Title: Middle School Reading
1Middle School Reading
- MiBLSi
- Michigan Integrated Behavior and Learning Support
Initiative
- Schoolwide Reading Day
- September 2007
2Acknowledgements
- Based on the work of
- Alliance for Education Reading Next
- (Biancarosa Snow, 2004)
- Anita ArcherArcherteach_at_aol.com
- Center on Instruction Academic Literacy
Instruction for Adolescents A guidance document
from the Center on Instruction
- (Torgesen, et. al., 2007)
- Developed by
- MiBLSi State Trainers
- Diane Bussema, Lynn Dykstra, Gloria Johnson, Kim
St. Martin, John Vail, and Jim Weaver
- MiBLSi Directors
- Steve Goodman, Margie McGlinchey, and Kathryn
Schallmo
3- This document was produced and distributed
through an IDEA Mandated Activities Project for
Michigans Integrated Behavior and Learning
Support Initiative (MiBLSi) awarded by the
Michigan Department of Education. The opinions
expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the
position or policy of the Michigan Department of
Education, the Michigan State Board of Education,
or the U.S. Department of Education, and no
endorsement is inferred. This document is in the
public domain and may be copied for further
distribution when proper credit is given. For
further information or inquiries about this
project, contact the Michigan Department of
Education, Office of Special Education and Early
Intervention Services, P.O. Box 30008, Lansing,
Michigan 48909.
4Setting Group Expectations
- To make this day the best possible, we need your
assistance and participation
- Please allow others to listen
- Turn off cell phones and pagers
- Limit conversations at your table to allow others
the opportunity to hear the presenters
- Share air time
- Active participation
- Please ask questions
- Participate with the come back together signal
- Take care of your own needs
5Todays Agenda
- Components of a Schoolwide Reading Model
- Research Summary of Middle School Literacy
- Goals, Objectives, Priorities
- Assessment
- Lunch
- Instructional Program and Materials
- Instructional Time
- Differentiated Instruction/Grouping/Scheduling
- Administration/Organization/Communication
- Professional Development
- Action Planning
6Literacy Crisis
7Reading Skills are Dangerously Low
- More than 8 million students in grades 4-12 are
struggling readers (U.S. DOE, 2003)
- 2 in 3 high school students read below grade
level (U.S. DOE, 2003)
- 1 in 4 high school students reads far below grade
level (U.S. DOE, 2003)
8Reading Skills are Dangerously Low
- Every school day, more than 3000 students drop
out of high school (Alliance for Excellent
Education, 2003)
- Only 70 of high school students graduate on time
with a regular diploma
- Over 75 of students who drop out of school
ascribe major significance to the difficulties
experienced in learning to read (Lyon, 2001)
- Among the prison population, 70 demonstrate
literacy at the two lowest levels of reading
proficiency (NIFL, 1998)
912th Grade Reading2 in 3 students are not
proficient in Reading.
66
62
U.S. Department of Education 2003
108th Grade Reading
71
71
Nations Report Card 2005
11What Are the Results?Low reading levels lead to
high dropout rates.
- Students in the bottom quartile of achievement
are 20 times more likely to dropout than students
in the top quartile.
20 X
Carnevale 2001 Kamil 2003 Snow Biancarosa
2003.
12What Are the Results?What happens to entering
9th graders four years later
Alliance for Excellent Education
37 Graduate from High School Not College-R
eady
29 Dropout of High School
34 Graduate from High School College-Ready
Greene Winters 2005
13What Does the Reading DataTell Us?
- On average, students of color and poor students
are more likely to read at below basic levels, or
far below grade level.
- Where a student lives is not an indicator of
their reading performance. Students in rural,
suburban, and urban areas alike struggle to read
at grade level.
14Indeed, the fundamental finding from the
Education Trust studies is that however important
demographic variables may appear in their
association with student achievement, teaching
quality is the most dominant factor in
determining student success.
Education Trust, 2001
15Current Literacy Policies and Practices Do Not
Support Adolescents
- Reading First Program under NCLB supports
research-based programs in grades K-3
- At fourth grade text changes and teachers are
less prepared to incorporate literacy instruction
into classes.
- Fourth-grade slump- a drop in the achievement and
reading comprehension skills of poor, minority,
and students learning English.
16Reading Next-In addition to the Reading First
program for students in grade K-3, the nation
needs a Reading Next program to extend the focus
on quality literacy instruction for students in
grades 4-12.
Available for download _at_ www.all4ed.org
17Team Activity
- Discuss the state of literacy proficiency of your
own students.
- List the needs you see and the skills that
students are lacking on the chart paper.
18What is the Solution?
19Adolescent Literacy Policy
- Improvements to
- Adolescent Literacy must involve both Instruction
and Infrastructure.
2015 Elements of Successful Adolescent Literacy
Program
- Instructional Improvements
- Direct, explicit comprehension instruction
- Effective instructional principles embedded in
content
- Motivation and self-directed learning
- Text-based collaborative learning
- Strategic tutoring
- Diverse texts
- Intensive writing
- Technology component
- Ongoing formative assessment of students
- Infrastructure Improvements
- Extended time for literacy
- Professional development
- Ongoing summative assessment of students and
programs
- Teacher teams
- Leadership
- A comprehensive and coordinated literacy program
Reading Next Alliance for Excellent Education
2004
2115 Elements of Successful Adolescent Literacy
Program
CURRICULUM INSTRUCT
ION Direct, explicit comprehension i
nstruction Effective instructional p
rinciples embedded in content
Motivation and self-directed
learning Text-based collaborative le
arning Technology component
Strategic tutoring Diverse te
xts Intensive writing
ASSESSMENT Ongoing formative assessment
of students Ongoing summative assessment of
students and programs
Academic Literacy
LITERACY ENVIRONMENT RESOURCES
Extended time for literacy
Professional development
Teacher teams Leadership
22Adolescent Literacy Instruction Basics
- The following series of slides are based on the
work of the Center on Instruction in the report
Academic Literacy Instruction for Adolescents,
2007
Available for download at www.centeroninstruction.
org
23Enough is already known about adolescent
literacy both the nature of the problems of
struggling readers and the types of interventions
and approaches to address these needs in order
to act immediately on a broad scale
24Three Goals for Improving Academic Literacy in
Adolescents
- Increase all students overall levels of reading
proficiency
- Ensure students who have achieved grade-level
reading standards by the end of 3rd grade
continue to meet increasingly difficult standards
in middle and high schools - Help students who are reading below grade-level
standards acquire the skills and knowledge
required to meet those standards.
- Note they must make multiple years growth for
each year of instruction if they are to
eventually achieve grade-level standards in
reading.
25Focus on Instruction The Six Essential Areas
- Reading Fluency
- Vocabulary Knowledge
- Domain-specific and domain-general content
knowledge
- Higher-level reasoning and thinking skills
- Cognitive strategies that can be applied to
enhance reading comprehension
- Motivation and engagement
26Focus of Instruction
- Reading fluency
- Absolute level does not change much after 6th
grade (approx. 150 wcpm).
- Significant increase in sight vocabulary to
maintain fluency level
- Most efficient to use phonological and
morphographic strategies to identify new words
- Also need high levels of reading practice in
appropriate leveled text
27Focus of Instruction
- Vocabulary knowledge
- Expanding knowledge needs to be supported in two
principle ways
- Inferring meaning from context
- Knowledge of word parts (morphemes)
- Explicit and systematic instruction with
carefully selected new vocabulary is essential,
especially for struggling readers
28Focus of Instruction
- Domain-specific and domain-general content
knowledge
- Acquired through
- broad and deep reading
- explicit instruction
- Students who cannot read grade-level text
proficiently especially need more powerful
instruction from their content-area teachers
because they are less able to acquire critical
conceptual and factual knowledge from the text
themselves. -
29Focus of Instruction
- Higher-level reasoning and thinking skills
- Students must grow in their ability to make
inferences, draw conclusions, and engage in
critical thinking
- Students ability to think deeply about what they
are reading must be stimulated and supported by
their classroom experiences grades 4 through
12
30Focus of Instruction
- Cognitive strategies that can be applied
specifically to enhance reading comprehension
- Proficient readers are much more likely to use a
variety of purposeful strategies to enhance their
comprehension
- Rereading
- Paraphrasing
- Make explicit connections to prior knowledge
- Underlining and note-taking
- Visualization
- These can be taught directly by all teachers!
More effective instruction and support in the
use of multiple, coordinated reading
comprehension strategies is required in order to
improve
31Focus of Instruction
- Motivation and engagement
- Motivation and interest in reading declines after
early elementary gradesparticularly for student
who have struggled during the initial stages of
learning to read. - This results in
- Not reading as much
- Less engaged when they read
- Research-based strategies for enhancing
adolescents motivation and engagement in reading
must be a part of any comprehensive plan for
improving levels of academic literacy.
32Partner Activity
- Take a minute with your partner and take turns
defining each of these big ideas. Pretend that
you are telling parents at conference time what
these big ideas mean.
33A difficult job
- Ensuring adequate literacy development for all
students in middle and high school is a more
challenging task than in the primary grades.
- Literacy skills are more complex, more embedded
in subject matters, and more multiply determined
- Adolescents are not as universally motivated to
read better
34But doable - if we are all involved
- Teachers of science, mathematics, history, etc.
must teach their subject matter so that students
not only learn the content more deeply but learn
to read content-area texts more strategically and
become more proficient in thinking about the
content. - Note Although reading strategies might be
taught explicitly in a designated reading
support class, students are unlikely to
generalize them broadly to content areas unless
teachers also explicitly support and elaborate
the strategies use within the content-area texts.
35and if we have support
- Clear outcomes
- Evidence-based practices
- Ongoing information and feedback
- Systems to support and sustain implementation
- (e.g. PD, collaboration, action-orientation,
time, resources)
36Team ActivityGetting Everyone on Board
- What level of understanding does all of your
staff have in regards to improving literacy?
- What are the needs for staff to increase
understanding?
-
List your teams responses on the chart paper.
37Improving Literacy Skills of All Students
- General Recommendations
- Schools should have tiered interventions that
allow significant increases in intensity of
instruction for students based on their literacy
needs. - Struggling readers must make more than one years
growth in reading each year of instruction
38Intervention Strategies
- Word-reading Strategies
- Decoding Skills
- Syllabication
- Morphemic Analysis
- Repeated Readings
- Teacher-moderated Readings (e.g. echo read, cloze
reading, unison reading)
39Conclusions from Intervention Research
- Intensive and skillful instruction in basic word
reading skills can have a significant impact on
the comprehension ability of students. However,
if reading accuracy is fairly high, there may be
little benefit spending more time to improve this
skill further - Repeated readings impact is significantly
impacted by a skilled peer or teacher
- Non-repeated readings with corrective feedback
can also have a significant impact on fluency and
comprehension
40Conclusions (continued)
- In terms of interventions focused on vocabulary
and comprehension, adolescent struggling readers
benefit from direct and explicit instruction of
effective reading strategies. - Struggling readers may require support beyond
that which content-area teachers can provide to
become proficient, but it would seem immensely
helpful if content-area teachers were explaining
and reinforcing the use of similar strategies in
the content texts.
41Where Have We Done It?With this kind of
intervention, schools have improved literacy.
Summary of the Second Adolescent Literacy
Workshops 2002.
42Where Have We Done It?With this kind of
intervention, schools have improved literacy.
43Using the Schoolwide Evaluation Planning Tool
(SWEPT) for Middle School Literacy
The SWEPT is based on the Planning and
Evaluation Tool-Rev. (Simmons Kameenui, 2003)
44SWEPT
- The SWEPT is designed to help schools take
stock of their strengths and areas of
improvement in developing a schoolwide plan for
teaching reading in Middle Schools. - The items and criteria in the SWEPT 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.
45Overview of the SWEPT
- 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
46SWEPTSection 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 in the middle school.
47Goals, Objectives, and Priorities
- Example Statement
- I know the essential reading goals my colleagues
and I are expected to teach and there is a system
in place to determine if we are meeting the needs
of all learners. - Non-example Statement
- I am not sure what my fellow teachers are doing.
I assume they do the same things that I do.
48GoalsA 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 to promote
growth in knowledge, reading, and thinking
skills
- Clear goals and expectations for each grade
- Reliance on research to determine what to teach
and when to teach it
49Goals
- I will become a better person
- I will organize my desk
- I will volunteer at the youth center over the
summer
- I will grade half of these tests by the time
Dancing with the Stars begins.
General Specific
50Goals
- 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 grade half of these tests by the time
Dancing with the Stars begins.
51In reading, specific goals provide a detailed map
to guide instruction, assessment and learning.
- Specific Reading Goals
- Tell you what to teach and when
- Provide a framework for determining whether
students are learning enough
- Provide a framework for determining whether
instruction is meeting the needs of all students
52Goal Setting for Middle School Reading
- To impact literacy achievement, middle
schools must focus instruction. Consequently,
goals should be set for the following six
essential areas for improving adolescent
literacy - Reading Fluency
- Content Knowledge
- Vocabulary Knowledge
- Higher Level Thinking Skills
- Comprehension
- Motivation and Engagement
- Torgeson, et.al (2007). Academic
Literacy Instruction for Adolescents A Guidance
Document from the Center on Instruction
With your partner, create a goal for one of
the six essential areas.
53Example Goals
- 80 of 7th grade students will be reading 150
wcpm in grade level text by January of 2008.
- Of 6th grade students will be able to accurately
define and apply the 100 critical high utility
words by the end of the year.
- Through teacher-peer observation, 95 of students
will be actively engaged and responding during
teacher-led instruction by October of 2008.
54Completing the SWEPT
- SWEPT 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?
55(No Transcript)
56Using the SWEPT to Evaluate a Schoolwide Reading
Program Objectives, Goals, Priorities
- Activity Complete Section 1 of the SWEPT
- 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.
57SWEPTSection 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
58Assessment
- Example Statements
- I receive and use the results of assessments
promptly to differentiate instruction.
- Non-examples statements
- All of my students are assessed but I rarely see
the resulting data.
59Purposes 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 automaticity of performance
60Reading Assessment For Different Purposes
- An effective, comprehensive reading program
includes reading assessments for four purposes
- Outcome
- Screening
- Diagnostic
- Progress Monitoring
61Outcome Assessment
- Purpose to determine level of proficiency in
relation to norm or criterion
- When Typically administered annually. Can be
administered pre/post to assess overall growth.
- Who All students
- Relation to instruction Provides index of
overall efficacy but limited timely instructional
information
62Screening Assessment
- Purpose To determine children who are likely to
require additional instructional support
(predictive validity)
- When Early in the academic year or when new
students enter school
- Who All students
- Relation to Instruction Most valuable when used
to identify children who may need further
assessment or additional instructional support.
63Diagnostic Assessment
- Purpose To provide specific information on
skills and strategy needs of individual students
- When Following screening or at points during the
year when students are not making adequate
progress.
- Who Selected students as indicated by screening
of progress monitoring measures or teacher
judgment
- Relation to Instruction Provided specific
information on target skills highly relevant.
64Progress Monitoring Assessment
- Purpose Frequent, timely measures to determine
whether students are learning enough of critical
skills
- When At minimum, 3 times per year at critical
decision making points
- Who All Students
- Relation to Instruction Indicates students who
require additional assessment and intervention
65Curriculum Based Measurement(e.g. AIMSWeb)
- A Valid and Reliable Schoolwide Assessment
System
- Linked to big ideas
- Addresses the following purposes
- Screening
- Progress monitoring
- Sometimes diagnostic
- Sometimes outcome
66The Need for Results-Focused Assessment
- Instructional Time is Precious
- CBM measures do not assess all aspects of
reading
- Short duration fluency-based measures
- Some Skills are More Important Than Others
- Provides timely feedback to enable responsive
intervention
- Allows identification of students who need
instructional support
67Section II Assessment
68Using the SWEPT to Evaluate a Schoolwide Reading
Program Assessment
- Activity Complete Section II of the SWEPT
- 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.
69How Are We Doing?
- Weather Report
- As a team provide a description in
meteorological terms of the status of your
schools literacy instruction (e.g. Sunny warm,
Hurricane Warnings, Mostly cloudy, etc.) -
-
70PET-R
- Section III
- Instructional Programs and Materials
- The instructional programs and materials have
- documented efficacy
- drawn from research based findings and
practices,
- align with state standards and benchmarks
- support a full range of learners.
71Instructional Programs and Materials
- Example Statements
- We have identified and acquired programs and
strategies of proven effectiveness to address
critical learning outcomes for all students.
- We ensure that all literacy teachers are using
programs and strategies of proven effectiveness
with fidelity and are focusing on the same
learning outcomes
72Instructional Programs and Materials
- Non-example Statements
- I use most of the curriculum we agreed upon. I
am not aware of any information on how effective
the practices and strategies are in terms of
achieving reading outcomes. - There is no method of support or monitoring to
ensure that the Implementation of the curriculum
is being done effectively in each classroom.
73Why focus on identifying critical learning goals
and proven strategies?
- Aligning what we know and what we do to maximize
outcomes.
- The research literature on critical skills
students need to be successful readers is
compelling. You have heard the list of six
essential areas for improving adolescent literacy
twice. Can you remember any without peeking?
Share with a partner. - Reading fluency
- Vocabulary knowledge
- Content knowledge
- Higher-level reasoning and thinking skills
- Cognitive strategies to enhance comprehension
- Motivation and engagement strategies
74Why Focus on Critical Learning Standards?
- Intensive instruction means teach less more
thoroughly.
- If you dont know what is important, everything
is.
- 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.
75Improving Literacy-Related Instruction in the
Content Areas
- Recommendation 1
- Provide explicit instruction and supportive
practice in the use of effective comprehension
strategies throughout the school day
- Note Explicit strategy instruction is the most
widely cited current recommendation for improving
reading comprehension in all students.
76Comprehension Strategies
- Active metacognition that leads to the use of
fix-up strategies when comprehension fails.
- Use of graphic and semantic organizers, including
story maps.
- Question generation
- Summarization and paraphrasing
- Selective rereading
77Comprehension Research Support
- 100 of successful middle and high school
teachers overtly taught strategies
- Only 17 of less successful teachers overtly
taught the strategies
78Conclusions about Comprehension Research
- Explicit instruction of strategies with teacher
modeling (the I do we do you do model)
- Extended practice opportunities in the
strategies
- Initial discussions to promote metacognition
79Practical Issues for teaching Comprehension
Strategies
- Balance Strategy instruction should be the
vehicle for effective content teaching
- Involvement using small group interactions
effectively to increase the involvement of
underachieving students and facilitate active
discussion is critical. - Number of strategies useful to teach more than
one but how many is still up for debate
- Time for PD Training and feedback is crucial
for teachers to become skilled in providing
strategy instruction.
80Improving Literacy-Related Instruction in the
Content Areas
- Recommendation 2
- Increase the amount and quality of open,
sustained discussion of reading content
- Note Research results converge to suggest that
comprehension of difficult text can be
significantly enhanced by replacing traditional
I-R-E (initiation-response-evaluation) patterns
of instruction with discussion based activities
in which students are invited to make
predictions, summarize, link texts with one
another, and with background knowledge, generate
and answer text-related questions, clarify
understanding, muster relevant evidence to
support an interpretation, and interrelate
reading, writing and discussion.
Alplebee, Langer, Nystrand, Gamoran, 2003
81Discussion Research Support
- In higher performing (middle schools and high
schools), at least 96 of the teachers helped
students engage in thoughtful dialogue (i.e.
shared cognition)
82Conclusions about Discussion-Oriented Instruction
Research
- Extended discussions are associated with
improvements in the quality of students thinking
about what they read.
- Discussions impact student learning by
- Improving understanding of specific content
- Developing habits of analysis and critical
thinking
83Practical Considerations
- Balance the discussion-based approach will
require adjustments to curriculum. There will
need to be a balance between breadth and depth of
coverage. Focusing on critical learning
standards will help determine the amount of time
that should be spent on any given topic.
84- Research results converge to suggest that
comprehension of difficult text can be
significantly enhanced by replacing traditional
I-R-E (initiation-response-evaluation) patterns
of instruction with discussion based activities
in which students are invited to - make predictions,
- summarize,
- link texts with one another, and with background
knowledge,
- generate and answer text-related questions,
- clarify understanding,
- muster relevant evidence to support an
interpretation,
- interrelate reading, writing and discussion.
85Improving Literacy-Related Instruction in the
Content Areas
- Recommendation 3
- Set and maintain high standards for text,
conversation, questions, and vocabulary.
- Note Unless individual teachers raise their own
expectations of literacy for all of their
students, state-level policies will have little
impact.
86Conclusions about High-Standards Research
- One consistent finding is that higher-level
questioning matters.
- Classrooms rated as placing higher academic
demands on students also produced the strongest
literacy growth
- Teachers in higher performing schools used the
(high-stakes) tests as an opportunity to revise
and reformulate their literacy curriculum
- More effective teachers tried to move students to
deeper levels of understanding once initial
learning goals were met, while less effective
teachers moved to an unrelated activity with
different content.
87Practical Considerations
- School-level literacy leaders and teachers must
apply the standards to classroom instruction and
ongoing, formative assessments.
- Classroom teachers must teach in ways that
directly support student growth toward the high
literacy standards.
88Improving Literacy-Related Instruction in the
Content Areas
- Recommendation 4
- Increase students motivation and engagement with
reading
- Note Deep comprehension of complex text is an
effortful process that requires active use of
background knowledge, active use of appropriate
reading strategies, and an actively thoughtful
process
89Research Support for Motivation and Engagement
Strategies
- Provide clear, interesting learning goals for
instruction
- (use student-friendly language)
- Provide a reasonable range of choices of reading
materials and activities.
- Provide interesting texts at multiple reading
levels
- Provide opportunities to collaborate with other
students
Important note Teachers need to pay close
attention to text difficulty and its match
to student skills.
90Practical Considerations
- Instructional strategies to increase student
engagement and motivation need to be taught to
teachers.
- teachers who received training consistently
implemented instructional strategies(and)
students showed a significant increase in their
engagement. (Reeve, Jang, et.al., 2004) - Most effective teachers focus on a finite number
of methods for increasing student engagement
during literacy instruction.
91Improving Literacy-Related Instruction in the
Content Areas
- Recommendation 5
- Teach essential content knowledge so that all
students master critical concepts.
- Note The most important conclusion is that
students with lower general verbal ability can
comprehend and remember as well as students with
high ability if they are equally familiar and
knowledgeable about the material they are
listening to or reading.
92Research Conclusions about Teaching Essential
Concepts to Mastery
- Vocabulary knowledge has an important impact on
reading comprehension.
- Wide reading
- Direct teaching of high-utility words
- Instruction in how to learn words independently
(it is not looking them up in the dictionary.)
- Instruction and activities that increase word
consciousness.
93Research Conclusions (continued)
- Teaching strategies around the concept of
similarities and differences and using graphic
organizers resulted in significant increases in
student mastery, especially with typically
low-performing students. - Well taught teacher-guided strategies can become
an information-processing habit in students.
94Instruction Programs
Adoption and Implementation of Research-Based
Reading Programs That Support the Full Range of
Learners
- A core instructional program of validated
efficacy adopted and implemented schoolwide
- Supplemental and intervention programs to support
core program
- Programs and materials emphasize big ideas
- Programs implemented with high fidelity
95Programs Implemented with High Fidelity
- Programs are only as good as the level of
implementation
- To optimize program effectiveness
- Implement the program everyday with fidelity
(i.e., the way it was written)
- 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)
96How 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?
97(No Transcript)
98Using the SWEPT to Evaluate a Schoolwide Reading
Program Assessment
- Activity Complete Section III of the SWEPT
- Review and Complete each item
- As a school team, record one common score for
each item and document the information sources
available to substantiate the score recorded.
99SWEPT Section IV Instructional Time
- A sufficient amount of time is allocated for
instruction and the time allocated is used
effectively.
100Examples and Non-examplesCan you tell which are
which?
- All students in our school receive at least one
hour of reading instruction daily.
- I minimize downtime and time spent in transitions
and provide students with many opportunities each
day to practice important skills.
- I use lots of arts and crafts to get my students
to express what they comprehend.
- I know the most effective methods to teach the
important skills.
101Instruction 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
102Instruction Time
- Instructional time allocated to reading should be
dictated by the schoolwide plan
- Examples of this may be the schoolwide decision
to allocate an additional period to reading in
the school day
- A schoolwide plan reduces the variance in
instructional time among teachers
103Three Types of Instructional Time
- Allocated
- Actual
- Academic Learning Time Time children are engaged
in tasks in which they can be highly successful
104Organization and the Use of Time
- Maximizing students reading engaged time is
the biggest single indicator of reading
achievement.
- Time spent with arts and crafts or student
selection of activities always produced a
negative correlation with reading achievement.
105Using the time wisely
- An Excerpt from
- Results Now How we can achieve unprecedented
improvements in teaching and learning
- Mike Schmoker
- 1. Individually read the section entitled,
Literature-Based Arts and Crafts
- In your team, talk about the prevalence of arts
and crafts literacy
- instruction at the middle school level.
- 3. If time spent on arts and crafts activities
was reduced, how would you
- replace the time with reading engaged time and
skill building?
106Use of Time
- In every school, from poor to affluent, we
seldom caught kids reading or writing. What we
did see was staggering amounts of coloring.
- (Mike Schmoker 100s of classroom
observations)
- that coloring was the single most predominant
activity in the schools they had observed right
up through middle school.
- Learning 24/7 Classroom Observation Study
- Doug Reeves was similarly dismayed by the amount
of time students spent coloring, cutting, and
pasting.
- Making Standards Work
As cited in Results Now, (2006), Mike Schmoker
107Observations from 1,500 classrooms
- Classrooms in which
- there was evidence of clear learning objectives
4
- high-yield strategies were being used 0.2
- there was evidence of higher-order thinking 3
- students were either writing or using rubrics
0
- fewer than half of students were paying
attention 85
- students were using worksheets (a bad sign)
52
- Non-instructional activities were occurring 35
Learning 24/7 Classroom Observation Study (2005)
108Keeping a focus on learning
- Be very clear about the reading goals for your
students
- Increase skill building and strategy-building
activities
- Increase reading engaged time
- Increase language rich discussions about the
text
- Increase direct vocabulary instruction
- Increase development of background knowledge
related to learning goals.
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110Complete Section IV of the SWEPT
111SWEPT Section V Differentiated
Instruction/Grouping/Scheduling
- Instruction optimizes learning for all
students by
- tailoring instruction to meet current levels of
knowledge and prerequisite skills
- organizing instruction to enhance student
learning.
112 A full 70 of U.S. middle school and high
school students require differentiated
instruction, which is instruction targeted to
their individual strengths and weaknesses.
(2004) Biancaraso and Snow. Reading Nex
t- A vision for Action and Research Middle and
High School Literacy
113Differentiated Instruction/Grouping/Scheduling
- Example Statement
- I teach using active participation strategies and
grouping techniques to engage all learners and
scaffold the learning of struggling students.
- Non-example Statement
- I typically use whole group and independent seat
work for instruction.
114Differentiated Instruction Aligned with Student
Needs
- 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
115Data 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 students need additional resources to be
successful?
- Which students need which skills?
- How well is intervention/instruction working?
- Is instruction working for some groups but not
others?
- Is intervention effective?
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119Flexible 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
120Improving Literacy Skills of Students Reading
Below Grade Level
- General Recommendations
- Schools should have tiered interventions that
allow significant increases in intensity of
instruction for students based on their literacy
needs. - Struggling readers must make more than one years
growth in reading each year of instruction
121(No Transcript)
122Using the SWEPT to Evaluate a Schoolwide Reading
Program Instructional Elements
- Activity Complete Section V of the SWEPT
- 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.
123SWEPT Section VI Administration/Organization/Com
munication
- 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.
124Administration/Organization/ Communication
- Example Statement
- Grade level teams exist and meet regularly to
analyze student progress data and plan
instruction.
- Non-example Statement
- We dont talk about or promote specific reading
goals in the content areas. The teachers are all
professionals and have their own ways to teach
students.
125Leadership Support
- Strong and Informed Instructional Leaders
Maintain Focus and Establish Mechanisms to
Support Academic 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
126Leadership Teams
- The use of teams at various levels to analyze
data, plan instruction and offer support can be
very effective in promoting cohesion and
communication of reading goals. - Types of Teams
- District Team (for larger districts)
- School Improvement Team/Building Level Team/You
- Grade Level Team
- Student Assistance Teams
127(No Transcript)
128SWEPTSection VII Professional Development
- Adequate and ongoing professional development is
determined and available to support reading
instruction.
129Professional Development
- Example Statement
- The principal or another teacher regularly
observes and provides feedback for me to improve
my skills.
- Non-example 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.
130Professional DevelopmentAn Integrated System of
Research-Based Professional Development and
Resource Allocation
- Ongoing professional development is established
to support teachers and instructional staff in
reading priorities and effective instructional
practices. - Time is allocated for educators to analyze, plan,
and refine instruction.
- Professional development efforts are explicitly
linked to scientifically based programs and
practices.
131(No Transcript)
132Using the SWEPT to Evaluate a Schoolwide Reading
Program Administration/Organization and
Professional Development
- Activity Complete Sections VI and VII of the
SWEPT
- Review and complete each item
- As a school team, record a common score for each
item and document the information sources
available to substantiate the score recorded.
133Activity School Summary Score
- After your team evaluates current practices on
all 7 sections, proceed to page 11 in the SWEPT
- 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
134What does a MiBLSi school look like when they
have a comprehensive schoolwide model for reading?
135A MiBLSi School
- Has clearly defined, quantifiable goals that are
linked to the essential elements and guide
instructional decisions.
- Uses AIMS Web as its primary screening and
progress monitoring measure and as an outcome
measure. Teachers use AIMS Web data to group
students and inform instruction. - Has purchased and is implementing faithfully
research-based supplemental programs to fill the
gaps within the core program and to provide
additional instruction and practice in essential
components for those students who need it. - Has purchased and is implementing faithfully
research-based intervention programs to meet the
needs of those students who do not benefit from
the core instruction.
136A MiBLSi School
- Dedicates at least 60-minutes to reading
instruction daily.
- Provides additional instructional time for those
students who fail to make adequate reading
progress
- Determines group size, instructional time, and
instructional programs according to learner
performance
- Has a schoolwide reading plan which includes a
targeted instructional map for Benchmark,
Strategic, and Intensive students in each grade
level. All teachers participate in this plan. - Establishes leadership teams (e.g., District
team, School Improvement team, Grade-level team)
to analyze reading performance and plan
instruction, ensuring that instruction is
coordinated across grades and special services. - Schedules ongoing high quality professional
development to support teachers and instructional
staff, including time for teachers to analyze,
plan, and refine instruction.
137Using the Results of the SWEPT to create an
action plan for your school
138School Team ActivityReading Action Plans
- With your team, review the scores on the SWEPT
Individual Summary to identify three areas in
which you want to focus for the coming year
- Begin to establish goals. (Refer to slide 53.)
-
- Determine action toward goals (what), who will be
responsible, and when the goals will be
accomplished
- Retain a copy of this document for planning and
make a copy to submit
139Assignments
- Schedule a meeting to occur before your Strategic
Reading training day with the following goals for
the day being
- Set a schedule for the teams for the balance of
the school year
- Share this information with your entire staff
- Complete AIMSWeb Assessment and enter data into
website
- Schedule a meeting to analyze the data. What are
the instructional implications?
140References
- Alliance for Excellent Education (2004). Reading
Next A Vision for Action and Research in Middle
and High School Literacy. Washington, DC.
- Barton, P.E. (2000). What Jobs Require
Literacy, Education, and Training, 1940-2006.
Washington, DC Educational Testing Service.
- Carnevale, A. (2001). Help WantedCollege
Required. Washington, DC Educational Testing
Service.
- Greene, J. and Winters, M.. (2005). Public High
School Graduation and College Readiness Rates
1992-2001. New York Manhattan Institute.
- Heller, R., and Greenleaf, C. (2007). Literacy
instruction in the content areas Getting to the
core of middle and high school improvement.
Washington, DC Alliance for Excellent
Education. - Kamil, M. (2003). Adolescents and Literacy.
Washington, DC Alliance for Excellent
Education.
- National Center for Education Statistics (2001).
The Condition of Education. Washington, DC.
- Nations Report Card State Reading Snapshot
Reports for Grade 8 (2005), as seen at
http//www.all4ed.org/states2/Michigan.pdf
141References
- Snow, C. and Biancarosa, G. (2003). Adolescent
Literacy and the Achievement Gap. New York
Carnegie Corporation of New York.
- Summary of the Second Adolescent Literacy
Workshops Practice Models for Adolescent
Literacy Success. Baltimore, MD. May 20, 2002.
http//www.nifl.gov/partnershipforreading/adolesc
ent/summaryIIa.doc - Swanson, C. (2004). Projections of 2003-04 High
School Graduates. Washington, DC The Urban
Institute.
- Torgesen, J. K., Houston, D. D., Rissman, L. M.,
Decker, S. M., Roberts, G., Vaughn, S., Wexler,
J., Francis, D. J, Rivera, M. O., Lesaux, N.
(2007). Academic literacy instruction for
adolescents A guidance document from the Center
on Instruction. Portsmouth, NH RMC Research
Corporation, Center on Instruction. - U.S. Department of Education (2003). Nations
Report Card Reading 2002. Washington, DC
National Center for Education Statistics.