    students and the skill being taught.
  • Nonexample Statement
  • I typically use whole group and independent seat
    work for instruction.

115
Examples and NonexamplesCan you tell which is
which?
  • I provide significant additional opportunities
    for practice and feedback on lagging skills for
    students who are behind.
  • Extra systematic instruction and practice for
    students who are behind is the job of the reading
    specialist.
  • I believe that each student learns at a different
    pace and they all will eventually will get it.
  • I extend learning for those who already have
    mastered the critical skills.
  • I believe that all kids can read at grade level
    and see it as my job to get them there.

116
Instruction Grouping Instruction, Grouping, and
Scheduling That Optimizes Learning
  • Differentiated instruction aligned with student
    needs
  • Creative and flexible grouping used to maximize
    performance
  • Note Use student data from benchmark and
    progress monitoring assessments to guide you in
    grouping and scheduling

117
Differentiated Instruction Aligned with Student
Needs
  • Examples
  • Students are grouped based on skill level
    (assessment results)
  • Specified intervention and supplemental programs
    are implemented depending on student needs and
    profiles
  • Groups are reorganized based on changes in
    student skill as assessed by regular progress
    monitoring data with the DIBELS

118
Data Used to Make Instructional Decisions
  • Are we meeting our goals?
  • Did we do better this year than last year?
  • Is our core curriculum and instruction working
    for most students?
  • How do we match instructional resources to
    educational needs?
  • Which children need additional resources to be
    successful?
  • Which children need which skills?
  • How well is intervention/instruction working?
  • Is instruction working for some groups but not
    others?
  • Is intervention effective?

119
Instructional Adjustments
  • Ongoing Instructional Adjustments Based on
    Assessment Data to Meet the Needs of Each Student
  • Instructional programs, grouping, and time are
    adjusted and intensified according to learner
    performance and needs.
  • Making instruction more responsive to learner
    performance

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Instructional Adjustments
Grouping Reduce group size
121
Instructional Adjustments
Program Efficacy Preteach components of core
program
122
Instructional Adjustments
Coordination of Instruction Meet frequently to
examine progress
123
Flexible Grouping Used to Maximize Performance
  • Grouping Options
  • Students
  • Within class, across class, across grade
  • Size
  • Whole class, small group (e.g. 3-8), one-on-one
  • Organization
  • Teacher led, peer tutoring, cooperative learning
  • Location
  • In classroom, outside of classroom

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Instruction Grouping
  • To effectively differentiate instruction, schools
    need to
  • Use assessment results to determine student needs
    and profiles
  • Group students based on instructional needs
  • Regroup students as performance changes
  • DIBELS Class List reports will be helpful in
    making grouping decisions

125
Team Time
Complete Section V of the Planning Evaluation
Tool 1. Review and Complete each item 2. As a
school team, report one common score for each
item and document the information sources
available to substantiate the score reported.
126
PET-RSection VI Administration/Organization/Comm
unication
  • Strong instructional leadership maintains a focus
    on high-quality instruction, organizes and
    allocates resources to support reading, and
    establishes mechanisms to communicate reading
    progress and practices.

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Administration/Organization/ Communication
  • Example Statement
  • Grade level and/or teacher teams exist and meet
    regularly to analyze student progress data and
    plan instruction.
  • Nonexample Statement
  • We dont talk about or promote specific reading
    goals. The teachers are all professionals and
    have their own ways to teach students.

129
Examples and NonexamplesCan you tell which are
which?
  • We have never shared information on reading
    progress with our board.
  • My principal and/or leadership team monitors the
    progress data of our students on a regular basis
    and provides direction or support when necessary.
  • We regularly share our data with the school board
    and keep them up to date on the effectiveness of
    our reading program.
  • My principal trusts that everybody is doing a
    good job in teaching reading and rarely looks at
    our data.
  • Classroom, Title I, Special Education, and
    Reading Support Teams do not systematically
    coordinate their efforts for the instruction of
    all students

130
Leadership Support
  • Strong and Informed Instructional Leaders
    Maintain Focus and Establish Mechanisms to
    Support Reading Progress
  • Administrators develop a coherent plan for
    reading instruction
  • Leaders organize resources and personnel to
    support reading instruction
  • A communication plan coordinated with all
    individuals responsible for teaching reading

131
PET-RSection VII Professional Development
  • Adequate and ongoing professional development is
    determined and available to support reading
    instruction.

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Professional Development
  • Example Statement
  • The principal or another teacher regularly
    observes and provides feedback for me to improve
    my skills.
  • Nonexample Statement
  • I seldom collaborate with others on reading
    instruction nor have I been observed with the
    specific intent to review effective instructional
    practices in reading.

134
Examples and NonexamplesCan you tell which is
which?
  • I have been adequately trained to teach reading
    effectively to the full range of students in my
    room.
  • We have a choice as to what professional
    development opportunities we take advantage of.
    There is no mandatory systematic plan to support
    improved reading instruction.
  • Professional development in our building goes
    beyond a workshop. We actually try what we have
    learned and monitor the effectiveness of the
    change.

135
Professional DevelopmentAn Integrated System of
Research-Based Professional Development and
Resource Allocation
  • Ongoing professional development is established
    to support teachers in the implementation of
    programs.
  • Time is allocated for educators to analyze, plan,
    and refine instruction.
  • Professional development efforts are explicitly
    linked to scientifically based programs and
    practices.

136
Team Time
Complete Sections VI and VII of the PET-R 1.
Review and Complete each item. 2. As a school
team, report a common score for each item and
document the information sources available to
substantiate the score reported.
137
Action Planning Using the PET-R
138
Team Time
  • School Summary Score
  • After your team evaluates current practices on
    all 7 sections, proceed to page 11 in the PET-R
  • Summarize the total score for each element and
    write that score plus the percent attained of the
    possible total in the spaces provided
  • Sum your total school score and percentage
  • Retain a copy of this document for planning
  • Turn in one copy of page 11

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Team Time
  • Reading Action Plans
  • Locate the MiBLSi Master Action plan in your
    binder
  • With your team, review the scores on the PET
    Individual Summary to identify three areas in
    which you want to focus for the coming year
  • Example goals include
  • Establish and implement a schoolwide assessment
    system.
  • Refine and prioritize reading goals objectives.
  • Select, adopt, and implement a core reading
    program
  • Once refined, document the goal (what), who will
    be responsible, and when the goal will be
    accomplished
  • Retain a copy of this document for planning and
    make a copy to submit

140
Assignments
  • Practice the process of conducting a targeted
    skill review with the same grade level you worked
    on today. Then discuss the findings with staff
    before engaging other grade levels in the
    process.
  • Have entire staff complete the portion(s) of the
    PET-R that your team identified as a priority for
    action.
  • Finalize your buildings communication and
    integration plan.
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