Title: Struggling Readers 3rd Grade and Up
1Struggling Readers3rd Grade and Up
- Darlene Bleier
- Katie Caldwell
- Jackie Mascara
- Yvette Wilder
2FACT
- More than eight million students in grades 4-12
read below grade level according to the National
Center for Education Statistics in 2005. - Only 31 of Americas eighth grade students and
roughly the same percentage of twelfth graders
meet the National Assessment of Educational
Progress standard of reading proficiency for
their grade level. (NCES, 2005, 2003)
3Through this presentation
- You will be able to identify
- Characteristics of a Struggling Reader
- Interventions
- Resources
4FACT
- If students are to be truly prepared for college,
work, and citizenship, they cannot settle for a
modest level of proficiency in reading and
writing. - Content area literacy instruction must be a
cornerstone of any movement to build high-quality
secondary schools.
5According to The Alliance for Excellent Education
- Without ongoing literacy instruction, students
who are behind in reading when they enter the
middle grades likely will never catch up. - Even college-bound students often struggle with
more advanced literacy skills.
6Some Considerations Associated with Struggling
Readers
- There are many factors related to reading
difficulties, but are not necessarily causes. - The most common include
- Environmental factors (home and school)
- Social factors
- Emotional factors
- Physical factors
- Cultural factors
7Environmental Factors Home
- Language development is greatly influenced by the
childs home experience with a parent (National
Reading Panel, 2000) - Studies that compare good and poor readers show
that good readers are more likely to have
favorable home environments (Abrams and Kaslow,
1987 Hart Risley, 1995 2002 Whitman, 2000)
8Home Continued
- A favorable home environment typically has
- Sufficient bonding with a parent or parent figure
in infancy years - Safety (low-risk environment) physical and
emotional - Intellectual stimulation through books and
conversation - General emotional health and encouragement of a
good self concept (someone they can count on)
9Environmental Factors School
- Gender differentiations
- Remedial stigma (high performing students tend to
shun lower performing students (Wong Donahue,
2002) - Inadequate or inappropriate diagnosis and
instruction - School district provisions
10Social Factors
- Relationships with peers
- Relationships with authority figures
- Confidence and participation some innate,
extrinsic
11Emotional Factors
- Anxiety
- Depression
- Hostile-aggressive behavior
- Learned helplessness
- Learning Block
- Low self-esteem
12Physical Factors
- Hearing loss
- Visual impairment
- Neurological dysfunction
13Cultural Factors
- As of 2002, nearly 17 of all children in this
country were considered at poverty level - Language barriers (ELL)
- Impaired oral and written language development
14A Day in the Life of a Struggling Reader
- Imagine you were required to speak Italian,
Arabic, and Russian in the morning, followed by
French, Swahili, and Spanish in the afternoon. - For struggling adolescent readers, thats what
it seems like to move from one subject to the
next. From math to English to history to science
to civics, each content area has its own
vocabulary, textual formats, stylistic
conventions, and ways of understanding,
analyzing, interpreting, and responding to words
on the page. - Alliance for Excellent Education (2006).
Reading and Writing in the Academic Content
Areas. Issue Brief.
15In groups of four
- Picture a science class of twenty-five students
from very diverse backgrounds- different social
classes, different ethnicities, and varying
achievement levels. Many of the students
struggle with text materials. Describe some
classroom strategies you might use to respond to
struggling readers while maintaining high
standards of content learning.
16- What does a child experiencing reading difficulty
look like?
17Profiles of Students Experiencing Reading
Difficulty
- Lets review what struggling readers look like at
each grade level. - Remember
- Students dont suddenly struggle once they reach
third grade. - They have often been struggling since the primary
grades.
18Kindergarten
- Miscalls or confuses letter names
- Cannot get letter-sound correspondences
- Invented spelling is indecipherable
- Can comprehend texts read aloud, but tends to
avoid reading independently - Showing signs of avoidance and frustration
- Concepts about print very limited
19First Grade
- Recognizes letter names in isolation, but still
cannot get letter-sound correspondences - Has memorized some sight words, but unable to
apply decoding skills - Attempts to sound out words but cannot blend
sounds - Guesses randomly at unknown words or relies on
pictures - Uses first letter decoding skills
- Comprehension texts read aloud but reluctant to
read independently - Fluency very poor reading is belabored and slow
with frequent errors - Writing is immature invented spelling resembles
that of a Kindergarteners
20Second - Third Grade
- Inability to keep up is more noticeable
- Poor decoding skills fluency is poor and not
grade appropriate - Has memorized lots of words but cannot decode
unknown ones - Signs of frustration and avoidance of independent
reading more apparent - Comprehension and vocabulary knowledge starting
to skip even when being read to - Writing lacks appropriate elaboration, contains
many spelling and conventions errors, and
vocabulary knowledge and usage is poor
21Intermediate Grades
- Decoding and fluency poor students tend to hide
when having to read aloud and/or make numerous
errors sometimes unknown to the student - Comprehension is to some degree compensated for
but is superficial at best student demonstrates
difficulty remembering and articulating major
text ideas - Writing is constrained and often brief and
undeveloped little evidence of elaboration or
interest in writing - Rarely reads independently selects easy books
or expository books for pictures more than for
content
22Middle and High School Grades
- Does not complete text-book assignments or needs
a great deal of time and support - Rarely reads and does not write well
- Still showing difficulty with decoding and
fluency miscalls a lot of words when reading
aloud - Comprehension and interpretation of text is
superficial and often wrong - Behavior manifestations of frustration and
embarrassment - Vocabulary repertoire is poor and resembles that
of an elementary grade student - Little knowledge of authors and genre
23Other Characteristics of Struggling Readers in
Middle and High School
- They sometimes have not mastered basic knowledge
and strategies required for decoding unfamiliar
words - They are almost always less fluent readerstheir
sight word vocabularies many thousands of words
smaller than average readers - Usually know the meanings of fewer words
- Usually have less conceptual/factual knowledge
- Are almost always less skilled in using
strategies to enhance comprehension or repair it
when it breaks down - Will typically not enjoy reading or choose to
read for pleasure
24The Fourth Grade Slump
- Some students, especially those from
socioeconomic disadvantage, may read adequately
from kindergarten to third-grade but suddenly
begin to struggle when they reach fourth-grade.
This phenomenon has been referred to as the
fourth-grade slump. - In fourth-grade, texts become more complex and
abstract and contain language and concepts that
are more challenging. - In subsequent grades, as texts become more and
more difficult and supply less and less
contextual support
25Causes of the Fourth Grade Slump
- Lack of fluency and automaticity which tends to
result, ultimately, in childrens reading less
and avoiding more difficult materials - Vocabulary words in text shift from high
frequency to less common words. - Too many difficult words and technical terms in
content area texts negatively effect
comprehension. - Many upper-elementary grade teachers do not have,
substantial knowledge of how to teach reading,
(Grosso de Leon, 2002, p. 1).
26- At the secondary level, the responsibility for
teaching reading and writing often seems to
belong to no one in particular.
27- In a typical high-poverty urban school,
approximately half of incoming ninth-grade
students read at a sixth-or seventh-grade level
or below.
28- How Can We Close the Reading Gap for Middle and
High School Students?
29Interventions Tips For Teachers
- Make sure you scaffold
- Vary reading levels
- Differentiate instruction
- Explicitly teach reading strategies
- Provide students with reading choices
30Fluency Interventions
- Partner Reading
- Fluency Word Cards
- Word Folder
- And the answer is
- Repeated Reading
- Readers Theater
31Decoding Interventions - Strategies
- Chunking
- Word Patterns
- Analogy
- Sight Words
32Decoding Interventions - Activities
- Jumping Syllables
- The Name Game
- Riming Race
- Mother May I?
33Comprehension Interventions
- Story Mapping
- Text Mapping
- Chunking The Text
- Answering the 7 Ws
- Word Study Boggle
- Tic-Tac-Toe
- Reciprocal teaching
- Questioning the Author
- Think-alouds
- QARs (question answer response)
34Seeking Help for a Struggling Reader Seven Steps
for Teachers
- Get to know the student
- Get to know the family
- Encourage good literacy habits at home
- Tap into the specialist and resources in your own
building - Reflect on your own research-based teaching
- Advocate for the student through school-based and
outside resources - Stay informed
351. Get to know the student
- Find out the interests of your struggling reader
and incorporate those into your teaching
strategies and the materials you select. - Using past records or the students cumulative
folder, find out more about the students history
of school success.
362. Get to know the family
- Helping a child learn to read is a community
effort, and sometimes it requires sensitivity on
the part of the teacher. - It is important to reach ESL families, they may
require special accommodations, like a translator
or materials sent home in their native language.
373. Encourage good literacy habits at home
- Support family reading time by allowing students
to borrow books overnight or for a few days. - Offer suggestions to parents for fun, easy things
that they can do at home to support literacy
development.
384. Tap into the specialists and resources in your
own building
- Schedule some time to discuss your struggling
student with the speech/language pathologist. - Meet with your reading specialist.
- Special education teachers have a wealth of
knowledge regarding teaching dyslexia, learning
disabilities, and the special education process.
395. Reflect on your own research-based teaching
- Good beginning instruction teaches children how
to identify words, to understand what they read,
to achieve fluency, and to develop a love for
reading that will motivate them and stay with
them for the rest of their lives. - Most importantly, good reading instruction is
tailored to the individual needs of students.
406. Advocate for the student through school-based
and outside resources
- Many schools have tutoring programs in place for
the struggling reader. - Tutoring often takes place before and after
school.
417. Stay informed
- Whether youre new to the profession or an expert
teacher, its important to keep current with
whats going on in the fields of reading and
special education.
42Some Major Recommendations given by the CORE
Literacy Leadership Summit, March 2006
- Direct, explicit comprehension instruction
- Effective instructional principles embedded in
content - Motivation and self-directed learning
- Text-based collaborative learning, lots of
opportunities for meaningful discussion - Diverse, interesting text at many levels
- Intensive writing
- Extended time for literacy
43Direct Instruction in Comprehension
- Teachers explicitly explain and model a
comprehension strategy - Guided practice with feedback with discussion
- Independent practice and review, with further
discussion - Gerston, R., Fuchs, L., Williams, J., Baker,
S. (2001). Teaching reading comprehension
strategies to students with learning
disabilities A review of research. Review of
Educational Research, 7, 279-320.
44Resources
- Florida State University and Florida Center for
Reading Research www.fcrr.org - National Reading Panel www.nationalreadingpanel.or
g - Alliance for Excellent Education www.all4ed.org
- Literacy Instruction in the Content Area
Getting to the Core of Middle and High School
Improvement - FactSheet, February 2006
- Issue Brief, June 2006
45- Heller, R. Greenleaf, L. (2007). Literacy
instruction in the content areas Getting to the
core of middle and high school improvement.
Washington, DC Alliance for Excellent Education. - Vacca, Richard T., and Jo Anne L. Vacca. Content
Area Reading. 9th ed. Boston Pearson Education
Inc., 2008. 34-66.
46- Jennings, Joyce H., JoAnne S. Caldwell, and Janet
W. Lerner. Reading Problems. 5th ed. Boston
Pearson Education Inc., 2006. 26-27. - CORE Literacy Leadership Summit, March 2006
http//www.scoe.org/reading/docs/torgesen.pdf - Department of Education and Early Childhood
Development http//www.education.vic.gov.au/studen
tlearning/teachingresources/english/literacy/conce
pts/4kcfourthgrade.htm
47- National Center Education Statistics, 2005
http//nces.ed.gov/ - Alliance for Excellent Education (2006). Reading
and Writing in the Academic Content Areas. Issue
Brief. - Gerston, R., Fuchs, L., Williams, J., Baker, S.
(2001). Teaching reading comprehension
strategies to students with learning
disabilities A review of research. Review of
Educational Research, 7, 279-320.
48- Essential Reading Strategies for the struggling
reader www.tea.state.tx.us/reading/products/essen
tial.pdf - Interventions for struggling adolescent readers
http//www.adlit.org/article/19750 - 10 Ways to Teach and Support Adolescent Readers
http//findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa4009/is_20
0710/ai_n21033481/pg_5?tagartBodycol1 - Seeking Help for Struggling Readers
www.readingrockets.org
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