Title: Reading Fluency: Phonemic Awareness, Orthography, Rapid Naming
1Reading Fluency Phonemic Awareness, Orthography,
Rapid Naming Prosody
Pamela E. Hook, Ph.D. phook_at_mghihp.edu and Christ
ine Doyle, CCC-SLP cdoyle_at_mghihp.edu MGH
Institute of Health Professions ASHA
Convention Boston 2007
2Components of the Reading Process
- Word Identification
- Comprehension
3Types of reading disabilities
LLD (Syntactic, Semantic, Pragmatic
Deficits)
DYSLEXIA (Decoding Deficits)
ADHD (Metacognitive Deficits)
Model by Carol Westby
4Definitions
Phoneme the smallest unit that serves to
distinguish one utterance from another in a
language (as the /b/ of bat and the /m/ of mat)
Phonemic Awareness an awareness of the sound
structure of ones language at the single phoneme
level involves the ability to segment, blend,
and manipulate those sounds
Phonics a teaching approach that gives attention
to the application of letter-sound
correspondences for reading and spelling
Orthography The total writing system of a
language also refers to the letter patterns
5Processes Involved in Word Identification/
Spelling
- Phonological Awareness
- Rhyming
- Blending
- Segmenting
- Manipulating
6PhonologicalAwareness
Phonemic Awareness
Word Awareness
Rhyming
Syllable Awareness
7Why is Phonemic Awareness Important?
- A childs level of phonemic awareness on
entering school is widely held to be the
strongest predictor of the success he or she will
experience learning to read. (Adams and Bruck,
1995)
However, without direct instructional support,
phonemic awareness eludes roughly 25 of middle
class first graders and substantially more of
those who come from less literacy-rich
backgrounds. (Adams, 1990)
8The Problem of Coarticulation
Why is Phonemic Awareness Difficult for Some
Children?
/d
a
g/
"dog"
C. Haynes, 1997 (Thanks to A. Liberman.)
9Phonological Awareness Developmental Continuum
Rhyming Word Awareness
Syllable blending segmentation
Onset-rime blending segmentation
Phoneme blending segmenting Phoneme
deletion manipulation (Modified from OConnor,
1998)
10Processes Involved in Word Identification/
Spelling
- Phonological Awareness
- Orthographic Processing
-
- Recognizing letter patterns that make up whole
words or parts of words.
11First Grader Across the Year (Adams, 1990)
12Four Types of Words in English Orthography
- Regular for reading and spelling (follows
unambiguous sound/symbol relationships)
Examples dog, sprint
- Regular for reading but not for spelling
(unambiguous for reading but ambiguous for
spelling)
Examples boat (could be bote for spelling)
sail (could be sale for spelling)
13Four Types of Words in English Orthography
(contd)
3. Rule/generalization based
Examples planning (follows one syllable
doubling rule) stretch (follows the final
tch generalization)
4. Irregular (part of word does not follow
sound/symbol correspondence relationships)
Examples beauty (only eau is irregular)
friend (only ie is irregular)
14What Do These Third Grade Students Know About
Phonology and Orthography?
Bear, Invernizzi, Templeton, and Johnston, 2000
15Processes Involved in Word Identification/
Spelling
- Phonological Awareness
- Orthographic Processing
- Naming Speed (RAN)
- Development of automaticity and fluency
16Double Deficit Hypothesis(Wolf, 1997, 2002)
EASY
DIFFICULT
17Comprehension Skills
Word Identification Skills
Pamela Hook, 2000
18National Research Council Report (NRC), 1998
Firm Conclusion from Recent Preventive
Researchsummarized by Torgesen, NEJC, 1999)
1. Instructional approaches that are more
phonemically explicit have the strongest impact
on the reading growth of children at-risk for
reading disabilities.
2. Intensive preventive intervention can bring
the average word reading skills of children
at-risk for reading disabilities solidly into the
average range.
3. In all studies reported thus far, a
substantial proportion of at-risk children have
remained relatively impaired in word reading
ability following the intervention.
19Bridging between Phonemic Awareness and Phonics
20Sound-Symbol Correspondence Is
The ability to produce the sound corresponding
to a letter or letter combination.
(Texas Center for Reading and Language Arts, 1998)
21Techniques for Teaching Sound-Symbol
Correspondence
- Key Words
- Story/Picture Associations
- Mouth Placement Cues
- Multi-sensory Techniques
22Bridging between Phonemic Awareness and Phonics
Multi-sensory activities that incorporate both
Phonemic Awareness and Phonics Elkonin and ROAST
23Say It And Move It-Elkonin TechniquePhonological
Segmentation
- To train phonological segmentation and careful
monitoring of sequence and exact sound/symbol
correspondence for encoding and decoding.
- student has a series of markers (colored blocks,
pennies, paper clips) - teacher says a word
- student repeats the word
- student segments the word into sounds (phonemes)
while moving one marker down to a segmented line
or series of boxes for each sound in the word
(consonant digraphs and vowel combinations are
considered one sound while consonant blends are
separated)"silent e" can be coded with a special
marker - student can then write the word if appropriate
24Segmentation (Elkonin)
/t/
/s/
/i/
sit
25Segmentation (Elkonin)
/t/
/s/
/i/
sit
26Elkonin ContDecoding
- Teacher constructs word or word part with letter
tiles or plastic letters - student moves letter tiles or plastic letters
while pronouncing the sound of each grapheme - student blends sounds to decode the word or word
part
As students progress, it may be sufficient for
them to touch each letter as they say the sound.
27Bridge to Orthography
28The Six Syllable Types
- closed notclosed in by a consonant vowel
makes its short sound - open noends in a vowel vowel makes its long
sound - silent e noteends in a vowel consonant e
vowel makes its long sound
29The Six Syllable Types (contd)
- vowel combination nailthe two vowels together
make a sound - r controlled birdcontains a vowel plus r
vowel sound is changed - consonant-l-e ta/bleat the end of a word
30open
vv
r cont
closed
c-le
silent e
31Strategies for Reading Multisyllable Words
- Rules for Syllable Divisionbased in the
phonological system - Structural Analysisbased in the morphological
system
32Strategy for Reading Multisyllable Words
- Rules for Syllable Division
- Apply to two syllable and some three-syllable
words (e.g. bas/ket po/ta/to) - There are Three Main Syllable Division Patterns
33Divide and Conquer
34Strategies for Reading Multisyllable Words
- Rules for Syllable Division
- Structural Analysis
- Apply to three-syllable words
35Definition of Structural Analysis
Structural Analysis is the study of the
morphological structure of words that includes
prefixes, stems and suffixes to enhance word
identification and meaning.
36Why is structural analysis important?
- allows students to recognize a finite number of
word parts to aid in pronunciation of
multi-syllabic words - can be linked to vocabulary work involving
stems and affixes
37Divide These Words
predictable
understanding
understanding
transporting
understanding
38Bridging between Phonics and Automaticity/ Fluency
39Automaticity/Fluency
Automaticity accuracy and rate Single
Word Level effortless identification of words
Fluency automaticity (accuracy and rate) plus
rhythm/prosody/ syntactic chunking for
comprehensiondeveloping an anticipatory set
(movement through text)
Text Level coordination of automatic word
recognition with appropriate phrasing and
expression for comprehension
40Development of Fluency
Fluency
(attention is free to comprehend)
(appropriate phrasing and expression)
Automaticity
(accuracy and speed)
Decoding Skills
BayState Readers, 2002
41Assessment of Automaticity and Fluency in Reading
Test of Word Reading Efficiency (TOWRE) Test of
Silent Word Reading Fluency (TOSWRF) Dynamic
Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills
(DIBELS) Gray Oral Reading Test-4 (GORT-4)
42Test of Word Reading Efficiency (TOWRE)Real Words
104 words total in four columns45 seconds
- go
- dog
- in
- at
- am
- it
- so
- big
- be
- do
- box
shop meat best then spell come start green want
better learn
chance instead farmer spring present strong huge b
elieve office question contact
initiate spurious particular emergency select
ion verbatim awkward wilderness grandiose ornament
penitent
43Test of Word Reading Efficiency (TOWRE)NonWords
63 words total in three columns45 seconds
- ip
- ga
- co
- ta
- om
- ig
- ni
- pim
- wum
- lat
- baf
brinbert clabom drepnort shratted plofent smu
ncrit pelnador fornalask fermabalt crenidmoke emul
batate
barp stip plin frip poth vasp meest shlee
guddy skree felly
44Test of Silent Word Reading Fluency (TOSWRF)
Draw a line between words3 minutes
- oratgetruncarisfunbluebiglikeback/
- eachmuchthreezooapplefarflywould/
- wayunderbirdfoundegglunchyardlive/
- staygirlcakeofbutpetroomlightvery/
-
- sullyseculargirddubcoerceguile/
- epochprecludepulsearvernacularquaff/
45Single Word Level
Developing Automaticity
46Training the Orthographic Processor
- Marking the Vowel in Closed and Magic-E Syllables
- If the word is a closed syllable, mark the vowel
short - If the word is a magic-e syllable, mark the vowel
long
Example take hunt clasp sole ice set
47Linking the Orthographic and Phonological
Processors
- Contrast Card Practicing the sounds of a in
Closed and silent e syllables
Say /a/ or /a/ for each word
48Sample Fischer Drill (Child reads words
horizontally as quickly as possible.)
49Sample S.P.I.R.E. Drill
?1999 Sheila Clark-Edmands Blackline Master
50Assessing Fluency
Measuring oral reading rate per minute.
(Mercer Campbell, 1998) 1 Gr. 30 -
50 wpm 2 Gr. 85 - 100 wpm 3-8 Gr.
100 - 180 wpm GORT-3 5th Gr. SS of 100 for
fluency, 137-150 wpm (Torgeson, Rashotte
Alexander, 2001) 9-12 Gr. 200 wpm -
Silent rates improve 10-20 wpm/year
Counting number and length of pauses.
Rating the prosodic quality.
Mercer, C., and Campbell, K. 1998. Great Leaps
Reading Program. Micanopy, FL K-2 Diarmuid,
Inc.
51Text Level
Developing Fluency
52General Strategies for Teaching Fluency
Selection of Text reader should be able to
decode text With 90 - 95 accuracy and not
pause on too many words.
(Adams, 1990)
Systematic Practice structured and sequential
fluency practice at all levels.
53General Strategies for Teaching Fluency (contd.)
Use a marker or pencil reader should use a
marker to aid their focus and in the flow of
their reading.
Silent Reading prereading of text silently
allows students to review text and practice any
difficult words.
Develop Anticipatory Set set the stage by
activating prior knowledge and reviewing what
might be happening help students predict text
content (Wood, Flowers, Grigorenko, 2001)
54Contrasting Approaches to Fluency Instruction
-
- GuidedRepeated Reading
-
- -(NRP, 2000)
Speeded Processing -(Breznitz, 2006)
55Text-Level Repeated Reading
- Student reads aloud a passage several times until
desired rate of reading is achieved (wpm).
- Student reads aloud another passage with same
- level of difficulty until desired rate is
again achieved (wpm).
3. Results are graphed to document fluency gains
and provide motivation.
56Chunking/Scooping Modifications of Repeated
Readings
Chunking or scooping under phrases is an
additional clinical technique that can be
employed with repeated readingsadds motor
component.
57Stone Fox Paragraph
With the heel of his moccasin Stone Fox drew a
long line in the snow. Then he walked back over
to his sled and pulled out his rifle.
58Stone Fox Paragraph,Short Phrases
59Stone Fox Paragraph,Combined Phrases
60Stone Fox Paragraph,Reduced Cueing
With the heel of his moccasin Stone Fox drew a
long line in the snow. Then he walked back
over to his sled and pulled out his rifle.
61Phrasing through Signal Words
62Introductory activities
Group signal words by function e.g., places to
go (tell where) over the hill around the
house under the tree Then find these kinds of
words in sentences, first through listening then
reading.
From Based on Alice Ansara in Never Too Late to
Read, Ann Cashwell Tuley
63Listening Activities
- What are the signal words in these sentences
telling you? - Instead of buying a pickup truck, he bought a
van. - Since he was leaving for Peru, she decided to
buy a ticket for Paris. - I like Joan but I like Peter more.
From Based on Alice Ansara in Never Too Late to
Read, Ann Cashwell Tuley
64Listening Activities (cont.)
- Finish these phrases
- He wanted to buy the Brooklyn Bridge, but . . .
- Without his help, . . .
- Throughout the night, . . .
- As a result of his decision, . . .
-
From Never Too Late to Read, Ann Cashwell Tuley
65Objective 7Signal Words in Sentences
- The boy skips in front of his home.
- 2. The pig drank the water after he woke up.
- 3. Jed mowed the lawn and planted the
flowers. - 4. Dan meets his sister next to the flagpole
every day.
66Computer Assisted Instruction and Fluency
Intervention
CAI is particularly well suited to deliver
instruction in the area of fluency.
67Sample CAI Programs
- Guided Repeated Readings
- Read Naturally (focus on paragraph level fluency
with comprehensionrepeated oral reading)
68Contrasting Approaches to Fluency Instruction
Speeded Processing -(Breznitz, 2006)
-
- GuidedRepeated Reading
-
- -(NRP, 2000)
69Speeded Processing
- Student reads a sentence or paragraph silently
and answers a comprehension question to determine
current rate where high accuracy in
comprehension is achieved
- Text disappears at rate determined by practice
selections
3. Results are monitored speed at which text
disappears increases or decreases based on
student response
70Sample CAI Programs (cont.)
- Speeded Processing
- Reading Acceleration (focus on sentence level
fluency with comprehensionspeeded text silent
reading)research version - Reading Plus (focus on paragraph level fluency
with comprehensionspeeded text silent reading)
71Theoretical Issues to consider
- Single word vs. text level
- Sentence level vs. paragraph level
- Silent reading vs. oral reading
72References
Adams, M. J. (1990) Beginning to Read Thinking
and Learning About Print, The MIT Press,
Cambridge, MA. Badian, N. A. (1995). Predicting
reading ability over the long term The changing
roles of letter-naming, phonological awareness
and orthographic processing. Annals of Dyslexia,
45, 3-25. Bear, D., Invernizzi, M.,Templeton,
S., and Johnston, F. (2000) Words Their Way
Word Study for Phonics, Vocabulary, and Spelling
Instruction (2nd Edition). Prentice Hall,
Inc. Chall, J. S. (1983) Stages of Reading
Development, McGraw-Hill, New York,
NY. Clark-Edmands, S. (1998) Specialized Program
Individualizing Reading Excellence (SPIRE).
Kennebunk, ME Progress Learning, Inc. Fischer,
P. (1994) Speed Drills for Decoding Automaticity.
Farmington, ME Oxton House. Great Leaps,
Diarmuid, Inc., Gainesville, FL
73Henry, M.K. (1995) WORDS Integrated Decoding
and Spelling Instruction Based on Word Origin and
Word Structure. Austin, TX Pro-Ed Inhot, C.
(1998) Read Naturally. St. Paul, MN Read
Naturally, Inc. Meyer, M.S. Felton, R. H.
(1999). Repeated reading to enhance fluency Old
approaches and new directions. Annals of
Dyslexia, 49, 283-306. Neuhaus Education Center,
Reading Readiness Skills, Practices for
Developing Accuracy and Fluencyhome practice
program Steere, A., Peck, C. Kahn, L. (1988)
Solving Language Difficulties. Cambridge, MA
Educators Publishing Service. Tuley, A. (1998).
Never Too Late to Read Language Skills for the
Adolescent with Dyslexia. Baltimore, MD York
Press.
Vaccariello, C. A. (1999) Tic-Tac-Read Match
(Books 1 and 2). Moline, IL LinguiSystems
Wolf, M., Bowers, P. (1999). The
Double-Deficit Hypothesis for the developmental
dyslexias. Journal of Educational Psychology, 91
(3), 1-24.