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DIBELS: An Overview Kelli Anderson Early Intervention Specialist - ECC

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Presentation on theme: "DIBELS: An Overview Kelli Anderson Early Intervention Specialist - ECC"— Presentation transcript:

1 DIBELS: An Overview Kelli Anderson Early Intervention Specialist - ECC
Dr. David Lillenstein, NCSP Director of Psychological Services

2 Literacy Skills Dynamic Indicators Basic Early DIBELS stands for: Of
dibels.uoregon.edu

3 DIBELS Facts: 6th edition – Grades K-6 Editors: Roland H. Good II
Ruth A. Kaminski Outcomes-Driven Model Research based Provides longitudinal data Assists with grouping students by skill in a balanced literacy classroom Prevention vs. remediation dibels.uoregon.edu

4 Key highlights of DIBELS:
Material for Kindergarten to 6th grade Quick, easy to administer, and to score Data system for a small fee ($1.00/student/yr) Grades K Year 2 Grades Year 1 dibels.uoregon.edu

5 BIG IDEAS of literacy skills:
Phonological awareness Alphabetic principle or Phonics Accuracy and fluency with connected text Vocabulary Comprehension abcdefg dibels.uoregon.edu

6 DIBELS and the BIG IDEAS:
Phonological Awareness: Initial Sounds Fluency Phonemic Segmentation Fluency Alphabetic Principle: Nonsense Word Fluency Accuracy and Fluency with connected text: Oral Reading Fluency dibels.uoregon.edu

7 Phonological Awareness:
The ability to hear and manipulate the sound structure of language NOT the same as phonics Examples of phonological awareness: Rhyming, syllable splitting, phoneme blending, phoneme segmentation, phoneme deletion, and phoneme manipulation Example of phoneme segmentation: Able to determine that the word “mop” is made up of the sounds … dibels.uoregon.edu

8 Alphabetic Principle or Phonics:
Letter-sound correspondence Is NOT knowing letter names in the alphabet The ability to blend letters into words dibels.uoregon.edu

9 Oral Reading Fluency: Ability to read text accurately and quickly
Effortless or to the level of automaticity Automaticity = fast, effortless word recognition Automaticity is necessary but not sufficient for fluency Fluent readers read with automaticity dibels.uoregon.edu

10 Fluency Continued… Reading fluently allows students to comprehend what they have read Fluency is developed through modeling and repeated oral reading Significant relationship with reading comprehension e.g correlation between WCPM and Stanford Achievement Reading Comprehension ORF is more closely related to Comprehension than to word recognition of words drawn from a passage (Fuchs, Fuchs, & Maxwell, 1988) dibels.uoregon.edu

11 Less fluent readers… must focus attention on decoding individual words
must allocate cognitive resources to word recognition have little attention left for comprehending text are unable to focus on comprehension!!! dibels.uoregon.edu

12 Fluent readers… focus attention on making connections with text
focus attention on connecting text with prior knowledge are able to read with expression are able to recognize words and comprehend at the same time are able to focus on comprehension!!! dibels.uoregon.edu

13 Why we assess fluency? Useful in evaluating instruction
Useful in setting instructional goals Provides means for monitoring Response to Intervention (RTI) / progress monitoring Can be motivating to students / teachers / parents Efficient, reliable, and objective Correlates with comprehension dibels.uoregon.edu

14 Administration Schedule
Administration Schedule DIBELS Oral Reading Fluency DIBELS Nonsense Word Fluency DIBELS Phoneme Segment Fluency DIBELS Letter Naming Fluency DIBELS Initial Sound Fluency Beg Mid End Preschool Kindergarten First Grade Second Grade Third - Sixth Grade dibels.uoregon.edu

15 The importance… Strong probability between…
A student remaining a poor reader at the end of 4th grade if the student was a poor reader at the end of 1st grade. A student remaining an average reader at the end of 4th grade if the student was an average reader at the end of 1st grade. From Good & Kaminski 2001 (cited Juel, 1988) dibels.uoregon.edu

16 Completing DIBELS Benchmark Assessments
All Students = 3 minutes/child - 3x/year (~20 mins/class) Recommended team assessment approach Team can include the following members: School psychologist, classroom teacher, special education teacher, student teacher, counselor, principal, IST, interns, remedial reading teacher, speech therapist, aides… dibels.uoregon.edu

17 DIBELS Reports

18 Grade Level Performance & Distribution
dibels.uoregon.edu

19 Grade Level Progress Report
dibels.uoregon.edu

20 Classroom Instructional / Grouping Recommendations
dibels.uoregon.edu

21 Instructional Recommendations
Benchmark = Core curriculum Strategic = Classroom-based intervention Intensive = Daily intensive in-class and/or out of class instructional support dibels.uoregon.edu

22 Progress Monitoring Assessments
Benchmark = “No risk” = BM 3x/year Strategic = “Some risk” = PM 1x/month (1 min) Intensive = “Risk” = PM 1x/week (1 min) dibels.uoregon.edu

23 Questions ??? dibels.uoregon.edu


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