Title: REWARDS and The Six-Minute Solution Professional Development
1REWARDS and The Six-Minute Solution
Professional Development
- Introductions
- Purpose
- Distribute Materials
- Overview of REWARDS Program and The Six-Minute
Solution - Closing and Reflection
2REWARDS One Hour Training (Intermediate Level)
- R Reading
- E Excellence
- W Word
- A Attack and
- R Rate
- D Development
- S Strategies
-
3What are some ways that students can respond
during a lesson?
- In your group, discuss some ways that students
respond to questions. - Choose a reporter to share out 1-2 response
strategies.
4Active Participation TE page 20
5Active Participation
6What is REWARDS (Intermediate Level)?
- A research-validated program
- To teach fourth through sixth grade students in
an elementary school - A flexible strategy for decoding long words
- 80 of all words have an affix
- Every decodable part of a word has a vowel sound
- Close approximations can be corrected using
context -
- To increase their oral and silent reading fluency
7Who is it designed for?
- Students in 4th through 6th grades
- Mastered skills associated with lst and 2nd grade
reading - Pre-assessment is the San Diego Quick
- Students scoring below 3rd grade - Phonics
For Reading - Students scoring 3rd grade or above -
REWARDS - Difficulty reading multisyllabic words
- Read slowly (60 to 120 words per minute)
8Why might you want to use REWARDS?
- Many new words in intermediate and secondary
materials. - From fifth grade on, average students encounter
approximately 10,000 words a year that they have
never previously encountered in print. - (Nagy Andersen, 1984)
- The longer words are often content words that
carry the meaning of the passage - REWARDS is a program to help your students who
struggle with decoding, not those who can decode
but struggle with comprehension.
9Why might you want to use REWARDS?
- Assume you cannot read multisyllabic words. How
much would you gain from reading the following
social studies passage? - When e_______ from P_______ arrived in B_____ in
1500, as many as 5 m______ N____ A_________ lived
there. During the 1500s, the P________
e__________ large sugar cane p___________ in
n___________ B_____. At first they e________
N______ A_________ to work on the p__________.
Soon, however, many N______ A_________ died of
d______. The p__________ o_____ then turned to
A______ for l_____. E__________, B______ brought
over more e________ A________ than any other
North or South A________ c______. - (From World Cultures and Geography (2005),
published by McDougal-Littell)
7
10Why might you want to use REWARDS? continued
- Assume you cannot read multisyllabic words. Read
the following passage, deleting the underlined,
multisyllabic words. How much would you gain from
reading this social studies passage? - When explorers from Portugal arrived in Brazil
in 1500, as many as 5 million Native Americans
lived there. During the 1500s, the Portuguese
established large sugar cane plantations in
northeastern Brazil. At first they enslaved
Native Americans to work on the plantations.
Soon, however, many Native Americans died of
disease. The plantation owners then turned to
Africa for labor. Eventually, Brazil brought
over more enslaved Africans than any other North
or South American country. - (From World Cultures and Geography (2005),
published by McDougal-Littell)
11What materials are included in REWARDS
(Intermediate Level)?
- Teachers Guide
- Introduction
- 25 Lessons - Perky Pace
- Pre-skills (Lessons 1-15)
- Strategy Instruction (Lessons 16-25)
- (Designed as 50-min. sessions but may need to
be divided into 2 days) - Blackline masters for transparencies
- Additional support material
- Pre, post, and generalization tests
- Fluency Graph
- Overhead Transparencies
- Posters
- Student Books
12Strategy Lesson Format Dr. Anita Archer
I do it
We do it
You do it
13Strategies for Reading Long Words
14Preskill Lesson Activities- 1-15
- ACTIVITY A Oral Activity--Blending Word Parts
- Into Words
- ACTIVITY B Vowel Combinations
- ACTIVITY C Vowel Conversions
- ACTIVITY D Reading Parts of Real Words
- ACTIVITY E Underlining Vowels in Words
- ACTIVITY F Oral Activity--Correcting Close
Approximations Using Context - ACTIVITY G Prefixes and Suffixes
- ACTIVITY H Circling Prefixes and Suffixes
- ACTIVITY I Vocabulary
- ACTIVITY J Spelling Dictation
-
15Auditory Skills TE p. 26
16Auditory Skills TE p.30
17Vowel Graphemes TE p. 366
18Vowel Graphemes continuedTE page 26
19Vowel Graphemes continuedTE p. 27
20Vowel Graphemes continuedTE page 28
21Vowel Graphemes continued TE p. 29
22Pre-skill Lesson Activities
- ACTIVITY A Oral Activity--Blending Word Parts
- Into Words
- ACTIVITY B Vowel Combinations
- ACTIVITY C Vowel Conversions
- ACTIVITY D Reading Parts of Real Words
- ACTIVITY E Underlining Vowels in Words
- ACTIVITY F Oral Activity--Correcting Close
Approximations Using Context - ACTIVITY G Prefixes and Suffixes
- ACTIVITY H Circling Prefixes and Suffixes
- ACTIVITY I Vocabulary
- ACTIVITY J Spelling Dictation
-
23Prefixes and SuffixesPoster and also located on
TE Page 366
- Check the affixes that are not pronounced as you
would expect given the graphemes in the affix.
P12
24Prefixes and Suffixes TE p. 366 continued
25Prefixes and Suffixes continued
26Prefixes and Suffixes continuedTE page 31
27Prefixes and Suffixes continued TE page 32
28Word Wall and Student Reference Sheet
Prefixes (Beginning Word Parts) Vowels and Vowel Combination Suffixes (Ending Word Parts)
dis ai
mis ay
ad au
ab a, i
29Vocabulary TE pages 33-34
30Vocabulary continued
31Activity J Spelling Dictation
- View an Anita Archer Video demonstration
- Teacher Guide - page 34
32Strategy Lesson Activities Lessons 16-25
- ACTIVITY A Vowel Combinations Review
- ACTIVITY B Vowel Conversions Review
- ACTIVITY C Prefix and Suffix Review
- ACTIVITY D Strategy Instruction
- ACTIVITY E Strategy Practice
- ACTIVITY F Independent Strategy Practice
- ACTIVITY G Word Families
- ACTIVITY H Spelling
- ACTIVITY I Vocabulary
- ACTIVITY J Sentence and Passage Reading
- ACTIVITY K Passage Reading Fluency
-
33 Strategy InstructionTE Pages 172-173
34Strategy Instruction Independent Strategy
Practice TE page 232
35Sentence Reading TE Page 178
36Preparation for Passage Reading TE Page 210
37Preparation for Passage Reading
38Passage Reading TE Page 212
39Passage Reading continued
40Fluency Building - Repeated Readings
- Why is reading fluency important?
- Fluency is related to reading comprehension.
- (Cunningham Stanovich, 1998 Fuchs, Fuchs,
Maxwell, 1988 Jenkins, Fuchs, Espin, van den
Broek, Deno, 2000) - When students read fluently, decoding requires
less attention. Attention can be given to
comprehension. - (Samuels, Schermer, Reinking, 1992)
- Accurate and fluent readers will read more.
- (Cunningham Stanovich, 1998 Stanovich, 1993)
- Fluent readers complete assignments with more
ease. - Fluent readers perform better on tests involving
reading. - How is reading fluency increased?
- Practice Practice Practice Practice
- Repeated Reading activities
41Fluency Building - Repeated Readings Chart in
TE on Page 17, Directions are for Activity J
Lessons 20-25