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Literacy Plan Kara Klokis and Carol Pippen Longwood University
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Contextual Factors Prince Edward County Elementary School Small, rural area High level of poverty; 68% eligible for free and reduced lunch
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Data Analysis Spring SOL scores for 2012 Fourth Grade Reading Test Patterns of difficulty emerged in the following areas: Use word analysis and informational resources Demonstrating comprehension of printed materials Analyzing the author’s purpose Identifying important details Drawing conclusions
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Description of Need 61% of students demonstrate difficulty with determining which reference material to use for a specific tasks 62% of students struggle to analyze the author’s purpose for including details in a narrative 67% of students can not identify supporting details 57% of students demonstrate difficulty drawing conclusions based on information stated in text
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Possible Solutions Guided Reading: Comprehension Shared reading between teacher and small group Critical analysis of text with close proximity of teacher as facilitator Leveled readers for students’ instructional reading levels
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Possible Solutions Leveled Literacy Intervention: Fluency Student reads at instructional reading level, moves through a text per lesson Repeated readings to increase fluency
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Possible Solutions Selected Solution Teacher Designed Plan: Incorporates Comprehension, Fluency, and Word Analysis Small group of 12 or less students 3 center rotations; 30 minutes each Guided Reading Center Word knowledge Center Independent Center
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Justification of Solution Meets students where they perform Incorporates three major components of reading Addresses each area of student need simultaneously through center practice and teacher guidance Adds element of student self-monitoring in fluency and self-regulation through questioning and repair strategies Encourages engagement and motivation through student choice
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Supplementary Materials Guided Reading Center Homogenous reading groups Teacher acts as a facilitator Leveled readers from school curriculum textbook; Journeys
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Supplementary Materials Word Knowledge Center Homogenous word study groups Adapted from Words Their Way Workstation Activity Board taken from reading curriculum textbook; Journeys
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Supplementary Materials Independent Center Individual differentiated skill practice from Journeys Independent reading; students choose from classroom or school library Journal writing prompts; correlating with genre read that week
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Process of Implementation Analyze school and student data Offer intervention resource during last 30 minutes of the ELA block outside of class Teacher will meet with a different group daily while the other two groups complete center activities Students go into a different center each day; rotation continues until guided reading lesson is completed
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Description of the Plan Gather the professionals-Fourth grade teachers, Title I teachers, Special Educators, Reading Specialists Facilitators (Reading Specialist/Literacy Coach) will describe the instructional plan, providing a rationale Workshop Format-Educators divided into three groups that mirror the student intervention groups Each group will be provided with representative instructional materials and given directions to function as the student groups will during actual intervention
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Training Initial training at faculty workshop: teachers experience the elements of the plan and problem solve together Ongoing collaboration between literacy coach and implementing instructors to plan and facilitate lessons
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Motivation for Change Teach students BDA reading strategies Assist in internalizing strategies to become more independent Provide meaningful discussions with teachers and peers about texts Aids students in developing skills for life (comprehension/problem solving) Support students by offering strategies on how to think, not what to think
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Role of Literacy Specialist Before: Gather data, select students, and offer professional development of literacy plan During: Co-planning of lessons, acquisition of materials, modeling of guided reading prompting, questioning, etc. After: Provide feedback and opportunities for reflection Gather post data and revise program to better meet students’ needs
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Assessment Plan Previous years SOL scores for pretest criteria inclusion Progress monitoring with fluency charts weekly Comprehension and word knowledge monitored daily/weekly with open ended questions and discussions with teachers and peers Use of common assessments given during ELA block to monitor skill progress after unit completion District-wide assessments administered according to district assessment matrix
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