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Fluency. *Presented by* Jilene Coleman Kelly Cottingham Kimberly Anne Elshazly Susan Gilchrist June Gual Darice LeAnne Shelton Rachael West. Fluency is the instantaneous, automatic recognition of words in reading (Richek, 2002).
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Fluency *Presented by* Jilene Coleman Kelly Cottingham Kimberly Anne Elshazly Susan Gilchrist June Gual Darice LeAnne Shelton Rachael West
Fluency is the instantaneous, automatic recognition of words in reading (Richek, 2002). Samuels defines fluency as “the ability to read a text orally with speed, accuracy, expression, and comprehension” (2002).
The Role of Fluency • A large sight word vocabulary leads to better fluency. • Fluency and comprehension are closely related. • Students aren’t spending all their energies with decoding words; therefore, they can spend that energy on understanding what they are reading. • While reading, fluency problems lead to pauses, repetitions, and little expression. • In order to become more fluent, readers need practice; however, struggling readers often do not want to read. • This leads to little development of sight word vocabulary which leads to more struggles with reading….and the cycle continues.
National Reading Panel (NRP) Report • Identified fluency as one of the six dimensions of reading • Described as the “most neglected” reading skill • Found a close relationship between fluency and comprehension
NRP Report (cont.) • Looked at two research strands • Guided oral reading procedures, such as repeated reading • The effect of procedures that encourage students to read more, such as DEAR, SSR, Book It, and Accelerated Reader
Choosing Focus Words • High-frequency Words/Function Words • Words that are important to your students
Teaching Sight Words • Associate Words and Meaning • Practice Them Often • Record Student Progress • Sight Word Focus • Word Cards • Word Collection File • Word Sorting • Word Games • Word Walls
Function Word Mastery • Cloze Strategy • Highlight Function Word in Text • Star Word Approach • Reversals • Concentrate on one letter at a time • Letter Tracing • Flash Cards • Highlight/Underline first letter of a confusing word • Let students physically manipulate letters on board
Encourage students to read, read, read!!! Especially easy texts!
Examples of Pattern Books • Hutchins, Pat. Good Night Owl • Carle, Eric. The Grouchy Lady Bug • Westcott, N.B. I Know an Old Lady who Swallowed a Fly • Zolotow, Charlotte. But Not Billy • Martin Jr., Bill. Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?
Examples of Pattern Books (cont.) • Lobel, Arnold. The Rose in my Garden • Lionni, Leo. A Color of His Own • Kent, Jack. The Fat Cat • Keats, E.J. Over in the Meadow • Allen, Pamela. Bertie and the Bear • Most, B. If the Dinosaurs Came Back
Assisted Reading • Assisted reading is a strategy in which the student and a fluent reader read the material together. It helps develop fluency because:
Assisted Reading (cont.) • The support of the fluent reader makes reading non-threatening. • Supports word recognition so that students can concentrate on meaning. • Gives students a model for what reading should look like. • Gives students practice with reading in context.
Assisted reading versions • Simultaneous assisted reading—the teacher reads along with the students. • Echo reading—the teacher models oral reading and has students imitate. • Choral reading—A group of students practice orally reading a selection. • Partner reading—Students read in pairs, alternation the text.
Versions of assisted reading (cont.) • Simultaneous listening reading—Students listen to tape recordings of the material while following along with the book. • Neurological Impress Method—The student and teacher read together orally. The teacher reads loudly at first, then softens as the student gains confidence.
Repeated Reading • Repeated reading is a strategy in which a student rereads a selection. As they read, their speed and accuracy increases.
Benefits of Repeated Reading • It is flexible. • It can be adapted for use with groups.
Of the two strategies, Stahl and Kuhn (2002) found that repeated reading did not make an impact on children’s oral reading or comprehension because teachers did not monitor children’s repeated reading accurately.
The National Reading Panel found that guided repeated oral reading has a consistent and positive impact on fluency, word recognition, and comprehension. Guided is the key!
LEA= Language Experience Approach • Students compose personal stories, and the stories are used for reading instruction. • “Talk written down” • Can create captions for wordless picture books
Steps to a Language Experience Story • Brainstorm ideas for a story: Shared experiences make good topics—field trips, science experiments, stories read aloud, etc. • Take dictation from students • Read each word as you write it • Reread each sentence, pointing to each word as you say it: Have students reread each sentence with you. • Reread the entire story with students • Follow up with language activities: Such as drawing pictures to go with the story, writing captions to go with the story written.
Reader’s Workshop • Purpose: To promote fluency and to provide an occasion to promote the love of reading and to learn about texts in various ways • One way of organizing a balanced literacy program
Structure of Reader’s Workshop • Mini-lesson (5-10 minutes) • Independent reading (20-25 minutes) • Sharing (10-15 minutes)
The Mini-lesson • The teacher reads a book or part of a book that illustrates the topic • Encourage students to consider that topic during reading • Ex. of mini-lessons: Reading strategies, choosing books, noticing interesting words, comparing characters, finding the point of view, and how the setting affects the story
Independent Reading • Purpose of reading is set during mini-lesson • Students select leveled books • During this time, students may be responding in journals or having a conference with the teacher
Sharing • An opportunity for students to share how they applied a concept introduced during a mini-lesson • Students may share response journal entries • Can share with a partner or in groups
Readers Theatre • An excellent way to bring repeated reading into the classroom in a fun and engaging way. • Increases fluency • Fluency has a profound effect on comprehension. • Gives a purpose for rereading • Very motivational • Increases students’ self-confidence
Since the main reason for reading is to gain meaning, which is comprehension, Readers Theatre seems like a great choice for the classroom.
Visually-impaired students learn to read just like their sighted peers. • Generally visually impaired students are slower readers. • Fluency is greatly stressed and practiced.
Fluency strategies are implemented as much as they can be, unless it is not possible. Then, strategies are memorized or accommodations are made. Ex. Bookmarks cannot be used because the Braille takes up too much room. The strategy is taught and memorized or a strategy chart is made.
Strategies used in a visually-impaired classroom • Guided reading • Repeated reading • Tactual hints
Other strategies for students with disabilities • Colored-overlays (Autism, Dyslexia and LD) • Phonics phones (ADHD and Autism)
Listening to students read. • Does the student read in a choppy manner? • Does the student read in a monotone voice? • Does the student read too fast?
Determine the rate at which a student reads. • Time a student reading a passage. After the student finishes, multiply the number of words read by 60 and divide by the number of seconds the student took to read. This will give the number of words per minute (WPM) the student is reading. • Remember that different materials will be read at different rates.
Give a timed word list assessment test. • This test is used to determine automaticity of sight word recognition. • Usually used in combination with an informal reading inventory.
Additional Assessments(suggested by the NRP) • Informal Reading Inventory • Miscue Analysis • Running Records
Related Websites • (Developing Reading Fluency) http://www.auburn.edu/~murraba/fluency.html • (Reading Fluency Norms) http://www.readnaturally.com/rationale-fluencynorms.htm • (Child Reading Directory) http://child-reading-tips.com/Reading-Fluency-Instruction-Research.htm
Related Websites (cont.) http://loiswalker.com/catalog/guidesamples.html http://www.ciera.org/library/reports/inquiry-2/ www.balancedreading.com/fluency.html
References Hitchcock, C.H., Prater, M.A., & Dowrick, P.W. (2004). Reading comprehension and fluency: Examining the effects of tutoring and video self-modeling on first-grade students with reading difficulties. Learning Disability Quarterly, 27, 89-103. Taylor, B., Pearson, D., Peterson, D., & Rodriquez, M. (2003). Reading growth in high poverty classrooms: The influence of teacher practices that encourage cognitive engagement in literacy learning. The Elementary School Journal, 104 (1). Worthy, J., & Broaddus, K. (2001/2002). Fluency beyond the primary grades: From group performance to silent, independent reading. The Reading Teacher, 55 (4).
References (cont.) Worthy, J., & Prater, K. (2002). I thought about it all night: Readers theater for reading fluency and motivation. The Reading Teacher, 56 (3), 294-297. Stahl, S., & Kuhn, M. (2002). Making it sound like language: Developing fluency. The Reading Teacher, 55 (6), 582-586. Martinez, M., Roser, N., & Strecker, S. (1999). “I never thought I could be a star”: A Readers Theatre ticket to fluency. The Reading Teacher, 52 (4), 326-334. National Reading Panel (2000). Report of the national reading panel: Teaching children to read. Bethesda, MD: National Institute of ChildHealth and Human Development