Title: Foundational Reading Skills and Data Analysis
1Foundational Reading Skills and Data Analysis
2Essential Questions
- What are the five essential components for
effective reading instruction? - How can I help secondary students improve
decoding and fluency skills? - How can I use data analysis to guide
individualized instruction of students in my
intervention class?
3LEARNING TARGETS
- I can explain the foundational reading skills
students must have in order to be successful
readers and writers. - I can administer the Ekwall / Shanker diagnostic
assessments. - I can analyze the data to inform instruction and
to meet the individual needs of my students.
4You dont try to build a wall. You dont set
out and say Im gonna build the biggest,
baddest, greatest wall that has ever been built.
You say Im going to lay this brick as perfectly
as a brick can be laid. You do this every single
day, and soon you have a wall. --Will
Smith
5 Struggling with Text
Building A Strong Foundation
6Reading Instruction
6
7Phonemic Awareness
8(No Transcript)
9Goal of Phonics Instruction
- To help students learn the Alphabetic
- Principlethe understanding that letters
- and sounds work together in systematic
- ways to form words.
- When students understand the alphabetic
principle, they develop the skills needed to
decode words.
10Students Who Struggle With Decoding Students With Strong Decoding Skills
Rely heavily on context and guessing Read slowly and with great effort Focus on decoding rather than comprehending Skip challenging words and sections of text Do not monitor their reading to make sure it makes sense. Read a word letter by letter Process words automatically and rapidly Look for known word parts in unfamiliar words Use context to confirm pronunciation and meaning.
11How Can I Help Students Who Struggle With
Decoding?
- Familiarize students with key words before
encountering them in text. - Provide a working definition of key words.
- Model explicitly how to break down regular
multisyllabic words.
12 Fluency
- It is not just about the speed.
- It is the ability to read a text accurately,
- quickly and with expression.
13- Fluency is important because it provides a
- bridge between word recognition and
- comprehension . Ambruster, Lehr Osborn, 2001-
Comprehension
Word Recognition
14- Fluency
- Effort and Attention
- Comprehension
Fluency Effort and Attention Comprehension
15Jigsaw Activity
- Group I Introduction and Caveat
- Group II Fluency beyond the Elementary Grades
- Group III What Does This Mean
- Participants use the Cornell note-taking graphic
organizer. Share with group.
16Texts and Fluency
17How Can I Help With Fluency?
- Repeated and monitored oral reading (partner
reading, student-teacher reading) - Choral Reading
- Readers Theatre
- Tape-assisted reading
- Model fluent reading
18Vocabulary
- Students cannot understand what
- they are reading without knowing
- what most of the words mean.
- This is especially true as students
- read more advanced texts that
- contains words that are not part
- of their oral vocabulary.
19How Can I Help With Vocabulary?
- Embed the CODE Principles and the Marzano
Six-Step Process into daily intervention
instruction - Use the vocabulary tools of the KCLM model
- Teach word parts (prefixes, suffixes, base words
and word roots) - Teach words that are important for understanding
a concept of the text - Teach words that students are likely to see again
and again
20Comprehension
21Infer and Predict
Ask Questions
Comprehension
Monitor/Clarify Comprehension
Summarize
Synthesize and Retell
Visualize
22Examples of Available Diagnostics
- Stanford Achievement Test (SAT-10)
- Ekwall/Shanker Reading Inventory
- TOWL 4 Writing Assessment
23SAT-10
- Is an online standardized, norm-referenced
achievement test that can be given three times a
year. - Provides student Lexile scores
- Reduces time needed to evaluate student
achievement. - From Pearson Education Inc.
24The SAT-10s Total Reading Measures
- Comprehension
- Vocabulary
- Phonics
- Decoding
- Phonemic Awareness
25The Ekwall/Shanker Reading Inventory
- The ESRI measures
- phonemic awareness
- concepts about print
- letter knowledge
- basic sight words
- structural analysis
- fluency
- comprehension
-
26ESRI Provides 3 Reading Levels
- Independent level a student should be able to
read without help of any kind from the teacher - Instructional level at which a student should
be able to read with teacher assistance - Frustration the point at which reading material
simply becomes too difficult for the student to
read
27ESRI Allows For
- Comparison of silent and oral reading
- Assessment of fluency and word recognition
proficiency at various levels of difficulty to
determine the level of materials that a student
should read under various conditions - Listening comprehension
28Tests that Compose the ESRI
- Informal Reading Inventory
- Emergent Literacy
- Sight Words
- Phonics
- Structural Analysis
- Context Clue Use
- Reading Interest
29Administering the GWL
- Test requires a student to pronounce increasingly
difficult words that are listed by grade level at
which most students learn them. - Takes approximately 5 to 10 minutes to
administer.
30Coding for Reading Levels
31Preparation
- Make copies of the scoring sheet. You will need
one set of the two pages for each student you
test. (p 131-132) - Open the manual to the Test Sheet (p. 130). You
can also copy and laminate the sheet to hand to
the student.
32Directions
- Place the test sheet in front of the student and
say, Here are some words I would like for you to
read aloud. Try to read all of them even if you
are not sure what some of the words are. Lets
begin by reading the words on this list. - Record words pronounced correctly with a plus()
on your scoring sheet and write down all
incorrect responses. - Have students continue reading consecutively
higher level-levels until the student misses
three or more words on any one list. - After the student misses three or more words on
any list, stop the testing.
33Scoring
- The highest list at which the student reads with
0 or 1 error is the independent reading level. - The highest list at which the student misses two
words is the instructional level. - The list at which the students misses three or
more words is the frustration level.
34TOWL-4
- Norm-referenced, comprehensive diagnostic of
written expression - It is used to
- identify students who write poorly
- Determine students particular weaknesses in
various writing abilities - Document student progress
-
35Subtests of the TOWL
- Vocabulary
- Spelling
- Punctuation
- Logical Sentences
- Sentence Combining
- Contextual Conventions
- Story Composition
36Reading is the most important skill for success
in school and society. Children who fail to
learn to read will surely fail to reach their
full potential. --Hall Moats, 1999
- Reflective Journal
- I can explain the foundational skills students
need to be successful readers and writers. - I can administer the SAT 10,
- Ekwall/Shanker, and Towl 4 diagnostic
assessments. - I know how to analyze the data to meet the
individual needs of my students.
37Bibliography
- Ekwall, James, Ward A. Cockrum. Reading
Inventory. 5th Edition. Allyn and Bacon 2010 - Gelfond, Sabra. How You Can Build A Better
Reader. Retrieved from the World Wide Web
http//www.iser.com/resources/better-readers.html
January 2010. - Hudson, Roxanne Ph.D. Word Work Strategies to
Develop Decoding Skills for Beginning Readers.
Retrieved from the World Wide Web June 2010
http//www.fcrr.org/staffpresentations/RHudson/wor
d_work_RF_Longisland_FCRR.pdf - National Reading Panel. Put Reading First.
National Institute for Literacy 2001) - Pressley, Michael. Comprehension Instruction
What Works. Retrieved from the World Wide Web
Reading Rockets.Org. June 2010) . - Rasinski, Timothy V., Nancy D. Padak, Christine
A.McKeon, Lori G.Wilfong, Julie A. Friedauer,
Patricia Heim. Is Reading Fluency a Key for
Successful High School Reading. National Reading
Associatioin 2005. - Rasinski, T. V. (2003). The fluent reader Oral
reading strategies for building word recognition,
fluency, and comprehension. New York Scholastic. - Walker, L. (1996) Readers' Theatre in the Middle
School and Junior High School, Meriwether
Publishing, CO. - SAT-10 http//www.pearsonassessments.com/NR/rdonl
yres/E5E5CAB0-7BB9-4BBB-88DA-C444B0A52245/0/SAT10S
coreReportSampler.pdf - TOWL-4 http//www.pearsonassessme
nts.com/HAIWEB/Cultures/en- - us/Productdetail.htm?PidPAa19045M
odesummary -