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    Colleen Mulcahy

    Intervention Plan

    For the past four weeks, I have been implementing a reading intervention with a third

    grade student. As there is only one special education teacher for grades 2-4, Ava typically

    receives reading support for 30 minutes, five days a week, with one other third grade student. My

    being in special education for my practicum has been a great opportunity to provide Ava with 1:1

    support and to implement this reading intervention.

    In this intervention I used a program called Read Naturally. Read Naturally is a program

    that combines three, research-proven strategies: teacher modeling, repeated reading, and progress

    monitoring. This read naturally strategy is used to build fluency, increase accuracy, promote

    comprehension, reinforce sight words, and much more. For this specific student, the purpose of

    this intervention was to assess her reading fluency and accuracy, and then by exposing Ava to

    this program for 30 minutes, five days a week, increase her reading fluency and accuracy.

    As I started my special education practicum seven weeks ago, Avas IEP reading goal

    was: to read grade level with a fluency of 80 words per minute, and with 95% accuracy. This

    students annual review IEP meeting was held two weeks ago, therefore her reading goal has

    changed a bit; for the purpose of this intervention we felt it appropriate to focus on the goal of 80

    WPM with 95% accuracy. Throughout the intervention, the student read stories specifically from

    the Read Naturally Program; all of the stories were a level 2.7 (which is still below grade level

    for this student).

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    Below is an example of a standard lesson plan used during the intervention:

    Springfield College

    Lesson Plan

    Teacher: Colleen Mulcahy Date: November 12, 2014

    Subject: ELA Grade Level: 3

    Title of Lesson:(Reading Intervention)

    Reading Naturally Solar: An Important Energy Source

    Lesson Length: 30-minute periods

    Overview of the Lesson

    Lesson Summary: During this lesson, the student will focus on a short story (from Read Naturally

    program); Solar An Important Energy Source. She will practice identifying long vowel patterns. The

    student will work on her fluency by practicing reading the text multiple times. After reading the

    passage, this student will use evidence in the text to answer questions.

    Lesson Objectives: The student will identify long O vowel patterns in a list of practice words. She

    will read 80 WPM with 95% accuracy. This student will use evidence in the text to correctly answer

    comprehension questions.

    Materials/Equipment to be Used in Teaching the Lesson:

    Solar An Important Energy Source sheet (Reading Naturally) timer

    red and blue colored pencils

    highlighters (4-5 colors)

    laptop/iPad (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUs4oA1RIMQ)Massachusetts Framework Standards:

    Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the text as

    the basis for the answers.

    Read with sufficient accuracy and fluency to support comprehension.

    Enduring Understandings:

    Big Ideas: The student will use the title and key words to make a prediction about the

    passage. After reading the passage 2-3 times, the student will use

    Concepts: Students will become familiar with the characteristics of folktales.

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    Essential Questions:

    Highlight long O vowel patterns in the practice word list.

    What is solar energy?

    What are other sources of energy?

    Content

    Vocabulary:

    Tier 1:

    sun, wood, gas, oil, stone, store, suns rays

    Tier 2:

    sole, solar energy, soak, coal, sources

    Tier 3:

    Critical Thinking Skills (Reading, Writing, Speech, Listening)

    Reading Identify long O vowel patterns in practice words; read the passage with 95% accuracy (80

    WPM)

    Writing Make a prediction about the passage; use evidence from the text to answer questions

    Assessments (Performance Tasks/Tests/Quizzes Formative/Summative, Informal/Formal)

    Graph WPM as student practices reading the passage (students first time ever

    reading the passage is graphed in blue, every time after that is graphed in red)

    Five comprehension questions

    Action/Instructional Procedures

    Procedures: For each procedure, list the teacher or student actions (with accommodations and

    modifications) as well as the anticipated amount of time it will take to accomplish each task.

    Anticipatory Set (hook):Watch short video on renewable energy(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUs4oA1RIMQ). Discuss ways we cansave/conserve energy.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUs4oA1RIMQhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUs4oA1RIMQhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUs4oA1RIMQhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUs4oA1RIMQ
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    Step One: Have the student read the title and the provided key words: solar energy, sole,sources, coal. Teacher should correct students pronunciation of these key words at this

    time, if needed.

    Step Two: Student will be timed for one minute as she reads the story; this is considered

    her cold read for this story (graphed in blue on data sheets).

    Step Three: After completion of her cold read, the student will then refer to the practice

    word list for the story. The student will practice reading the word list which has 10-20different words (in this case, all words have a long O vowel), which are repeated multiple

    times throughout the practice list to provide the student with repetition.

    Step Five: Discussion of long O vowel patterns: o, o-e, oa, ow; student will use

    highlighters to highlight the vowel pattern in each word on the practice list. The student

    should then use her knowledge of the vowel patterns to practice rereading the words.

    Step Six:Read the passage three times: teacher reads aloud to student, teacher reads onesentence and student reads same sentence, student reads to herself

    Step Seven: Hot ReadWhile being timed for one minute, student will read the

    passage out loud. Teacher keeps track of errors. After one minute, the student will stop

    reading and she will graph how many words per minute she read accurately (on her Read

    Naturally graph).

    Step Eight: Student will then read the comprehension questions to herself. She will begiven time to highlight evidence from the text to answer each question.

    **Use this as an opportunity to remind student to use: complete sentences, capitals,punctuation, and refer to the text for spelling when possible

    Step Nine: Teacher will read the passage again to the student.

    Step Ten: Hot ReadStudent will read the passage aloud again and graph WPM.** This should continue until the student has read the entire passage within one minute.

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    Data Sheet 2:

    Graph 1was used to keep track of errors as the student read each story. For the purpose of this

    intervention, errors are: substitutions, eliminations, addition of incorrect word endings, and

    words read incorrectly. Self-corrections do not count as an error.

    Graph 2was used to graph the students accuracy. To calculate accuracy: the amount of errors

    was subtracted from the total amount of WPM the student readthis gives you the amount ofcorrect words per minute (CWPM) the student read; you then divide the total WPM by CWPMto calculate the students accuracy (%).

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    Data Analysis:

    Referring to data sheet 1, you can see that the student did make a slight increase in WPM

    during cold reads (graphed in blue). The student jumped from 57 WPM to 72-74 WPM during

    cold read, but because we only had then chance to complete a total of three stories over the

    course of the intervention, it is difficult to say whether the students fluency has increased due to

    the intervention, or if the increase in WPM is due to the difficulty of the stories. All of the stories

    used in the intervention were a 2.7 level, but it was evident that some stories were easier than

    others for the student.

    Despite the students satisfactory accuracy during hot reads (refer to data sheet 2, graph

    2; graphed in red) the purpose of the intervention was to increase accuracy on cold reads which

    you can see did not increase any significant amount, and still does not meet the students IEP

    goal of 95% accuracy. The purpose of the Read Naturally Program is to increase fluency and

    accuracy, and this has not necessarily been the case for this student.

    Next Steps:

    As this student read the practice words on the word lists of each story, I noticed she often

    had difficulty. However when she reads the stories, Ava is almost always able to correctly read

    these words within the text; therefore I began thinking that she has strong context skills but lacks

    decoding skills when it comes to words in isolation. I discussed this concern with my supervising

    practitioner, and we decided to take a step back from the Read Naturally Program. It became

    clear that this student has not grasped vowel patterns, therefore is having continued difficulty

    decoding words, and is unable to read grade level text with acceptable accuracy and fluency.

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    It is not possible to increase a students fluency and accuracy if she or he is unable to

    efficiently recognize sight words and decode unfamiliar words. Therefore, after discussion with

    my supervising practitioner, we have decided it would be valuable for this student to review

    vowel patterns (both long and short). To do so, I have started to have the student complete word

    sorts, each with a specific vowel pattern, from Words Their Way. These word sorts provide the

    student the opportunity to focus on one vowel (long, short, and/or both) or multiple vowels. The

    student first reads the words, they are then encouraged to highlight the long vowel patterns (ex: i-

    e, igh, y) she/he then cuts the words out, sorts them and glues them in the correct column.

    Below are two examples of Words Their Way word sorts:

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    To gather more information on Avas phonological awareness, I will be having her

    complete a Phonological Awareness Profile. This assessment provides information on an

    individuals knowledge of: rhyming (discrimination, production), segmentation (sentences,

    compound words, syllables, phonemes), isolation (initial, final, medial sounds), deletion

    (compounds/syllables, phonemes), substitution (with and without manipulatives), and blending

    (compounds/syllables, phonemes).

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    As was suspected, results from the Phonological Assessment show that this student has

    significant limitations in the following: segmentation (specifically with syllables and individual

    sounds), isolation of middle sounds, ability to delete medial phonemes, and substitution of

    individual sounds. All of these limitations are evident in the students spelling and reading

    isolated words. Although this student as mentioned, is able to read grade-level text with

    accuracy, her difficulty with these skills can interfere with her reading fluency and

    comprehension. These weaknesses as expected, also drastically inhibit Avas writing.

    For the last few days of my practicum, I plan to use resources from the Florida Center for

    Reading Research. I will begin this process by using activities from FCRR related to phoneme

    isolating and phoneme segmenting, which my supervising practitioner plans to continue using, to

    provide the student with the phonemic support that is needed.