Title: Fluency
1Fluency
2- You cant read to learn until you first learn to
read. - -Rod Paige, US Secretary of Education
3FluencyGrades 1-5
- Fluency is the ability to read a text accurately
and quickly (automaticity). (Samuels,
1994) - Fluency is the ability to read text with accuracy
at an appropriate rate, and with appropriate
expression/phrasing (prosody).
4Research says
- Repeated and monitored oral reading improves
fluency. - Repeated reading can benefit most students
throughout elementary school, as well as
struggling readers at higher grade levels. - Fluency is key to reading achievement.
-
(Chard, Vaughn, Tyler 2002) - It develops because students are given
opportunities to practice reading with a high
degree of success. They should be reading books
at their independent reading level with 95
accuracy. (Allington 2001)
5Fluency
- Fluent readers use decoding skills to quickly
read through material to achieve comprehension.
They have good vocabulary and they continually
make connections with the text and their own
background knowledge. - (Armbruster, Lehr, Osborn 2001)
6Fluency continued
- Fluent readers focus on and can devote attention
to comprehension. - Non-fluent readers focus on decoding.
- Fluency is important because it provides a bridge
between word recognition and comprehension. - Fluency develops from practice it is not
developmental. It can change depending on
vocabulary and the background knowledge the
student has. Students need to read and re-read
appropriate books at their independent level. - Fluency can be very motivating to students.
7Fluency continued
- Students must hear fluent readers model reading
and must be coached to become smooth,
expression-filled readers. - To determine if a book is the correct level for a
student they should be able to read a 100 word
passage with 95 accuracy, meaning that they have
less than 7 errors in the passage. - Round Robin reading is not effective. Students
only read a small amount of text, only read it
once, not the best use of time. - (Eldridge, Reutzel and Hollingsworth 1996)
8Assessing Fluency
- DIBELS or AIMSweb
- 3 Minute Reading Assessments Word Recognition,
Fluency Comprehension (2205) by Timothy
Rasinski Nancy Padak - Just use instructional situations
- Any passage of about 125-150 words
9Oral Reading Rate Norms
Grade Fall Winter Spring
1 2 3 4 5 6 0-20 40-60 60-90 90-110 95-115 105-125 20-40 50-80 70-100 100-120 110-130 120-140 40-60 70-110 90-120 110-130 120-140 135-155
Source Adapted from Hasbrouck and Tindal (2006)
10Techniques for Developing Reading Fluency
- Repeated Reading of books with conversation
- Partner Reading
- Radio reading
- Echo Reading, Choral Reading
- Chunking
- For beginning readers put phrase slash marks
- Tape-Assisted Reading
- Readers Theater
- Timed Reading
- Read Alouds
11Websites for Fluency
- http//www.busyteacherscafe.com/units/fluency.htm
- http//www.time4learning.com/readingpyramid/index.
htm - http//www.readinga-z.com/guided/fluency.html
- http//www.nifl.gov/partnershipforreading/publicat
ions/reading_first1fluency.html - http//www.fcrr.org/publications/pub...uency_2005.
pdf
12How Much Growth?Fuchs, (1993)
Grade Realistic Goals Ambitious Goals
1 2.0 words per week 3.0 words per week
2 1.5 words per week 2.0 words per week
3 1.0 words per week 1.5 words per week
4 .55 words per week 1.1 words per week
5 .5 words per week .8 words per week
6 .3 words per week .65 words per week
13Monitoring Progress
- 2-3 passages at GOAL or Instructional Level
- WCPM goal at this time
- Weekly goal- 2 words a week
- Goal Period- 10 weeks
- Draw aim line and begin instruction
- This compares students to themselves rather than
grade norms
14Lets Have Some Fun!
- http//www.readingonline.org/electronic/carrick/
- Ickle Me, Pickle Me, Tickle Me Too
- Ickle Me, Pickle Me, Tickle Me too, Went for a
ride in a flying shoe, "Hooray!" "What fun!"
"It's time we flew!" Said Ickle Me, Pickle Me,
Tickle Me too.
15- Ickle was captain, Pickle was crew, And
Tickle served coffee and mulligan stew As higher
And higher And higher they flew, Ickle Me,
Pickle Me, Tickle Me too.
16Ickle Me, Pickle Me, Tickle Me too, Over the sun
and beyond the blue. "Hold on!" "Stay in!" "I
hope we do!" Cried Ickle Me, Pickle Me, Tickle
Me too.
17- Ickle Me, Pickle Me, Tickle Me too Never
returned to the world they knew, And nobody
knows what's happened to Dear Ickle Me, Pickle
Me, Tickle Me too. - Written by Shel Silverstein (1930-1999)