Response to Intervention 1 Savvy Teacher’s Guide: Reading Interventions That Work (Wright, 2000)

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Response to Intervention www.interventioncentral.org 1 Savvy Teacher’s Guide: Reading Intervention s That Work (Wright, 2000)

Transcript of Response to Intervention 1 Savvy Teacher’s Guide: Reading Interventions That Work (Wright, 2000)

Page 1: Response to Intervention  1 Savvy Teacher’s Guide: Reading Interventions That Work (Wright, 2000)

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Savvy Teacher’s Guide: Reading

Interventions That Work

(Wright, 2000)

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Big Ideas in Beginning Reading• “Phonemic Awareness: The ability to hear and manipulate

sounds in words. • Alphabetic Principle: The ability to associate sounds with letters

and use these sounds to form words. • Fluency with Text: The effortless, automatic ability to read words

in connected text. • Vocabulary: The ability to understand (receptive) and use

(expressive) words to acquire and convey meaning. • Comprehension: The complex cognitive process involving the

intentional interaction between reader and text to convey meaning.”

Source: Big ideas in beginning reading. University of Oregon. Retrieved September 23, 2007, from http://reading.uoregon.edu/index.php

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Building Reading Fluency

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CBM Student Reading Samples: What Difference Does Fluency Make?

• 3rd Grade: 19 Words Per Minute

• 3rd Grade: 70 Words Per Minute

• 3rd Grade: 98 Words Per Minute

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Reading Decoding

‘…Of course, when children cannot decode at all, there is little chance of comprehension. When they can decode but it requires a considerable effort, decoding competes with comprehension efforts for the limited capacity available for processing of text…so that effortful decoding consumes capacity that might otherwise be used to understand text.’

- Pressley & Wharton-McDonald, 1997

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NRP Conclusions Regarding Importance of Oral Reading Fluency:

“An extensive review of the literature indicates that classroom practices that encourage repeated oral reading with feedback and guidance leads to meaningful improvements in reading expertise for students—for good readers as well as those who are experiencing difficulties.”-p. 3-3

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• Assisted Reading Practice• Listening Passage Preview

(‘ListeningWhile Reading’)

• Paired Reading • Repeated Reading

Interventions for…Increasing Reading Fluency

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Paired Reading (p.17)

The student reads aloud in tandem with an accomplished reader. At a student signal, the helping reader stops reading, while the student continues on. When the student commits a reading error, the helping reader resumes reading in tandem.

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Building Reading Comprehension

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Reading Comprehension

Skills Checklist: p. 104

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‘Student Reader’ ActivityIn your ‘elbow groups’:

Review the ‘Reading ComprehensionChecklist’ (p. 104)

Identify the 2-3 most frequent or important ‘comprehension blockers’ that youhave observed in the population of ‘difficult-to-teach’ students with whom you work.

Be prepared to share your selections with the larger group.

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Processing Before Reading (Pressley & Wharton-McDonald, 1997)

• Good readers– have clear goals in mind before reading– overview the text before reading to:

• determine whether text is worth reading• identify sections that may be most relevant• Create a ‘reading plan’

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Processing During Reading (Pressley & Wharton-McDonald, 1997)

• Good readers– pay ‘differential’ attention to information

that pertains to their goals– may jump back and forth in the text to clarify

confusion, review specific information– anticipate what will come next in the text and updare

their predictions based on new information– make inferences based on reading– ‘demonstrate passion’ for their reading

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Processing After Reading (Pressley & Wharton-McDonald, 1997)

• Good readers– may reread or ‘reskim’ the text just read– may take notes on text or attempt to restate

main ideas– continue to think about and reflect on text once they

are done reading

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• ‘Click or Clunk?’ Self-Check• Keywords: A Memorization Strategy• Main Idea Maps• Mental Imagery: Improving Text Recall• Oral Recitation Lesson• Prior Knowledge: Activating the ‘Known’• Question-Generation• Reciprocal Teaching: A Reading Comprehension Package• Story Map• Text Lookback

Comprehension Interventions That Rely on ‘Gist’ Sentences

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Create a ‘gist’ sentence for this passage…

‘…when skilled readers read, they implicitly parse the text into micropropositions, the smallest units of meaning that can be conceived as verbs or prepositions as well as semantic roles that are related by the verbs or prepositions. All of the micropropositions specified in a text combine to capture the full meaning of the text. Of course, no one remembers every idea specified in a text. What people remember is the gist-the main idea of the text.’- Pressley & Wharton-McDonald, 1997

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‘Click or Clunk’ Self-Check

(p.25)

Students periodically check their understanding of sentences, paragraphs, and pages of text as they read. When students encounter problems with vocabulary or comprehension, they use a checklist to apply simple strategies to solve those reading difficulties.

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‘Click or Clunk’ Check Sheet

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‘…The combination of lack of practice, deficient decoding skills, and difficult materials results in unrewarding early reading experiences that lead to less involvement in reading related activities. Lack of exposure and practice on the part of the less skilled readers delays the development of automaticity and speed at the word-metacognition level. Slow, capacity-draining word-recognition processes require cognitive resources that should be allocated to higher-level process of text integration and comprehension.’- Stanovich, K., (1986)

‘…The combination of lack of practice, deficient decoding skills, and difficult materials results in unrewarding early reading experiences that lead to less involvement in reading related activities. Lack of exposure and practice on the part of the less skilled readers delays the development of automaticity and speed at the word-metacognition level. Slow, capacity-draining word-recognition processes require cognitive resources that should be allocated to higher-level process of text integration and comprehension.’- Stanovich, K., (1986)

‘…The combination of lack of practice, deficient decoding skills, and difficult materials results in unrewarding early reading experiences that lead to less involvement in reading related activities. Lack of exposure and practice on the part of the less skilled readers delays the development of automaticity and speed at the word-metacognition level. Slow, capacity-draining word-recognition processes require cognitive resources that should be allocated to higher-level process of text integration and comprehension.’- Stanovich, K., (1986)

‘…The combination of lack of practice, deficient decoding skills, and difficult materials results in unrewarding early reading experiences that lead to less involvement in reading related activities. Lack of exposure and practice on the part of the less skilled readers delays the development of automaticity and speed at the word-metacognition level. Slow, capacity-draining word-recognition processes require cognitive resources that should be allocated to higher-level process of text integration and comprehension.’- Stanovich, K., (1986)

‘Click or Clunk?’ Example

‘…The combination of lack of practice, deficient decoding skills, and difficult materials results in unrewarding early reading experiences that lead to less involvement in reading related activities. Lack of exposure and practice on the part of the less skilled readers delays the development of automaticity and speed at the word-metacognition level. Slow, capacity-draining word-recognition processes require cognitive resources that should be allocated to higher-level process of text integration and comprehension.’- Stanovich, K., (1986)

‘…The combination of lack of practice, deficient decoding skills, and difficult materials results in unrewarding early reading experiences that lead to less involvement in reading related activities. Lack of exposure and practice on the part of the less skilled readers delays the development of automaticity and speed at the word-metacognition level. Slow, capacity-draining word-recognition processes require cognitive resources that should be allocated to higher-level process of text integration and comprehension.’- Stanovich, K., (1986)