Title: Planning Reading Assessment, Goals, and Interventions
1Planning Reading Assessment, Goals, and
Interventions
- Linking Reading Interventions to Assessment
- and State Standards
- for Secondary Students
2Skills students must acquire in order to learn
to read
- Understanding sounds within oral language
- Understanding the relationship between letters
and sounds - Recognize a large number of words by sight so
they can read fluently - Retrieve the meanings of a large vocabulary of
words - Think actively while reading in order to
construct meaning
3Some unfortunate findings
- Only 1 in 8 of those children in the bottom
quartile in word reading ability at the end of
first grade reach grade-level reading skills by
fourth grade. - Special education tends to prevent students from
falling further behind. It does not reduce the
gap in their reading skills compared to their
peers.
4Research Results What Do At-Risk Students
Need?
- systematic and explicit instruction on whatever
component skills are deficient phonemic
awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, reading
comprehension strategies - a significant increase in intensity of
instruction - ample opportunities for guided practice of new
skills - systematic cueing of appropriate strategies in
context - appropriate levels of scaffolding as students
learn to apply new skills
5Intense Instruction
- Increase intensity by
- Increasing instructional time
- Providing instruction in very small groups
(3 or 4)
6Issues related to deciding to intensify support
- When?
- The earlier the better
- Whos going to do it?
- Training personnel
- Scheduling
- Progress monitoring
- Treatment fidelity
7Issues related to deciding to intensify support
- Group Size (3-5 max)
- Amount of time for
- Teaching and re-teaching
- Extending skills
- Instructional delivery
- Explicit
- Systematic teacher wording
- Error correction
- Prioritized content
- Scaffolded support
8Explicit Instruction
- Carefully preplan materials and instruction
- Provide direct instruction
- Fast-paced
- Highly focused
- Many examples and prompts
- Many opportunities to respond (with feedback)
- Provide guided and independent practice
9Systematic Instruction
- Prioritize critical skills needed
- Develop planned sequence for providing
instruction in critical skills - Use research validated materials
10Reading Research RegardingLD Students
- Directed questioning and responses
- Limit the difficulty or processing demands of the
task - Small interactive group instruction
- Sequencing
- Drill-repetition practice
- Segmentation
- Technology (including graphic organizers)
- Modeling of problem-solving steps by teacher
- Supplement teacher and peer involvement
- Strategy cues
11Older students with a Mild Reading Disability
- Scores before instruction
- word reading accuracy 30 ile
- fluency 2 ile
- 60 hours of small group instruction
- Scores after instruction
- word reading accuracy 80 ile
- fluency 48 ile
- reading comprehension 70 ile
12Older students with a Moderate Reading Disability
- Before instruction
- Word reading accuracy 10 ile
- Reading fluency below 1 ile
- Comprehension 8 ile
- 100 hours in small group intervention
- After instruction
- Word reading accuracy 39 ile
- Reading fluency 8 ile
- Comprehension 39 ile
13Older students with aSevere Reading Disability
- Before instruction
- Word reading accuracy 2 ile
- Reading fluency below 1 ile
- Comprehension 8 ile
- 68 hours in one to one intervention
- After instruction
- Word reading accuracy 23 ile
- Reading fluency 5 ile
- Comprehension 27 ile
14The Fluency Gap
- Seems to be related to lack of practice reading
outside of school. - This lack of practice results in huge differences
in sight word vocabulary which impacts fluency. - Remember that word reading accuracy and
comprehension skills can be significantly
improved, even for the most severely disabled
readers.
15Essential Componentsof Reading Instruction
- Phonemic Awareness
- Phonics
- Fluency
- Vocabulary
- Text Comprehension
16Alignment of State Standards
- Essential Components of Reading
- Phonemic Awareness
- Phonics
- Fluency
- Vocabulary
- Comprehension
- Benchmarks within the State Reading Standard
- Alphabetics
- Fluency
- Vocabulary
- Comprehension
17Basic Literacy Skills
- Learning to Understand Reading
- Reading comprehension
- Reading vocabulary
- Learning to Read Accurately
- Reading fluency
- Decoding (including phonics, word analysis, and
phonemic awareness)
18Essential Component 1
- Reading Comprehension
- Reading with understanding,
- reading with purpose, and thinking
- actively while reading
19ACTIVITYRead Dire Straits
20Review Dire Straits
- Except for names, how many of the words are
totally new? - Except for names, how many words do you need help
with pronouncing? - How many words would you have difficulty using in
a sentence? - So is it possible to do these three things and
still not comprehend?
21Important Steps in Comprehension
- Activation of background knowledge
- Student need to interact with text
- Drawing conclusions and making inferences
- Monitoring comprehension and using fix-up
strategies - Determining importance in text
- Purpose for reading
- Author styles
- Text features
22Research on Reading Comprehension Instruction
- Most effective strategies
- Monitoring comprehension
- Using graphic and semantic organizers
- Answering questions
- Generating questions
- Recognizing story structure
- Summarizing
23Research on ReadingComprehension Instruction
- Teach strategies explicitly
- direct explanation (why, when)
- modeling of strategies (think-aloud)
- guided practice
- application
- Teach through cooperative learning
- Provide multiple-strategy instruction so that
students learn to use strategies flexibly and in
combination
24Two Voices In My Head
- Word Calling Voice
- For some older students, fluency does not
correlate with comprehension. - When this voice acts alone, the reader is checked
out.
- Thinking Voice
- Visualizes
- Predicts
- Connects
- Questions
- Summarizes
- Monitors
25Reading Process
- Before motivate and engage
- Establish a purpose, activate background
knowledge, predict, question, preview text
features, - During take in and organize
- Predict, Question, Connect, Visualize, Summarize,
Monitor - After evaluate
- Summarize, Conclude, Form an opinion, Question,
Evaluate, Connect
26ACTIVITYRead The House
27Good Instructional Practices
- Before reading
- Purpose for reading
- Advance organizers
- Before, During, and After
- Models, examples, non-examples
- I do it, We do it, You do it
28Instructional Techniques for I do it, We do it,
You do it
- Think Aloud teacher reads aloud and voices
his/her thinking to model strategies - Shared Reading teacher reads aloud, students
follow along, usually whole class strategy
practice - Guided Reading small group only, teacher
divides text in segments, students read and stop
to discuss the strategy - Independent Practice student reads silently and
individually tracks his/her own thinking
29Levels of Reading Difficulty
- Some tests (like the MAP) provide a students
reading level in lexile ranges - For example 700-800
- Numbers low in the range reflect levels for
independent reading - Numbers high in the range reflect levels for
instructional reading - Numbers above the range reflect frustration level
30Levels of Reading Difficulty
- Reading level of material depends on both its
lexile level and the concepts and content of the
material - For example, Animal Farm and The Giver have low
lexile levels but high levels of difficulty due
to the concepts
31Assessments of Reading Comprehension
- Gray Oral Reading Test (GORT-IV)
- Secondary Reading Assessment Inventory (Grades
2-10) - Maze test (two sources have grades 2-8)
- Answering or Generating Questions
- Accuracy of completion of blank graphic
organizers about - Story structure
- Story webs
- Character webs
32Data and Goal for Reading Comprehension
- Goal
- In 36 instructional weeks, James will score 17
responses correct on an 8th grade Maze probe.
(baseline 8, which is below the 10th
percentile) - Indicator
- R 8.1.4.5 Uses information from the text to make
inferences and draw conclusions
33Intervention Notebook
34Reading Strategies
- Visualize
- Predict
- Connect
- Question
- Summarize
- Monitor
35Visualization Teaching Point visualize the
important stuff
- A movie across your forehead
- Make a comparison
- Make a chart
36Visualization Activities
- Comic strips
- Sketches and drawings
- Acting or miming
- Illustrate the comparison
- Make a chart
- Study imagery
37PredictionsTeaching Point not too general, not
too specific Revise with more information
- Examples
- This will be about a boy who has a hard time
adjusting to life in a new school. - This will be about a girl who goes camping and
will have to survive in nature.
- Non-Examples
- This will be about a boy.
- This will be about a girl who will get separated
from the group and get attacked by a bear and
when she is hanging on to her life by a thread
her dog will find her and go to get help.
38Predicting Activities
- Keep track of predictions and revisions on a
chart. (narrative) - Highlight or flag places in the text that may be
clues as to what is coming next. - Determine the text structure to anticipate
upcoming information.(expository)
39Connecting
- Text to Self How does the text relate to my
experiences? - Text to World How does the text relate to my
knowledge about the world? - Text to Text How does the text relate to other
texts?
40ConnectingTeaching Point make connections
meaningful
- Examples
- I hate having to split my time between divorced
parents it makes it hard to know what to expect. - When my dog died my whole family was really sad.
We had a funeral in the backyard
- Non-Examples
- My parents are divorced too.
- I had a dog once.
41Connecting Activities
- Brainstorm questions to ask yourself to aid in
all three kinds of connections - Text to self
- Text to world
- Text to text
- Triple Entry Diary
- Marking the text
- Discussing the text
- Finding other texts that relate
- Compare and contrast
42Questioning
- Question yourself
- Question authors intent
- Pursue and enhance students natural curiosity
- Bad questions
- already know the answer
- its irrelevant (more questions do not equal a
better grade)
43Questioning Activities
- Take time to be curious
- Mark in text, mark answers if found
- Questions game
- Keep track of questions that lead to predictions
on an organizer
44Summarizing
- Teaching Points
- Compare a summary to a retelling
- Think about structure and purpose of the text
- Use to monitor understanding and check for
synthesis
45Summarizing Activities
- Retell/Summarize Activity
- Retell more, more, more
- Highlight important stuff
- Write important stuff in 2 or 3 sentences at
bottom of pagethats a summary - Chunk/Summarize Activity
- Chunk
- Key word for each chunk
- Connect key words
46Chunking
- Ideas for chunking narrative text
- Characters
- Story scenes
- Story elements
- Cause-effect relationships
- Compare-contrast
- Characters
- Settings
- Plots, sub-plots
47Chunking
- Ideas for chunking expository text
- Topics, categories
- Time periods
- Historical figures
- Concepts, philosophies
- Cause-effect relationships
- Steps in a process
- Properties
48Summarizing Activities
- Use graphic organizers to find main points (for
example, text structure or concept map) - Mark the text sticky notes
- Getting the Gist
49Monitoring
- Knowing when you dont get it.
- I read it, I just dont remember it.
- Instruction should be ongoing, dont wait until
you teach all strategies
50Monitoring Activities
- Track the inner voice (teach through reciprocal
teaching - Mark when you space out and note what strategy
you chose to get back on track - Mark the text for
- Predictions
- Questions
- Connections
- Summarizations
- Reactions
51Teaching the Strategies
- Use advance organizers
- Use I do it, we do it, you do it
- Use models, examples, non-examples
52Essential Component 2
- Vocabulary
- Words we must know to communicate effectively
53Research on Vocabulary Instruction
- Tiered words reflect a way of systematizing
vocabulary instruction. - Tier 1 very common, high frequency words
- Tier 2 important and useful words known by a
mature reader - Tier 3 very difficult, rare words
- Generally, instruction for meaning should focus
on teaching Tier 2 words.
54Research on Vocabulary Instruction
- Explicit Instruction, focusing on
- Important words
- Useful words
- Difficult words (e.g., multiple meanings, idioms)
55Research on Vocabulary Instruction
- Implicit Instruction (exposure over extended
time) - Students need to read outside of the classroom
- Some students can be encouraged to read outside
of class by letting them select materials of
interest at very easy levels of difficulty
56Research on Vocabulary Instruction
- Multimedia Methods
- Association Methods
- Provide scaffolding
- Teach use of word parts
- Teach use of context clues
- Teach use of reference materials
57Vocabulary
- Increase
- Opportunities for reading
- Use of varied, rich text
- Opportunities to hear/use in natural contexts
- Use of concrete contexts (pictures, artifacts)
- Opportunities to connect new words to those known
- Study of concepts rather than single, unrelated
words - Explicit concept instruction and incidental
encounters - Teaching strategies leading to independent word
finding - Find the word/concept that will have the biggest
impact on comprehension - (Janet Allen, Words, Words, Words)
58Vocabulary
- Decrease
- Looking up definitions as a single source of word
knowledge - Asking students to write sentences for new words
before theyve studied the word in depth - Notion that all words in a text need to be
defined for comprehension - Using context as a highly reliable tool for
increasing comprehension - Assessments that ask students for single
definitions -
59Assessment of Vocabulary Knowledge
- Measures of antonym/synonym knowledge
- Providing word definitions
- Formative assessment items of assessed vocabulary
indicators - Completing blank graphic organizers
- PPVT III (oral receptive)
- EOW (oral expressive)
60ExampleCloze Test
- Goal
- In 36 instructional weeks, when given a
teacher-made Cloze test where only adjectives are
omitted, Sarah will insert words of appropriate
meaning and grammatical type in 75 of the
blanks. (baseline 25) - Indicator
- R 7.1.3.1 determines meaning of words or phrases
using context clues from sentences
61Examples of Activities for Vocabulary Instruction
- Smashed sentences
- Give a list of vocabulary words and see if you
can use them all in just 2 or 3 sentences - Linear Array
- Provide pool of words to organize
- Provide words in squares at end
- Provide end words plus one word in middle
- Provide only word in middle
62Examples from Inside Words
- Previewing Content Vocabulary
- Vocab-O-Gram
- List-Group-Label
- Concept Circles
63Intervention Notebook
64Motivation
- Provide choice
- Books of various types, various levels, various
lengths - Magazines, atlas, graphic novels, etc.
- Meet the student where she/he is (Orca Soundings)
- Provide
- Read alouds
- Book pass
- Book talks
- Book sharing
- Books by an author they like
- For example, Terry Truman Stuck in Neutral and
No Right Turn - Teachers might read Lifers by Pamela Mueller
65Basic Literacy Skills
- Learning to Understand Reading
- Reading comprehension
- Reading vocabulary
- Learning to Read Accurately
- Reading fluency
- Decoding (including phonics, word analysis, and
phonemic awareness)
66To Assess Reading Accurately Skills for
Secondary Students
- Assess oral and/or silent reading fluency
- Assess phonics knowledge of common letter
patterns - Assess knowledge of high frequency sight words
- Assess letter-sound knowledge
- Assess phonemic segmentation knowledge
67Essential Component 3
- Fluency
- Ability to read text accurately and quickly,
- with expression
68Why Is Fluency Important?
- Fluent readers are more likely to comprehend what
they are reading - Building fluency makes reading less effortful and
less frustrating for students - Because building fluency makes reading a more
rewarding , it increases the chance that a
student will chose to read (and as a result
increase incidental learning of vocabulary and
background knowledge)
69Research on Fluency
- Repeated and monitored oral reading
- Student-adult reading
- Choral reading
- Tape-assisted reading
- Partner reading
- Readers theatre
- Practice oral rereading at students independent
reading level (95) - Model fluent reading
70Assessment of Fluency
- AIMSweb Words Read Correctly (grades 1 8)
- Gray Oral Reading Test IV Rate
- 3 Minute Reads (Grades 5-8)
71Important issues about measuring fluency in older
students with reading disabilities
- DO assess their fluency levels for diagnostic
purposes - DO teach them skills designed to improve their
fluency levels - DO NOT use fluency measures for writing and
progress monitoring reading goals on IEPs for
older students
72Progress Monitoringof Fluency
- For writing and progress monitoring reading goals
on IEPs DO NOT measure fluency (i.e., rate) in
older students (remember the Fluency Gap) - Instead measure these alternative skills.
- Accuracy of Reading Connected Text
- Recognition of Sight Words or Phrases
73ExampleText Reading Accuracy
- Goal
- In 36 instructional weeks, John will read a sixth
grade passage with at least 90 accuracy.
(baseline 86 on 5th grade passage) - Indicator
- R 8.1.2.4 uses a variety of word-recognition
strategies (e.g., orthographic patterns, reading
and writing text) to read fluently
74ExampleFry Phrases
- Goal
- In 36 instructional weeks, given a list of the
first and second sets of Fry phrases, Mollie will
recognize 80 of the phrases (baseline 50 of
first set of Fry phrases). - Indicator
- R3.1.3.1 Expands sight word vocabulary
75Intervention Notebook
76Essential Components 4 5
- Decoding
- (including phonics, word analysis, and phonemic
awareness) - Relationship between letters and sounds
77Research onPhonics Instruction
- Systematic and explicit phonics instruction is
especially important for at-risk students or
those with reading difficulties - Older readers need individualized instruction
designed for their needs - Older readers need both phonics and word analysis
skills
78Research on Phonics Instruction
- Instruction must be systematic and explicit
- Use a selected, useful set of letter-sound
relationships - Introduce this set in a logical instructional
sequence - Focus on application of phonetic skills
- Practice application in both reading and writing
79Assessment of Phonics Knowledge
- Words Their Way inventories
- Nonsense Word Test
- The Names Test
- San Diego Quick Assessment
- Test of Word Reading Efficiency (TOWRE)
- DIBELS
- Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF)
80Test and Teach Word Analysis Differently
- To assess student skill in word analysis, stimuli
are non-words - To teach phonetic skills, teachers should use
real words
81Example Nonsense Word Fluency
- Goal
- In 36 instructional weeks, when given a one
minute probe, Julie will score 50 on DIBELS
nonsense word fluency. (baseline12) - Indicator
- R3.1.1.1 Uses decoding skills that include
knowledge of phonetics and structural analysis
when reading unknown words.
82Is it appropriate to link a goal for a 7th grade
student to a 3rd grade indicator?
- The answer is yes, the entire scope sequence of
the standards provides the framework for
analyzing progress in the general curriculum. - Remember that phonics is part of the alphabetics
benchmark and there are no indicators past 4th
grade in this benchmark. If you have a student
that needs to work on phonics skills you will
have to link to below grade level indicators.
83Many Skills Are Included In Phonemic Awareness
- Phoneme isolation
- Phoneme identity
- Phoneme categorization
- Phoneme blending
- Phoneme segmentation
- Phoneme deletion
- Phoneme addition
- Phoneme substitution
84Research Regarding Phonemic Awareness for Older
Students
- Teach phonemic segmentation and blending if
needed - You can use the same instructional approaches
developed for elementary students by focusing on
oral practice or substituting different pictures - It is best to teach sounds in combination with
letters and word study, and that becomes phonics
85Assessment of Phonemic Awareness
- For Screening or progress monitoring
- Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills
(DIBELS) Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF) - For Diagnostics
- Phonological Awareness Skills Test (PAST) by
Zgonc, 2000 (in Sounds in Action)
86Intervention Notebook
- Decoding
- (including Phonics, Word Analysis, and Phonemic
Awareness)
87A Balanced Program
- Instructional Reader
- Fluency 20
- Spelling 20
- Comprehension 40
- Writing 20
- Other considerations
- Text types (narrative, expository, technical,
persuasive) - Graphics
- Text books
- Newspapers
- Letters
88Research-Based Curriculum Selection for Standard
Protocol
- A review of reading core curriculum and
supplemental materials is available at the
Florida Center for Reading Research. See
www.fcrr.org/fcrrreports/table.asp - They also have information about assessments for
Middle and High Schools. See www.fcrr.org/assessm
entMiddleHighSchool.htm
89Deborah McVey Lawrence Public Schools dlmcvey_at_usd4
97.org
A KSTARS projected funded with Federal IDEA Part
B Funds through
Student Support Services