Title: Advanced Applications of CBM in Reading: Instructional Decision-Making Strategies
1Advanced Applications of CBMin Reading
Instructional Decision-Making Strategies
- Pamela M. Stecker, Ph.D.
- Erica S. Lembke, Ph.D.
- July 8, 2005
2Overview of Session
- 1. Importance of Using Progress Monitoring
- 2. General Approaches for Conducting Progress
Monitoring - Using general outcome measures of achievement
(robust indicators) - Using skills-based measures of achievement
(systematic sampling of curricular skills) - 3. Print-Based Progress Monitoring Measures in
Reading - Letter-Naming Fluency
- Letter-Sound Fluency
- Nonsense Word Fluency
- Word Identification Fluency
- Oral Reading Fluency
- Maze Fluency
3Overview of Session (contd)
- 4. General Procedures for Data-Based Decision
Making - Goal setting and rate of progress
- Decision-making framework
- 5. Web-Based Applications in Reading
- AIMSweb
- Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills
(DIBELS) - Edcheckup
- Yearly Progress Pro
- 6. Generally Effective Reading Instruction
- Instructional procedures
- Case studies
4Part 1Importance of Using Progress Monitoring
5What Is Progress Monitoring?
- Progress monitoring involves ongoing data
collection on skills that are important to
student success and can be used to - estimate student rates of improvement
- identify students who are not demonstrating
adequate progress - aid teachers in instructional planning
6Why Is Progress Monitoring Important?
- Research has demonstrated that when teachers use
progress monitoring for instructional
decision-making purposes - students achieve more
- teacher decision-making improves
- students tend to be more aware of their
performance - (e.g., see Fuchs, Deno, Mirkin, 1984 L. S.
Fuchs, Fuchs, Hamlett, Ferguson, 1992 Stecker,
Fuchs, Fuchs, in press)
7Benefits of Conducting Progress Monitoring
- Student performance data on important,
grade-level skills/content can be gathered
quickly and easily - Student progress can be analyzed in order to
modify instructional programs when needed and/or
adjust student goals upward - Individual student data can be compared to data
of other students in the classroom, in the
childs school, or in the school district
8Progress Monitoring Levels of Implementation
- Schoolwide screening
- To identify at-risk students who may need
additional services - Grade-level, classroom-level, or individual
student level - To help general educators plan more effective
instruction - To help special educators design more effective
instructional programs for students who do not
respond to general education
9Curriculum-Based Measurement A Specific Form of
Progress Monitoring
- CBM is a scientifically validated form of student
progress monitoring that incorporates standard
methods for test development, administration,
scoring, and data utilization - CBM enjoys nearly 30 years of research to support
its effectiveness - Several computerized or Web-based versions of
progress monitoring are based on principles of CBM
10Key Features of CBM
- Tests sample year-long curriculum
- Tests are relatively brief and easy to administer
- Tests are given frequently (e.g., from twice
weekly to every month) to judge student progress - Each alternate form samples the same types of
skills at the same level of difficulty
- Student performance is used to set long-term
goals - Scores are graphed, and teachers use a
decision-making framework to judge adequacy of
student progress - Data are used to compare/contrast effectiveness
of different instructional methods - CBM has documented reliability and validity
11Sample CBM graph
12Why Should Your School/District/State Implement
Progress Monitoring?
- What efforts have you already made toward
implementation of progress monitoring? - What are your goals for implementation for next
year? - Goals for 3 years from now?
ACTION PLAN
13Part 2General Approaches for Conducting
Progress Monitoring
14Two Main Approaches for Sampling Student
Performance
- Using General Outcome Measures of Achievement
- Robust indicators of overall reading proficiency
- Oral reading fluency
- Maze
- Using Skills-Based Measures of Achievement
- Mixed set of items representing systematic
sampling of skills from the annual curriculum
(e.g., mixed set of problems in mathematics) - (see Fuchs, 2004 for a description of general
outcome vs. skills-based measures)
15General Outcome Measures
- Correlate well with other measures of component
skills that constitute reading - Correlate better than other possible tasks that
could be used to represent reading
16General Outcome Measures in Reading
- Oral Reading Fluency and Maze
- Overall indicators of reading competence
- Students who score well on these skills tend to
be students who also do well with decoding, sight
words, and comprehension - Scores and slopes correlate well with other
global measures of reading competence, such as
high-stakes test performance, performance on
standardized tests, and teacher-made tests
17Skills-Based Measures
- Systematic sampling of the annual curriculum to
create probes that proportionally represent the
instructional curriculum - Allows the possibility of providing analysis of
level of mastery of component skills
18Skills-Based Content
- Mixed set of items representing important skills
from the annual curriculum or state standards in
reading/language arts, including, for example - selecting misspelled words
- identifying main ideas for paragraph or passage
- locating verbs within sentences
- choosing correct punctuation for writing a date
19What considerations do you need to address as you
choose a progress monitoring system?
- What type of information do you hope to collect
about student progress in reading? - Approach you will use?
- Scope of implementation at your school (school,
class, or grade level)? - Resources?
- Time
- Money
- Personnel
- Technology
- How will teachers betrained and providedwith
ongoing support?
ACTION PLAN
20Part 3 Print-Based Progress Monitoring Measures
in Reading
21Common Print-Based Progress Monitoring Reading
Measures
- Letter-Naming Fluency
- Letter-Sound Fluency
- Nonsense Word Fluency
- Word Identification Fluency
- Oral Reading Fluency
- Maze Fluency
- Type of measure and time necessary for
administration varies by system!
22Single-Skill vs. CBM Multidimensional Measures
- Single-skill measures
- Focus on one type of skill
- Static scores correlate well with some criterion
measures - Few studies that document use of single-skill
measures for modeling global learning over time
consequently, growth over time may not correspond
well with overall learning of the broader domain - Instructional utility may be overly narrow across
the long term
23Single-Skill vs. CBM Multidimensional Measures
- Multidimensional Measures (CBM)
- Oral reading fluency and maze fluency--student
must integrate many reading skills in order to
perform well on task - Scores and slopes correlate well with multiple
global measures of reading competence - Instructional utility is broad based
24Letter-Naming Fluency
- Single-skill measure for kindergarten students
- Used in AIMSweb, DIBELS
- Data graphed Number of letters named correctly
in 1 minute
25Letter-Sound Fluency
- Single-skill measure used for kindergarten
students - Used in AIMSweb, Edcheckup
- Data graphed Number of letter sounds produced
correctly in 1 minute
26Nonsense Word Fluency
- Single-skill measure used for kindergarten and
first-grade students (vc or cvc blending) - Used in AIMSweb, DIBELS
- Data graphed Number of sounds produced correctly
in 1 minute (Student may say individual sounds or
say the entire word however, credit is awarded
for each sound produced)
27Word Identification Fluency
- Embeds several skills, such as decoding,
sight-word recognition, vocabulary knowledge - Used for first-grade students
- Used in Edcheckup
- Data graphed Number of words said in 1 minute
28Oral Reading Fluency
- Multidimensional CBM measure used for students
who are beginning to read connected text through
high school students - Used in AIMSweb, DIBELS, Edcheckup
- Data graphed Number of words read correctly in 1
minute
29Maze Fluency
- Multidimensional CBM measure often used for
students in fourth grade through high school - Used in AIMSweb, Edcheckup, Yearly Progress Pro
also used in Monitoring Basic Skills Progress
computer program (L.S. Fuchs, Hamlett, Fuchs,
1997) - Data graphed Number of correct maze choices in
2.5 minutes
30Print-Based Measures in Reading
- With which measures are you most familiar?
- Which measures would you like to examine?
- Relative benefits of individual measures?
- Resource considerations
- Time
- Money
- Technology
- Training
ACTION PLAN
31Part 4 General Procedures for Data-Based
Decision Making
32General Procedures
- Select goal-level material
- Collect baseline data and set realistic or
ambitious goals - Administer timed, alternate measures weekly
- Apply decision-making rules to graphed data every
3-4 weeks - Implement instructional interventions when
warranted - Use database to analyze errors and to develop
instructional procedures
33Selection of Measure
- General CBM Implementation Schedule
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35Goal Setting Methods
- Universal benchmarks
- Use of growth rates that reflect typical
increases in performance by grade level - Intra-individual framework that accounts for
baseline rate of improvement and multiplies rate
by 1.5 - Goal-setting method varies by system used!
36CBM Reading Benchmarks
- K 40 letter sounds per min.
- 1 50 words correct per min. on word list
- 2 75 words correct from text per min.
- 3 100 words correct from text per min.
- 4 20 replacements in text per 2.5 min.
- 5 25 replacements in text per 2.5 min.
- 6 30 replacements in text per 2.5 min.
37Realistic and Ambitious Growth Rates for Oral
Reading Fluency
- Grade Realistic Ambitious
- 1 2.0 3.0
- 2 1.5 2.0
- 3 1.0 1.5
- 4 0.85 1.1
- 5 0.5 0.8
- 6 0.3 0.65
- Maze Fluency 0.4 0.85
- (see L. S. Fuchs, Fuchs, Hamlett, Walz,
Germann, 1993)
38Writing GoalsLegally Correct and Educationally
Meaningful IEP Goals
- Current Level of Performance
- Given passages sampled randomly from Grade 3
reading curriculum, Jasmine currently reads 50
words correct per minute (i.e., median baseline
information). - End-of-Year Goal
- If teacher calculates a 1.5-word increase across
34 weeks left in school year and adds it to the
current baseline, Jasmines goal will be set at
101 words read correctly per minute (1.5 x 34)
50 101 - In 34 weeks, when given a grade 3 passage,
Jasmine will read aloud 101 words in one minute.
39Goal Line Versus Students Current Rate of
Progress
- Examine both level and rate of student progress
to determine whether students are progressing
adequately to reach end-of-year goals - Compare students current rate of progress with
projected rate of progress (i.e., goal line) - To judge whether the instructional program needs
to be modified to better meet student needs - or
- To determine whether the goal should be raised
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41General Decision-Making Framework
- Trend-Line Rule
- If 4 weeks of instruction have occurred AND at
least 8 data points have been collected, figure
trend of current performance and compare to goal
line. - If trend of student progress is steeper than goal
line, raise goal. - If trend of student progress is less steep than
goal line, make a teaching change.
42What Is the Data-Based Decision Rule?
The trend-line rule may be applied Data-based
decision is to make an instructional change.
43General Decision-Making Framework
- 4-Point Rule
- (supersedes the trend-line rule)
- If 3 weeks of instruction have occurred AND at
least 6 points have been collected, examine the 4
most recent data points. - If all 4 are above goal line, increase goal.
- If all 4 are below goal line, make a teaching
change. - If the 4 data points are both above and below the
goal line, keep collecting data until trend-line
rule or 4-point rule can be applied.
44What Is the Data-Based Decision Rule?
The 4-point rule may be applied Data-based
decision is to raise the goal.
45What Is the Data-Based Decision Rule?
The 4-point rule may be applied Data-based
decision is to make an instructional change.
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47Intervention Implementation
- Most important aspect of CBM
- USE THE DATA!!!
- The following instructional elements may be
altered to enhance student performance - Instructional strategies
- Size of instructional group
- Time allocated for instruction
- Materials used
- Reinforcement
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49Considerations for Data-Based Decision Making
- How will you determine what goals to use?
Universal goals? Slope data? Goals from a
particular system? - How often will you collect data and with whom?
Schoolwide? With individual students? - How will you prompt yourself to apply
decision-making rules and how often? Or, how will
you prompt others? - How will instructional interventions be
determined, and how will their implementation be
monitored?
ACTION PLAN
50Part 5Web-Based Tools in Reading
51AIMSweb
- http//www.edformation.com
52AIMSweb CBM Measures
- Reading-CBM (Oral Reading Fluency)English and
Spanish - Maze-CBM (Reading Comprehension)
- Early Literacy Measures
- MIDE (Spanish Early Literacy)
- Early Numeracy-CBM
- Mathematics-CBM
- Spelling-CBM
- Written Expression-CBM
53DIBELS Compatible
- AIMSweb fully supports charting and reporting of
all DIBELS brand assessments - Customers may use DIBELS assessments, AIMSweb
assessments, or any combination of both
543-Tier Progress Monitoringand Response to
Intervention system
Powered by Edformation
55Tier 1 BenchmarkFeatures
- Organizes Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM) and
DIBELS Data for Benchmark Assessment Fall,
Winter, and Spring - Prepares Reports for Teachers, Principals, and
Administrators on Individual Students, Classes,
Grades, Schools, and School Districts - Identifies At Risk Students Early
- Objectively Determines Rates of Progress for
Individual Students, Schools, and NCLB Risk
Groups - Allows Evaluation at Multiple Levels of
Comparison Groups - Prints Professional Reports for Parent
Conferences and Other Meetings
Powered by Edformation
56Tier 1 BenchmarkIndividual Student Report -
Spring
- Documents What Worked for At Risk Students
Powered by Edformation
57Tier 1 BenchmarkClass Report Rank by Score and
Percentile
- Rank Orders Students by Performance
- Color-Codes Individual Educational Needs
- Provides Instructional Decisions to Think About
Powered by Edformation
58Tier 1 BenchmarkGrade Report All Skills Matrix
- Identifies At-Risk Students in the School by
Name, Teacher, Assessment, and Benchmark Period
Powered by Edformation
59Tier 1 BenchmarkBuilding Report Above and
Below Target
- Evaluates Improvement of Students Relative to
Specified Achievement Targets
Powered by Edformation
60Tier 1 BenchmarkDistrict Report Compare Schools
- Allows Comparison of Scores by School
Powered by Edformation
61Strategic MonitorFeatures
- Monthly assessments to allow more frequent
evaluation - Verifies achievement levels
- Identification of all students requiring
intensive progress monitoring is ensured
Powered by Edformation
62Tier 2 Strategic MonitorIndividual Student Report
Powered by Edformation
63Progress MonitorFeatures
- Frequently assess students in need of intensive
instructional services - Document the effects of intervention
- Print professional reports for periodic and
annual reviews - Translate annual IEP goals into expected rates of
progress (Aim lines) automatically - Monitor progress (Trend lines) towards goals
Powered by Edformation
64Tier 3 Progress MonitorCase Manager Interface
Powered by Edformation
65Tier 3 Progress MonitorStudent Report 3
- IEP Revisions Can Be Evaluated
Powered by Edformation
66Tier 3 Progress MonitorStudent Report 4
- And Revised as Necessary!!
Powered by Edformation
67Response to Intervention (RTI)Standard Process
Protocol
- Assess skills directly, frequently, and
continuously using CBM assessments - Progress Monitor with AIMSweb to chart expected
rates of progress and quickly compare to actual
rates of progress - Plan, Intervene, and Document. The RTI Interface
pulls data together to provide clear evidence of
a response to intervention or lack of response
Powered by Edformation
68Response to Intervention (RTI)Case Manager
Interface
Powered by Edformation
69Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills
(DIBELS)
70DIBELS Measures and Administration Schedule for
Benchmarking
71Materials Provided
- Materials can be printed for school-wide
benchmarking (3 times per year) or for individual
progress monitoring (weekly) - For both benchmarking and progress monitoring,
measures and directions are provided in
easy-to-manage, folded booklets
72Information Provided
- Provides comprehensive data management and
reports for - District-level
- School-level
- Grade-level
- Class-level
- Individual student level
73Grade-Level Reports
- Report Components
- Benchmark Goalslong-term performance goals.
Represent minimal levels of satisfactory progress
for the lowest achieving students. - Established, Emerging, or Deficit--if the
benchmark goal is to be completed by the time the
measure is administered - Low Risk, Some Risk, or At-Risk--if the benchmark
goal is to be completed at some point in the
future
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75Class Reports
- Scoresraw scores
- Percentilespercent of students that scored the
same as or lower than the student - Statusrefers to grade-level report
- Instructional recommendations
- Benchmark (Tier I)goal has been met or student
is on track to meet subsequent goals no
additional intervention is recommended at this
time - Strategic (Tier II)no clear prediction regarding
subsequent goals and additional intervention is
recommended - Intensive (Tier III)odds are against student
achieving subsequent goals without substantial
intervention - Reports can be printed for one testing period
(e.g., Winter) or across the school year (Fall,
Winter, Spring)
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78Individual Student Reports
- Provides data on individual students
- Across a school year
- Across the students elementary career
- Data are provided for each reading skill and can
be compared to benchmark goals
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83Edcheckup
84Edcheckup Reading and Writing Measures That Can
Be Downloaded and Printed
85Edcheckup Letter Sounds
86Edcheckup Isolated Words
87Edcheckup Oral Reading
88Edcheckup Maze Reading
89Data Entry for Oral Reading Edcheckup Program
Automatically Calculates Median
90Link to Electronic Scoring Feature
91Electronic Scoring Feature
92Roster Shows Class Lists and Measures Used
93Class Reports Options Page
94- Class Report with Recommendations Regarding
Interventions - At or above benchmark (blue)
- On track with modest rate (green)
- Intervention recommended (yellow)
- Intervention necessary (red)
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96Edcheckup Individual Student Report Screening
and Progress Monitoring Data
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98McGraw-HillDigital Learning
- http//www.mhdigitallearning.com
99McGraw-HillDigital Learning
- Language Arts 15-minute weekly standards-based
measure of specific skills - Text Comprehension (includes narrative,
informational, and functional passages) - Vocabulary
- Spelling
- Word Analysis
- Language Mechanics
- Language Usage and Expression
- Reading 2 1/2-minute weekly maze measure
100Student Takes Assessment
How Yearly Progress Pro? Works
McGraw-Hill Digital Learning
101 Grade 3rd Cluster Word Analysis Skill
Letter-sound correspondence for
vowels McGraw-Hill Digital Learning
102 Grade 3rd Cluster Reading Comprehension Skill
Literal Details McGraw-Hill Digital Learning
103 Grade 3rd Cluster Reading
Comprehension Skill Main Idea McGraw-Hill Digit
al Learning
104 Grade 3rd Cluster Reading Vocabulary Skill
Synonyms McGraw-Hill Digital Learning
105 Grade 3rd Cluster Language Mechanics Skill
Punctuation McGraw-Hill Digital Learning
106Report by Skill Cluster
107Class Report by Skill Detail
108Reading Maze--2 1/2 Minutes
109Whole Class Report
110Student Watch Report
111Graph of Student Meeting Year-End Target
112Graph of Student Almost Meeting Year-End Target
113Graph of Student Not Progressing Well
114Dual Discrepancy Report
115Student Detail for Dual Discrepancy
116Intervention Recommendations
117Price Skills Covered
AIMSweb Basic (data management for DIBELS)--1 per student per year Pro (data management and materials for skills)--2-4 per student per year Early literacy, oral reading, maze, writing, early numeracy, spelling, mathematics
DIBELS Materials onlyFree Materials and data management, 1 per student per year Early literacy, oral reading, retell, word use fluency
Edcheckup Materials and data management, 80-100 per classroom, per year Reading materials free for a limited time Beginning reading, oral reading, maze, writing mathematics being developed
Yearly Progress Pro Annual student subscriptions are 7.99 for one subject or 12.98 per student for two subjects (skills are aligned to state or national standards as requested), provides skills analyses and report access for teachers and administrators includes student tutorials for each skill add 1st-year technology and implementation fee per building Reading and Language Arts--includes reading maze and language assessment of specific reading and language skills, such as main idea, critical analysis, spelling, vocabulary, grammar Mathematics--grade-level specific computation and problem solving skills aligned to state and national standards
Information taken from Web sites or publishers
on 5/30/05. Check with individual publishers for
most current information.
118Considerations When Selecting a Web-Based
Systemfor Progress Monitoring
- Measures needed?
- Types of information provided?
- Cost?
- Other academic areas covered?
ACTION PLAN
119Part 6Generally Effective Reading Instruction
120General Considerations When Determining
Interventions
- Using research-validated instructional
procedures Is there evidence for their
effectiveness? - Oral reading fluency or maze fluency
- Very low scores student probably would benefit
from instruction in decoding and word
identification - Somewhat low scores student probably would
benefit from fluency interventions - Average scores student probably would benefit
from vocabulary instruction and text
comprehension strategies
121NRP Findings Focus on Critical Areas of Literacy
Instruction
- Phonemic Awarenessability to hear and manipulate
individual sounds in oral language - Phonicsunderstanding and connecting letters of
written language with sounds of oral language - Fluencyreading text accurately and quickly
- Vocabularyoral or reading language needed for
effective communication - Text Comprehensionpurposeful and active
strategies for understanding written language -
- (National Reading Panel, 2000)
122PHONEMIC AWARENESS
- Phonological awareness The understanding that
ORAL language can be broken down into smaller
components and the ability to manipulate those
components--sentences into words, words into
syllables, words into onsets and rimes, and words
into individual phonemes/s/ /u/ /n/ or /s/
/u/ /n/ /sh/ /i/ /n/ - Phonemic awareness the ability to hear,
identify, and manipulate individual sounds in
spoken words appears critical for reading and
spelling development - Put Reading Firstvarious dimensions of phonemic
awareness phoneme isolation, identity,
categorization, blending, segmentation, deletion,
addition, substitution
123Critical Dimensions ofPhonemic Awareness
- Blending Ill say the sounds of a word. You
guess what the word is. What word is this?
/fffuuunnn/ - Segmenting Im going to say a word, and then
Ill say each sound in the word. Listen
carefully. man - /m/ /a/ /n/
Now Ill say a different
word and you tell me each sound you hear.
124n
u
s
125Phoneme Deletion or Substitution
- Deletion Im going to ask you to say a word and
then to say it again without one or more of its
sounds. Say sat. Now say it again, but dont
say /s/. (at) Say plate but dont say
/p/. (late) Say plane but dont say
/n/. (play) - Substitution Say plane but change /pl/ to /tr/
(train) - General progression of difficulty beginning
sounds, ending sounds, middle sounds)
126PHONICS
- Systematic and Explicit Phonics instruction
significantly improves young childrens decoding,
spelling, and reading comprehension and older
students word reading and oral text reading
skills. - Systematic logical sequence and careful
selection of letter-sounds for instruction - Explicit precise directions for teachers or
careful wording to emphasize accurate models for
students and to make letter-sound relationships
conspicuous
127Why Is Phonics Instruction So Challenging for
Many Teachers?
- Many teacher preparation programs do not provide
training in phonics instruction. - The English alphabet contains 26 letters but we
use roughly 44 phonemes. These sounds are
represented by as many as 250 different spellings
(e.g., /f/ as in ph, f, gh, ff). - Many core beginning reading programs have not
emphasized systematic and explicit phonics
instruction.
128Phonics Instruction
- Use a functional sequence of letter-sounds, one
that leads to rapid success in reading words - Provide opportunities for practicing decoding
skills both in word lists and in connected text
129Systematic and Explicit Phonics Instruction
- Introduce most common sound for a new letter (/k/
for c) - Separate instruction of potentially confusing
letters due to visual or auditory similarity
(h/n, e/i, b/d) - May introduce lower case letters first (more
functional)
- Start with high-utility letters (s, t, m, and
vowels, not z, x) - Select words that start with continuous sounds
rather than stop sounds when beginning to sound
out wordsor for blending and segmenting practice
(use mat before bat)
130FLUENCY
- Repeated and monitored oral reading significantly
improves reading fluency and overall reading
achievement. - Caution Silent, independent reading with little
guidance or feedback may not be enough to improve
fluency and overall reading achievement.
131Why Fluency Is Important
- More fluent readers focus their attention on
making connections among the ideas in a text and
between these ideas and their background
knowledge. Therefore, they are able to focus on
comprehension.
- Less fluent readers focus their attention
primarily on decoding and accessing the meaning
of individual words. Therefore, they appear to
have little attention left for comprehending
connected text.
132Oral Reading Fluency Norms, 2005
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
59 89 107 125 138 150 150 150
Grade
WPM
Spring norms Over 100,000 students Taken from
Oral Reading Fluency, 90 Years of Measurement.
Behavioral Research and Teaching, Eugene, OR,
2005. http//brt.uoregon.edu/techreports/TR_33_NCO
RF_DescStats.pdf
133Fluency Interventions
- Model fluent reading. Have students reread text
themselves. Read aloud daily. - Students should read aloud repeatedly with
guidance. - Use text at independent level (approx. 95
accuracy). - Use adults, peers, or tape recorders for modeling
and practicing one to one (although can do
classwide partner reading). Choral reading may
engage groups of students. - Activities from Put Reading First
- Student-adult reading
- Choral reading
- Tape-assisted reading
- Partner reading
- Readers theater
134Repeated Readings as an Instructional Strategy
- Text used for repeated readings may be of varying
lengthoften 100-word passages are used for young
elementary children. Student reads text three or
four times, trying to decrease the duration for
each reading. Or, teacher sets a time limit, such
as 1 or 2 min., for student to read as much as
possible. Goal is to increase the amount read in
each subsequent reading. - Text should include only words the student can
read rapidly and accurately, either through
efficient decoding or good sight-word vocabulary. - Teacher or student may chart progress and
reinforce increases in rate.
135VOCABULARY
- Many words are learned indirectly through
everyday experiences with oral and written
language (e.g., conversations, listening to
others read, reading independently). - However, some vocabulary must be taught directly
through specific word instruction or through
word-learning strategies.
136Direct Vocabulary Learning Specific Word
Instruction
- Direct vocabulary instruction aids in
comprehension. However, a text may have too many
unknown words for direct instructionbe selective
with vocabulary. Students do not have to know all
words in order to understand text. - Words selected should be important, useful, and
difficult. - Teach specific words prior to reading text (e.g.,
use a model, synonym, or definition). - Repeat exposure to vocabulary often and in many
different contexts. - Teach word-learning strategies (e.g., use of
dictionaries and other reference tools,
contextual clues, word parts). - An important aspect of teaching vocabulary is
selecting a set of appropriate examples.
137Examples for Specific Word Instruction
- Model the concept above. Use hand or object and
place above or not above other objects
(demonstrate position). - Teach meaning for gigantic by using the known
synonym large. Connect to prior knowledge,
check with examples and nonexamples, and use in
sentences. - Teach meaning by providing definition exita
door that leads out of the building. Is this
(point to front door) an exit or not? How do you
know? - (see Carnine, Silbert, Kameenui, Tarver, 2002)
138COMPREHENSION
- is the reason for reading!
- Comprehension is both purposeful and active. Good
readers have a purpose for reading, and they
think actively about what they are reading as
they are doing it (metacognitionmonitoring
understanding during reading and applying fix
up strategies, such as adjusting reading speed
and rereading also checking understanding
afterward).
139Effective Comprehension Strategies
- Comprehension monitoringinvolves students using
a set of steps to recognize when they have
difficulties understanding - Graphic and semantic organizers (webs, charts,
frames)to illustrate relationships among ideas
and events - Summarizinginvolves synthesis of important
ideas helps to identify main ideas, eliminate
unnecessary information, and remember content - Answering questions and generating own
questionshelp students to establish purpose,
focus attention, think and monitor actively,
review content, and relate content to prior
knowledge - Story structureknowledge of story parts (e.g.,
characters, setting, problem, sequence of events,
problem resolution) facilitates comprehension - Guidelines for How to Teach Comprehension
- Cooperative learningstudents work together to
apply comprehension strategies. Effective with
clearly defined tasks and content-area reading. - Multiple-strategy instructionstudents use
different strategies flexibly as needed to assist
their comprehension.
140Comprehension Strategies Should Be Taught Directly
- As with other big ideas in reading instruction,
comprehension strategies must be taught
explicitly - Provide explanations--why strategy helps and when
it should be applied - Model or demonstrate strategy--think aloud
- Provide guided practice using strategy
- Scaffold assistance during practice opportunities
until students become independent in applying
strategy
141Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS) A
Multiple Strategy Intervention
- Classwide peer tutoring program to supplement
classroom literacy instruction for practicing
important reading skills and strategies, such as
decoding, sight-word recognition, oral reading
fluency, summarization, and prediction - Validated instructional practices that strengthen
general educations capacity to meet academic
needs of increasingly diverse population in
classrooms - (D. Fuchs, Fuchs, Burish, 2000)
142PALS Research
- Based on Juniper Gardens ClassWide Peer Tutoring
model - Has over 10 years of experimental research
- Used in Title 1 and Non-Title 1 Schools
- Implemented in urban and suburban schools
- Includes high, average, and low achievers as well
as students with disabilities
143Critical Features of PALS
- Supplemental reading practice several times per
week (30-45 min. each session, depending on grade
level and activities) - Structured activities
- Reciprocal roles (Coaches and Readers)
- Individualized support--corrective feedback
- More time on task with active engagement
- Inclusion of all students with built-in
opportunities for success - Facilitation of positive peer interactions
- Opportunities to monitor student progress
- Practical AND effective strategies
144General Procedures for PALS
- PALS is conducted three times each week (about
30-45 min. per session) but four times is
recommended in Title I schools or very
low-achieving schools. - Students are rank ordered, split in half, and
stronger readers in top half are paired with
weaker readers in bottom half. - Each pair is assigned to one of two teams.
- Teams and pairs remain together for 3-4 weeks,
and partners work to earn points for their team
each week. - Within pairs, the stronger reader reads first to
provide a model, but coach and reader roles are
switched during each activity. - Partners read text at the level of the weaker
reader. - Teachers monitor students, provide help, and
award bonus points for good tutoring behaviors.
145PALS Activities for Kindergarten and First-Grade
Students
- Includes Teacher-Led Practice and Partner
Activities Conducted in Pairs - Phonological Awareness (e.g., saying first and
last sounds, rhyming, counting
sounds, segmenting, and blending) - Letter-Sound Correspondences (e.g., letters and
letter combinations) - Decoding (e.g., words and sentences)
- Fluency (e.g., sight words, stories, and book
reading)
146PALS in Grades 2-6
- Partner Reading (11-12 minutes)
- Stronger reader reads for 5 min
- Weaker reader rereads same text for 5 min
- Weaker reader retells selection for 1 min. in
Grades 2-3 or for 2 min. in Grades 4-6 - Paragraph Shrinking (10 minutes)
- Stronger reader reads new text, stopping to
summarize after each paragraph states the most
important who or what, tells what mainly
happened, and gives main idea statement in 10
words or less (5 min.) - Weaker reader continues with new text using same
procedure (5 min.) - Prediction Relay (10 minutes)
- Stronger reader makes prediction for next half
page, reads half page, stops to verify prediction
for 5 min. - Weaker reader continues with new text using same
strategy for 5 min.
147ApplicationCase Studies
148General Considerations When Determining
Interventions
- Using research-validated instructional
procedures Is there evidence for their
effectiveness? - Oral reading fluency or maze fluency
- Very low scores student likely would benefit
from instruction in decoding and word
identification - Somewhat low scores student likely would benefit
from fluency interventions - Average scores student likely would benefit from
vocabulary instruction and text comprehension
strategies
149Case Study 1Jonahs CBM Graph
150Jonah
- 2nd grader makes many errors during oral reading
fluency assessments - Word correct scores are lower than classmates
30, 35, 28, 32, 40, 35, and 31 - Daily teacher-directed, whole-class instruction
that includes some independent work also two
days per week has two reading groups focused on
skills-based activities three days per week has
whole-class writing activities - Score of 31 on last measure (seen on next slide)
and Quick Miscue Analysis to illustrate types of
miscues made on first 10 - What might you ask Jonahs teacher about
structuring class time and activities for
language arts? What type of intervention(s) might
benefit Jonah?
151 Larry was very excited! His father 6 had
just brought home a new puppy. Larrys
14 brother and sister were going to be very
22 surprised, too. 24 The little puppy was
black and brown 31 with a few white patches.
Her ears were long 40 and floppy. Her tummy
nearly touched the 47 ground. Dad said this dog
was a beagle. 55 Larry thought their new dog
was cute. 62 He couldnt decide what he wanted
to name 70
saw him (T provided)
our b
mother was much
sorpray
pup blue
for much His hair was
funny teeth were torn
growl our puppy boy
152Word Written Word Spoken Grapho-phonemic Syntax Semantics
was saw no yes no
very him no no no
excited ----- no no no
just our no no no
brought b minimal no no
brother mother yes yes no
were was minimal yes yes
very much no yes yes
surprised sorpray yes no no
puppy pup yes yes yes
Quick Miscue Analysis Quick Miscue Analysis 30 50 30
153Case Study 2Alexs CBM Graph
154Case Study 2Alex
- Alex is a 3rd grade student in Mr. Simons
general education classroom. Alex has always been
a slow reader, and as the text has become more
difficult, her reading has gotten even slower.
Mr. Simon has asked the special education teacher
for advice, because he isnt sure why Alex reads
slowly. Mr. Simon has been collecting 1-minute
samples of Alexs reading performance in grade
level text and has been graphing that
performance. For the last three weeks, Alexs
scores have fallen below the goal line. On these
passages, Alex has received the following scores
- Passage 157 wcpm, 3 errors (Sahara (teacher
supplied--TS) desert (said dessert) arid
(TS)) - Passage 258 wcpm, 2 errors (Thursday (said
Tuesday) while (said whil)) - Passage 355 wcpm, 3 errors (passage (TS)
blossoming (TS) garden (said garnet)) - For each passage, Mr. Simon also has Alex retell
everything that she can remember about what she
read. Alex retells an average of 87 of main
story elements. - Based on the information you have, what reading
intervention might you suggest for Alex at this
time?
155Considerations When Determining What Reading
Strategies to Implement
- When will you implement interventions?
- How will you determine what intervention to
implement? - How often will you make decisions about which
interventions to implement and whether
interventions are working?
ACTION PLAN