1 / 34

Reading stimulates general cognitive growth—particularly verbal skills

Reading stimulates general cognitive growth—particularly verbal skills. How will schools know if they have a strong program?. Every child will be reading!. We know what to do to ensure that virtually every child learns to read early and well.

Download Presentation

Reading stimulates general cognitive growth—particularly verbal skills

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reading stimulates general cognitive growth—particularly verbal skills

  2. How will schools know if they have a strong program? Every child will be reading!

  3. We know what to do to ensure that virtually every child learns to read early and well. Whether or not we do it will ultimately depend upon how we feel about the fact we haven’t done it so far. We can do this. We have to do this. We have the knowledge. We have the research. Now, we even have the resources.

  4. Bridging the 5 Elements of Reading • Phonemic Awareness • Phonics • Vocabulary • Fluency • Comprehension

  5. The Research Says… “Children who fall behind in first grade reading have a one in eight chance of ever catching up to grade level.”(Juel, 1994) “Phoneme awareness is the single best predictor of reading success between kindergarten and second grade.”(Adams, Stanovich, 1995) “Phonemic awareness is more highly related to learning to read than are tests of general intelligence, reading readiness, and listening comprehension.” (Stanovich, 1993)

  6. Who is it for? • Preschool • Kindergarten through second grade • Basic and below grade level readers

  7. Areas of instruction • Isolation • Identify • Categorization • Blending • Segmentation • Deletion • Addition • Substitution

  8. Five Levels of Phonological Awareness Phonological Awareness Phonemic Awareness Phoneme Blending & Segmenting Onset-Rime Blending & Segmenting Syllable Blending & Segmenting Sentence Segmenting Rhyming & Alliteration

  9. How Much Instructional Time? “No more than 20 hours over the school year.” Stanovich1993

  10. Language

  11. Hart and Risley (1995) conducted a longitudinal study of children and families from three groups: • Professional families • Working-class families • Families on welfare

  12. Interactions Hart & Risley compared the mean number of interactions initiated per hour in each of the three groups.

  13. Interactions Hart & Risley also compared the mean number of minutes of interaction per hour in the three groups.

  14. Cumulative Language Experiences

  15. Cumulative Language Experiences

  16. Teaching Reading is Urgent • A student in the 20th percentile reads books ______ minutes a day. • This adds up to _________words read per year. • A student in the 80th percentile reads books ______ minutes a day. • This adds up to __________ words read per year. .7 21,000 14.2 1,146,000

  17. Our Goal Desired Course We are Here Actual Course Where are we? What is our goal? What course should we follow? How are we doing?

  18. Continuous Assessment Data-Based Instructional Planning Model for Student Success Instruction

  19. Teacher names School Status Report- Gives overview for principal of all classes Teacher names

  20. How will data Help Guide Instruction? The Class Status Reports will help answer three important questions: 1. Who needs extra support? 2. How should groups be formed? 3. Which skills need to be emphasized?

  21. Who Needs Extra Support? High Risk: 7 Moderate Risk: 3 Low Risk: 9

  22. How will small groups be formed? • Group 1: • Students 1, 3, 5, 7, 8 • Group 2: • Students 2, 4, 6, 9, 10 (12, possibly) • Group 3: • Students 11-19

  23. Summary of Recommended Uses of Student Data • To identify students in need of more assistance • To determine if students are improving with extra assistance • To form flexible reading groups

  24. Early Screening Identifies Children Who Need Additional Intervention • 201 randomly selected children from five elementary schools serving children from mixed SES and ethnic backgrounds were followed from the beginning of first grade to the end of fourth grade. • Children who scored low on phonemic awareness and letter knowledge at the beginning of first grade • Started with lower skills • Made less progress • Fell further and further below grade level as they progressed from first through fourth grade. For example, in one longitudinal study:

  25. 5.2 2.5 Early Screening Identifies Children At Risk of Reading Difficulty 5 4 Low Risk on Early Screening Reading grade level 3 2 At Risk on Early Screening 1 1 2 3 4 Grade level corresponding to age

  26. Additional Instructional InterventionChanges Reading Outcomes • Four years later, the researchers went back to the same school. Two major changes were implemented: • First, a research-based comprehensive reading program was implemented for all students, and • Second, children at risk for reading difficulty were randomly assigned to a control group or to a group receiving substantial instructional intervention.

  27. With substantial instructional intervention 4.9 With research-based core but without extra instructional intervention 3.2 Intervention Control Early Intervention Changes Reading Outcomes 5.2 5 4 Low Risk on Early Screening Reading grade level 2.5 3 2 At Risk on Early Screening 1 1 2 3 4 Grade level corresponding to age

  28. Research-Based, Comprehensive Reading Program and Substantial Instructional Intervention Both a research-based comprehensive reading program and substantial instructional intervention were needed for children at risk of reading difficulty. Children receiving substantial additional instructional intervention beyond an effective comprehensive reading program: • Progressed more rapidly than control students, • Had reading skills more like the low risk group than the at risk group, and • Were reading about at grade level.

  29.   " I am the decisive element in the classroom.  It's my personal approach that creates the climate.  It's my daily mood that makes the weather.  As a teacher, I possess a tremendous power to make a child's life miserable or joyous.  I can be a tool of torture or an instrument of inspiration.  I can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal.  In all situations, it is my response that  decides whether a crisis will be escalated to deescalated and a child humanized or dehumanized"   - Hiam Ginott

  30. A Window of Opportunity that doesn’t work.

  31. Three Definitions of Schools A series of autonomous classrooms that are connected by a common parking lot. A place where the relatively young watch the relatively old work. A complex organization that is built upon relationships that require individuals to work interdependently.

  32. A concluding thought -- As we acquire more and more knowledge of what works….. Another set of questions assumes more and more importance…. How do we make this kind of instruction available to every child who needs it?

More Related