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Points and Reflections

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    Points and Reflections

Activities

Application Activity 1.1

Knowledge of reading assessment is important for all educators. What is your current role or the role you aspire to? Based on your reading of Chapter 1, identify the purpose(s) for reading assessment most relevant to your role.

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Application Activity 2.1

Which model of reading characterizes reading as being comprised of two primary abilities?

Which models of reading discussed in Chapter 2 are most helpful for understanding where students may be in reading skill development?

Which models are most useful for understanding the reading process?

Which models are most useful for understanding the role of context and environmental variables in the reading process?

Application Activity 2.2

In Chapter 2, the authors discuss three ways of identifying a specific learning disability in reading. Which method makes the most sense to you and why?

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Application Activity 3

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    Chapter 3 Activity

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Application Activity 4

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    Chapter 4 Activity

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Application Activity 5.1

After administration of a new reading assessment to her class, Ms. Crockett and Mr. Oakley, the school psychologist, each scored all the assessments. The scores they came up with were very similar. What does this indicate?

Application Activity 5.2

Mr. Haywood recently created an assessment to determine the level of student mastery on a unit he is teaching. After writing the assessment, he decided to have the reading specialist, Ms. Swafford, look at the test and give him feedback before administering the test to her students. What is Mr. Haywood’s reason for doing this and what is he trying to find out?

Application Activity 5.3

What is the difference between reliability and validity, and why should they be important to you?

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Application Activity 6

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    Chapter 6 Activity

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Application Activity 7.1

Use Figure 7.2 in the text to answer the following questions.

  1. Based on the score report, how does the achievement in this teacher’s class compare with others in her district?  Nationally?
  2. As this teacher begins thinking about instructional strategies for next year, he used the classroom score report to identify areas of strength and weakness so that he can make adjustments to his teaching strategies.  What are the areas of strength and weakness?  Why is it important to identify areas of strength instead of just weaknesses?
  3. Based on this score report, do you notice any students that may need interventions as they start the next school year?

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Application Activity 8

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    Chapter 8 Activity

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PowerPoints

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Instructional Tips

General

Provide adequate time for reading and writing every day.

Provide 90 minutes on average of reading per day (Allington, 2006).

Provide 30-45 minutes on average of writing per day (Allington, 2006).

Provide access to lots of books and other materials students can and want to read.

Allow students to have choices about what they read.

Provide opportunities for students to read with and talk about their reading with peers.

Collect and use assessment data to determine student strengths, weaknesses, and interests and target instruction appropriately.

Provide instruction in all areas of reading.

Provide a balance between authentic reading-writing activities and specific skills-building instruction.

Word Analyses

Use a sequential and systematic approach, balanced with embedded practice, to learn words.

Use predictable books with young children.

Teach young children or beginning readers to count or clap words in a phrase, syllables in a word, and finally, phonemes in a word.

Do rhyming activities, song, nursery rhymes, and games with young children.  

Use students’ names as a basis for teaching letters and sounds.

Play word games (e.g., change a hen to a fox—lead students to change hen to fox by changing one letter of the word at a time) (Cunningham, 2005).

Use word walls (posted lists of words) to build automatic word recognition.

Use high frequency words in the word wall.

Use words that can be decoded analytically in the word wall (words with common rimes).

For higher grades, use words from subject area texts in word wall.

Do” Making Words” activities—guide students to make small words from bigger words (Cunningham & Hall, 1994).

Teach common patterns in words by having students identify and create rhyming words.

Teach phonics by analogy—students use words they know to decode new words.

Teach six syllable types (c = consonant, v = vowel):

  • Closed—cvc (cat)
  • Open—cv (go)
  • Double vowel—cvvc (read)
  • Vowel-consonant-E—vce (write)
  • R controlled—cv + r (car)
  • Consonant-le—C + le (candle) (Bos & Vaughn, 2006)

Teach meanings of prefixes, suffixes, and word endings and practice applying them.

Fluency

Provide opportunities for choral reading—have a group read together focusing on inflection and rate.

Be sure text is at appropriate level—not too difficult nor too easy.

Have students take turns reading with a partner, focusing on inflection and rate.

Provide opportunities for older, struggling students to read easy level books to younger students.

Provide opportunities for students to re-read text to meet a set standard of rate and accuracy.

Allow students to audiotape and time themselves reading.

Use oral reading fluency norms (in Figure 3-7) as a general guideline to set expectations.

Model fluent reading: Read the first few pages of a text, then let students read the rest of the text.

Provide opportunities for echo reading: Read a passage and let students read it immediately afterward.

Vocabulary

Discuss meanings of words before reading text.

Provide opportunities for students to use words in various contexts.

Relate meaning of new words to familiar words.

Teach meanings of prefixes, suffixes, and word endings and practice applying them.

Provide opportunities for students to encounter new words repeatedly in text.

Guide students to determine meaning of vocabulary from text rather then giving them definitions.

Provide opportunities for students to work in groups (e.g., work with a partner or peer tutor) to learn vocabulary.

Use a variety of methods to promote active engagement (Kamil, 2004).

Allow students to act out definitions, make mental pictures, use the words in writing, and attend to context cues to infer meanings (Kamil, 2004).

Use vocabulary from children’s literature to introduce and then use new, more sophisticated words.

Create examples and nonexamples of a given word meaning and have students determine which is which.

Teach students a process for determining meanings of words in context.

Teach vocabulary both directly and through multiple incidental opportunities (wide ranging independent reading, writing, and classroom discussion).

Teach students to use dictionaries and computer resources efficiently and effectively.

Comprehension

Teach young children or beginning readers to guess the covered word in a phrase or sentence.

Teach students to predict what will happen in text.

Teach story structure; teach students how to ask what, why, when, where, who, etc.

Introduce new reading material by reading and discussing a portion.

Teach comprehension monitoring: Students ask, “Does this make sense?”

Use cooperative learning groups to teach reading.

Use reciprocal teaching strategies: Predicting, Clarifying, Questioning, and Summarizing (Palincsar & Brown, 1984).

Use graphic organizers to aid comprehension. Use teacher generated graphic organizers to introduce a story or subject area content. Teach students to develop their own graphic organizers, such as story maps, during and after reading.

Use well-designed questions to promote comprehension.

Teach students to generate and then answer their own questions as they read.

Teach students to summarize what they read.

Teach students to use more than one strategy simultaneously to improve comprehension.

Reading-Writing

Teach the same words in reading and spelling.

Provide opportunities for authentic writing frequently each week.

Provide some extended time for authentic writing a couple of times per week.

Provide time for students to share their writing with peers.

Teach students to use a timeline to develop background knowledge and relate what they read to what they already know (Wooten, 2002).

Use literature as a catalyst for student writing.

Use student interests and experiences as catalysts for writing.

Teach students to use sticky notes to mark passages of interest and to write brief notes they can build upon in writing and discussion.

Motivation

Don’t assume that students can read grade-level material.

Interview students to determine their interests.

Provide access to a wide variety and different levels of reading materials.

Match reading content with student interest.

Encourage strong readers to try new genres.

Teach students to self-select books of appropriate interest and reading level.

Teach students the five-finger rule for determining book difficulty (see Chapter3).

Provide access to lots of books and other materials students can and want to read.

Involve parents and family in literacy experiences.

Provide ample time for a wide range of reading.

Foster students’ reading self-efficacy.

Provide opportunities for students to read and write together.

Provide opportunities for buddy reading (i.e., older and younger students reading together).

Resources

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    Resources