1 FluencyFluency From Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success By Wiley Blevins.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 10 Fluency Instruction
Advertisements

Next Helping students to read with speed and fluency. Reading in the Holy Quran.
Reading Fluency.
SNRPDP On the Road to Reading with the Common Core State Standards Fluency Phonics Fluency Comprehension.
Developing Fluent Readers and Writers  Why do students need to learn to read and write high-frequency words?  What strategies do students learn to use.
Flying Fingers, Continued… Assessment and Remediation For Braille Reading Fluency Getting In Touch With Braille Literacy 2011.
FLUENCY INSTRUCTION.
With Phyllis Ferguson RDA/TLS/EAC/MBM/4-032 What is Fluency? Fluency is the ability to read most words in context quickly and.
Fluency This publication is based on the First and Second Grade Teacher Reading Academies, ©2002 University of Texas System and the Texas Education Agency,
Fluency Phrasing Assisted Reading Rereading Expressing Pacing Wide Reading Accuracy.
Fluency Grades 2-5 Planning Session Presentation October 2010.
FLUENCY  a gateway to comprehension. Three core elements to skilled reading:  Identifying the words  FLUENCY  Constructing meaning.
Addressing Issues in Braille Reading Fluency. Reading Fluency Reading fluency refers to a level of reading accuracy and rate where decoding is relatively.
What is fluency?  Speed + Accuracy = Fluency  Reading quickly and in a meaningful way (prosody)  Decoding and comprehending simultaneously  Freedom.
Abandoning Round Robin: Alternative and Effective Oral Reading Strategies Cathy Wishart Literacy Coach Copyright © 2009.
Section IV: Reading Fluency Teaching Reading Sourcebook 2 nd edition.
CURR 511 WIKI By: Amanda Paganin, Elizabeth Depue, Brendan Crowley, Amber Allenbrandt.
Gail E. Tompkins California State University, Fresno
SEALS Welcome to Selinsgrove Elementary’s Second Grade Literacy Night!
O RAL R EADING F LUENCY Goal: Help you child be a Superhero Reader! Created and Presented by Diane M. Leja Literacy Coach.
Fluency Chapter 10. Reflections on Fluency Have you ever been to a book reading where the author read her material very slowly and monotonously? Were.
Reasons for Teaching & Assessing Reading Fluency Reading Fluency.
 Reading fluency is the ability to read quickly and easily.  A simple way to know if your child is reading fluently is to listen to him/her read grade.
Fluency University of New England EDU 740 Kelley Tetreault.
How can parents support their child’s literacy?. Supporting Children’s Learning Why are parents important in education? Important areas in Reading Research.
Fluency EDC424 Dr. Deeney.
Adrian Parry and Steven Bookhart “ Mathematics is a participant sport. Children must play it frequently to become good at it.” National Research Council.
Ashlee Montgomery Columbia Primary School Columbia, MS.
Judith Goodman Jag Consultant Service
Flying Fingers, Continued… Assessment and Remediation For Braille Reading Fluency CTEVBI 2013.
Reading Fluency Chapter 5.
An Overview Amy Pregulman Stanley British Primary School November 2014.
Fluency Presentation and Forum in the Primary Grades Susan Libby & Jaime Quinn.
What is Fluency? Quotes Activity.
Maine Department of Education 2006 Maine Reading First Course Session #12 Fluency Instruction.
Get Ready to Huddle! Discover Intensive Phonics (K - 3 rd Grade & SPED) Huddle 4 th Tuesday of each month at 2 p.m. MT Please Call Passcode.
DR. JOANNE ROBERTSON JULY 14, 2014 POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY, HK Thematic Course on Supporting Students with SEN: Fluency.
Gillian Kutches TE 842, Section 730 June 17, 2010 Fluency.
Constructivism Theory and Assessing and Teaching Literacy Across the Curriculum Dr. Elaine Roberts.
English Language Arts/Reading Domain 1 Competency 6 Reading Fluency.
Mid-Level Fluency. Warm-Up Activity: Brainstorm the characteristics of these readers.
Building Fluency:.
SEALS Welcome to Selinsgrove Elementary’s Second Grade Literacy Night!
FLUENCY INSTRUCTION DEFINITION OF FLUENCY Reading at a just right pace, accurately and with expression Combines rate and accuracy Requires automaticity.
F LUENCY Phrasing Rereading Expressing Pacing Accuracy.
Reading Fluency Plattsmouth Elementary Training Adapted from Marcy Stein, Ph.D. University of Washington, Tacoma.
Fluency. Fluent readers read orally with accuracy, ease and expression. Students who read smoothly and with attention to punctuation and phrasing are.
DEVELOPING READING FLUENCY A Project LIFT Training Module CORE - Center at Oregon for Research in Education Module 4 – Part 2.
Helping your child with Reading Fluency Presented by: Mr. Koga F.D.Roosevelt Elementary TIIP.
The Missing Link Decoding True Reading Comprehension and between.
Title 1 Parent Advisory Council Meeting February 10, 2011 Mrs. Linda Oros- Trinity North Ms. Mary Anne Hoffman- Trinity West.
Improving Reading Fluency
Materials Easy button Paper for snowball pass.
With Phyllis Ferguson FLUENCY with Phyllis Ferguson
Five Components of a Comprehensive Reading Program
Fluency Key Points.
TE
Fluency.
Fluency Instruction TLED 432/532.
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Instructional Level Readers
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success
Gail E. Tompkins California State University, Fresno
Ellhart Community Schools
Presentation transcript:

1 FluencyFluency From Building Fluency: Lessons and Strategies for Reading Success By Wiley Blevins

2 A Definition Fluency is the ability to read smoothly, easily, and readily with freedom from word recognition problems A lack of fluency is characterized by a slow, halting pace; frequent mistakes; poor phrasing; and inadequate intonation.

3 Fluent reading is a major goal of reading instruction because decoding print accurately and effortlessly enables students to read for meaning.

4 A fluent reader can: 1.Read at a rapid rate (pace—the speed at which oral or silent reading occurs) 2.Automatically recognize words (smoothness/accuracy—efficient decoding skills) 3.Phrase correctly (prosody—the ability to read a text orally using appropriate pitch, stress, and phrasing)

5 Automaticity Refers to knowing how to do something so well you don’t have to think about it. For reading, refers to the ability to accurately and quickly recognize many words as whole units. Advantage—recognizing a word as a whole unit is that words have meaning.

6 Exposure To recognize a word automatically: The average child –4-14 exposures Struggling reader –40 or more exposures Students need a great deal of practice reading stories at their independent reading level to develop automaticity.

7 Why do children fail to read fluently? 1.Lack of exposure 2.The good-reader syndrome 3.Lack of practice time 4.Frustration 5.Missing the “why” of reading

8 Ways to teach fluency 1. Model fluent reading

9 2. Provide direct instruction and feedback Teach sight words and phonics Practice reading prior to reading a text scan a text, preteach vocabulary Time students’ reading Include oral recitation lessons Teach “smooshing” words together Explain return-sweep eye movement

10 Teach about the eye-voice span eyes are 1 to 3 words ahead of oral reading Find alternatives to round-robin reading Teach phrasing and intonation

11 Activity Recite the alphabet/numbers as a conversation. ABCD? EFG! HI? JKL. MN? OPQ. RST! UVWX. YZ! ! 567? !

12 Recite the same sentence using different punctuation. Dogs bark?Cows moo. Dogs bark!Cows moo? Dogs bark.Cows moo!

13 Practice placing the stress on different words in the same sentence. I am tired.We are happy.

14 3. Provide reader support Reading aloud simultaneously with a partner or small group Echo reading Reader’s theater Choral reading Paired repeated readings Books on tape

15 Activity Book –You Read to Me, I’ll Read to You: Very Short Stories to Read Together by Mary Ann Hoberman –ISBN (Also, fairy tales and mother goose rhymes)

16 4. Use repeated readings of one text. Child reads at his instructional level Teacher times the reading Feedback is given on word recognition errors and the number of words per minute

17 6. Provide easy reading materials. Enormous amounts of individualized reading material At least 30 minutes per day Must be independent or instructional level