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Teachers on the Cutting Edge Volume 16 Studies and Research Committee Fall 2004 Fluency: Development and Instruction.
FLORIDA READING ASSOCIATION STUDIES AND RESEARCH COMMITTEE MEMBERS Judy Moore, FRA Studies and Research Chair Ginger Butto, FRA District Director (8 ) Kathy Carmichael, FRA District Director (3 ) Lela-Anne Carroll, Florida Secondary Reading Council, President Kathy Jongsma, Professional Development/Publications Chair Ruth Lowery, Children’s Book Award Co-Chair Karis MacDonnell, FRA District Director (14 ) Andrea Rosenblatt, Conference Sites Co-Facilitator Nile Stanley, Florida Reading Quarterly Editor Debra Wellman, Children’s Book Award Co-Chair Paula Zielonka, Newsletter Editor Each year the Studies and Research Committee of the Florida Reading Association (FRA) publishes Teachers on the Cutting Edge, a sampling of research literature and instructional techniques representative of best practices in an area of literacy. Designed to aid teachers and administratorsin their efforts to learn about research and best practices, Teachers on the Cutting Edge is one of the many benefits of membership in FRA. Responding to a renewed interest in reading fluency effected by the findings of the National Reading Panel and the work of a number of researchers, this year’s edition, volume 16, addresses fluency development and instruction.In this volume, you will find articles that address the current knowledge base concerning fluency including the following:
Research on effective fluency instruction
This year, the Studies and Research Committee changed the format for the Cutting Edge. In addition to the source, summary, and implications, we have added a new “applications” section offering practical suggestions for the classroom. Framed quotations, in most cases, come from the summarized entries. Names, dates, and page numbers have been included for ease in posting or copying the quotations independent of the main entries. Readers are urged to share this issue of the Cutting Edge with administrators, colleagues, and others who may be decision makers. In an effort to disseminate the research as widely as possible, the committee encourages readers to copy the volume, check the website for an electronic copy, or purchase additional books. Table of ContentsForeward 4 Kids need to learn to read fluently 5 Richard Allington Creating fluent readers 6 Timothy Rasinski Teaching children to read: An evidence-based assessment of the scientific research literature on reading and its implications for reading instruction. Reports of the subgroups National Reading Panel 7 Fluency: Questions, answers, and evidence-based strategies 8 Jerry Johns and Roberta Berglund The effects of repeated readings and attentional cues on reading fluency and comprehension 9 Lawrence J. O’Shea, Paul Sindelar, and Dorothy O’Shea Effects of repeated reading on second-grade transitional readers’ fluency and comprehension 10 Sara Dowhower The method of repeated readings 11 S. Jay SamuelsAssisted reading practice: Effects on performance for poor readers in grade 3 and 4 12 Michael T. Shany and Andrew Biemiller Effects of fluency development on urban second-grade readers 13 Timothy Rasinski and Nancy Padak Reading: A research-based approach 14 Jack Fletcher and G. Reid LyonImproving oral reading fluency (and comprehension) through the creation of talking books 15 Grace Oakley Speed does matter in reading 16 Timothy Rasinski Effects of repeated readings on instructional- and mastery-level readers 17 Paul Sindelar, Lisa Monda, and Lawrence J. O’SheaA synthesis of research on effective interventions for building reading fluency with elementary students with learning disabilities David Chard, Sharon Vaughn, and Brenda-Jean Tyler 18 Fluency: A review of developmental and remedial practices 19 Melanie Kuhn and Steven Stahl The intermediate grades—“I thought about it all night”: Readers theatre for reading fluency and motivation Jo Worthy and Karen Prater 20 Fluency: The neglected reading goal 21 Richard Allington Peer tutoring and paired reading: Combining two powerful techniques 22 Keith Topping Fluency beyond the primary grades: From group performance to silent, independent reading 23 Jo Worthy and Karen Broaddus Be a good detective: Solve the case of oral reading fluency 24 Meribethe Richards “I never thought I could be a star”: A Readers Theatre ticket to fluency 25 Miriam Martinez, Nancy Roser, and Susan Strecker Fluency for everyone: Incorporating fluency instruction in the classroom 26 Timothy Rasinski The threads of reading: Strategies for literacy development 27 Karen Tankersley Supporting struggling readers and writers: Strategies for classroom intervention 3-6 28 Dorothy Strickland , Kathy Ganske, and Joanne Monroe Oral reading in the school literacy curriculum 29 Timothy Rasinski and James Hoffman Turning a New Page to life and literacy 30 Rosemarye Taylor and Richard McAtee Toward understanding oral reading fluency 31 Susan Strecker, Nancy Roser, and Miriam Martinez Effects of repeated readings and nonrepetitive strategies on students’ fluency and comprehension 32 Susan Homan, Janelle Klessius, and Clare Hite Improving oral reading fluency: A brief experimental analysis of combining an antecedent intervention with consequences Tanya Eckert, Scott Ardoin, Edward Daly III, and Brian Martens 33 References 34 Membership Application 36 Ordering Information 36 Fluency: Development and Instruction. Source Allington, R. L. (2001). Kids need to learn to read fluently. In What really matters for struggling readers: Designing research-based programs. New York: Longman. Summary Chapter four in Allington’s groundbreaking study of struggling readers critically analyzes the need for developing fluency in struggling readers. The chapter is broken into two segments: understanding the importance of reading fluently and interventions to develop fluency in struggling readers. Allington describes the most successful intervention strategies that have demonstrated effectiveness in developing fluency, reviewing them in three clusters: tutorial approaches, small group approaches, and whole-class instructional redesign. Implications
strategies.
Applications
Source Rasinski, T. (2004). Creating fluent readers. Educational Leadership, 61, 46-51.
Summary Fluency plays a significant role in the understanding of written material. The students who have difficulty decoding pay little attention to punctuation and phrasing; they lack expression in their oral reading and most often have a great deal of difficulty comprehending.There are three dimensions of reading fluency: 1) accuracy in word decoding, 2) automatic processing, and 3) prosodic reading. Fluency should be addressed at all grade levels. This article includes the Multidimensional Fluency Scale, with a four-point rubric, that can be very useful for the classroom teacher.
Implications
Applications
Source National Reading Panel (2000). Teaching children to read: An evidence-based assessment of the scientificresearch literature on reading and its implications for reading instruction. Reports of the subgroups. Washington, DC: National Institute for Literacy.
Summary The report presents the findings of a national panel charged with the task of determining the effectiveness of various approaches to teaching children to read in the primary grades. Panel members reviewed experimental studies in five essential areas: phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and text comprehension, using seven broad questions to guide their review. Results in each of the five areas are summarized as are research studies on teacher education and computer technology. In the area of fluency, the report recommends classroom practices that encourage repeated oral reading with feedback and guidance as a means to improve reading speed, accuracy, and expression. Implications
Applications
Source Johns, J. L. & Berglund, R.L. (2002), Fluency: Questions, answers, and evidence-based strategies. Dubuque , IA : Kendall/Hunt Publishing. Summary Fluency is a “how to” book focusing on the major aspects of fluency. Part I presents a series of question and answers on the basic principles of fluency that are supported by research:
Part II gives evidence-based strategies, practical activities, and resources to promote fluency. Implications
Applications
SourceO’Shea, L. J., Sindelar, P. T., & O’Shea, D. J. (1985). The effects of repeated readings and attentional cues on reading fluency and comprehension. Journal of Reading Behavior, 17 (2), 129-142.
Summary O’Shea, Sindelar, and O’Shea investigate the effects of repeated readings and cues to attend to either rate or to meaning on reading comprehension and reading fluency of 30 third graders who initially read at or above grade level. Students read passages one, three, or seven times, given cues either to read quickly and accurately or to read for meaning. Story propositions retold and rates of reading were analyzed after each reading. Students cued to read quickly and accurately had more words read correctly per minute but fewer story propositions retold than those students cued to read for meaning. All students increased reading rates with repeated readings.
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Applications
SourceDowhower, S. L. (1987). Effects of repeated reading on second-grade transitional readers’ fluency and comprehension. Reading Research Quarterly, 22 (4), 389-406.
Summary Dowhower studied the effects of two repeated reading procedures, read-alongs with tapes or independent reading practice, on 17 second-grade transitional readers’ oral reading performance on practiced and unpracticed passages. The study was completed over a period of seven weeks. Students’ rate, accuracy, comprehension, and prosodic reading improved with both training procedures and gains from repeated readings of practiced passages transferred to unpracticed passages. Read-along procedures were more helpful at rates under 45 wpm, while independent practice was more helpful for students reading at higher rates of speed. Prosodic reading was more improved by read-alongs than by independent practice.
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Applications
Samuels, S. J. (1997). The method of repeated readings. The Reading Teacher, 50, 376-381. (Original work published 1979).
Summary Samuels builds a case for why fluency is an important skill for a reader. He then explains the procedure of repeated readings, a method consisting of rereading a short, meaningful passage several times until a satisfactory level of fluency is reached. He advocates the theory of automaticity, stating that fluent readers are those who decode text automatically, thus freeing their attention so they can focus on comprehension. When readers do not have automaticity, they necessarily focus on decoding, rather than text understanding.
Implications
Applications
SourceShany, M. T. & Biemiller, A. (1995). Assisted reading practice: Effects on performance for poor readers in grade 3 and 4. Reading Research Quarterly, 30, 382-395.
Summary Shany and Biemiller investigate two types of assisted reading practice with at-risk third- and fourth-graders over a four-month period. Those in the teacher-assisted group practiced reading materials orally, receiving teacher assistance with word recognition, as needed. Those in the tape-assisted group practiced their reading while listening to tape recordings of the same stories. At study end, students in the tape-assisted condition had read twice the amount of text as those in the teacher-assisted condition. They also scored higher on listening comprehension measures. Overall gains were highest for those students who had a larger differential between their listening comprehension and their reading comprehension prior to assisted practice treatment.
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Applications
SourceRasinski, T.V. & Padak, N. (1994). Effects of fluency development on urban second-grade readers. Journal of Educational Research, 87 (3), 158-165.
Summary Rasinski et al. tested the effects of a program to improve the general reading and fluency development of urban second-graders. Students received daily 10-15 minute Fluency Development Lessons over a variety of text types during a 6-month period. Lessons included teacher modeling of fluent reading, discussion of the text read by the teacher, discussion of the teacher’s fluency, student choral reading of each text, student paired readings of each text (3 times), student performance of each text and student independent practice with each text. Statistically significant differences were found in oral reading rates. Teachers also reported student improvement in general reading performance and attitudes toward reading.
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Applications
SourceFletcher, J. M. & Lyon, G. R. (1998). Reading: A research-based approach. In Evers, W. M. (Ed.). What’s gone wrong in America’s classrooms? Palo Alto, CA: Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University.
Summary Fletcher and Lyon review research studies sponsored by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development on processes related to reading: phonological awareness, word recognition, reading fluency and automaticity, reading comprehension, and social and biological factors in literacy. Studies explore three questions: what aspects of reading must be taught; why do children fail to learn to read; and what is the best way to teach poor readers. Findings suggest the importance of explicit classroom instruction and the value of early identification, prevention, and intervention. Reading programs should ensure that children receive adequate instruction in all reading components. Skills need to be taught in an integrated manner in appropriately leveled materials.
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Applications
Oakley, G. (2003, March). Improving oral reading fluency (and comprehension) through the creation of talking books. Reading Online, 6(7). Available: Retrieved March 15, 2004, http://www.readingonline.org/articles/art_index.asp?HREF=oakley/index.html
SummaryAfter briefly reviewing representative research on fluency, the author reports a formative experiment in which three 9- and 10-year-old girls in Australia created their own “electronic talking books” as a way to improve their levels of oral reading fluency. The author explains the process of book development, reports on the software used for book construction and recording of text voices, and presents observations of the girls’ involvement and progress as they collaboratively worked on the project over several weeks’ time. Teacher observations focused on the effectiveness and efficiency of the procedures, as well as on their appeal to the students. The three subjects completed The Neale Analysis of Reading Ability and the Multidimensional Fluency Scale as pre and post assessments. Each girl improved in phrasing, read in more meaningful chunks, and paid more attention to semantic cues and punctuation. Two improved in their reading rates. Observations include identification of both facilitative and inhibitive factors that emerged during the composing and recording processes, as well as some unplanned outcomes, such as improvement in the students’ comprehension. Implications
Applications
Source Rasinski, T.V. (2000). Speed does matter in reading. The Reading Teacher, 54, 146-151.
Summary A common manifestation of struggling readers is the slow, disfluent way in which they read. This is often called inefficient reading. Although students may be able to comprehend while reading at this slower rate, it affects the amount of reading they may be able to complete. For some students this slower rate impacts comprehension because of the laborious manner in which they must attend to word recognition. Such attention to words can influence memory of content. Educators must not ignore this area for instruction. There are a number of strategies that have shown to be very successful for improving fluency with struggling readers. These strategies can be woven into the curriculum and made available for all students.
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Applications
Source Sindelar, P. T., Monda, L. E., & O’Shea, L. J. (1990). Effects of repeated readings on instructional- and mastery-level readers. Journal of Educational Research, 83 (4), 220-226.
Summary Sindelar, Monda, and O’Shea investigated whether the effects of repeated reading are comparable for students identified as learning disabled or nondisabled. All students read two passages, one passage once and one passage three times. Some read at their instructional level (between 50 and 100 wpm with two or fewer errors) and some at their mastery level (faster than 100 wpm). Students were assessed for fluency, accuracy, and information after their final reading. Rate increased with each reading for both groups, with no significant differences for students initially identified as disabled or nondisabled. Mastery level students made fewer reading errors. All students retold more story propositions after third reading than after first.
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Applications
Chard, D. J, Vaughn, S., & Tyler, B. J. (2002). A synthesis of research on effective interventions for building reading fluency with elementary students with learning disabilities. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 35 (5), 386-407.
Summary The authors synthesize research on interventions for building reading fluency for students with learning disabilities. The study yielded 24 studies that reported findings on intervention features, including repeated reading with and without a model, sustained reading, number of repetitions, text difficulty, and specific improvement criteria. The authors' findings suggest that teachers can effectively build LD students' fluency through explicit modeling of fluent reading, providing multiple opportunities to repeatedly read familiar text independently and with corrective feedback, and establishing performance criteria for increasing text difficulty.
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SourceKuhn, M. R. & Stahl, S. A. (2000). Fluency: A review of developmental and remedial practices. Ann Arbor: Center for the Improvement of Early Reading Achievement. Retrieved February 27, 2004, from the CIERA Web site: http://www.ciera.org/library/reports/inquiry-2/2-008/2-008.htmlhttp://www.rwjf.org/library/chrcare SummaryKuhn and Stahl reviewed studies related to fluency and reading development. They surveyed definitions for fluency and the characteristics of fluent reading. Their selection of studies that have attempted to improve the fluency of struggling readers focused on repeated readings and assisted reading as the basis for instruction including tutorial approaches, small group approaches, and whole-class instruction. They found 58 studies dealing with assisted reading (15), repeated reading (33), or classroom intervention designed to improve fluency (10). Their examination of repeated readings found that in those cases that used material at or above the child’s instructional level, greater gains were achieved. In many of the 58 studies, they found that while gains were reported, such gains were often insufficient to accelerate learning. The article includes 2 charts, one listing repeated reading studies and the critical elements of each study; the other listing assisted reading studies and their critical elements.
Applications
Source Worthy, J. & Prater, K. (2002). The intermediate grades—“I thought about it all night”: Readers theatre for reading fluency and motivation. The Reading Teacher, 56 (3), 294-298
Summary Readers Theatre provides intermediate students with an authentic reason to engage in repeated reading of the material. By preparing text to be shared with classmates, the student practices by reading the text numerous times while trying to emphasize certain words to enhance the listener’s experience. The repeated readings improve the student’s ability to orally read material with improved prosody. Readers Theatre was beneficial for all students including the very resistant readers. Students had a reason to engage in repeated reading of the same text, which is a research-based technique to improve fluency.
The variety of materials appropriate for Readers Theatre includes poems, famous speeches, excerpts from chapter books and novels, fairy tales, and even expository texts. Although expository texts take some ingenuity, one teacher reported a great deal of success with Christopher Maynard’s, Micro monsters: Life under the microscope (1999). Students created and played the roles of mites, lice, and other microscopic insects.
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Applications
Source Allington, R. L. (1983). Fluency: The neglected reading goal. The Reading Teacher, 36 (6), 556-561.
Summary Early research in fluency noted that students that lacked fluency were classified as poor readers but were seldom given instruction in improving fluency. Because fluency is trainable, researchers began to look at the best ways to help students to gain fluency. Allington noted that most teachers felt students needed to work to improve their automaticity by receiving large doses of letter, sound, and word instruction. Students who were somewhat successful in their fluency were receiving instruction that was more meaning oriented and that focused their attention on making sense of the story. Fluent reading or prosodic reading was the goal for young readers. Repeated readings of texts produced better achievement than did programs designed to develop automatic word recognition.
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Applications
Source Topping, K. (1989). Peer tutoring and paired reading: Combining two powerful techniques. The Reading Teacher, 42, (7), 488-495.
Summary Topping discusses how structured pair-work between children of differing ability has great potential for effective co-operative learning. Peer tutoring and paired reading are presented. Research shows that peer tutoring accelerates the reading skill of both tutor and tutee. A reader supported by a more capable peer can sustain higher readability levels than when reading independently. The key to having an effective cooperative reading program is teacher organization.
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Source Worthy, J. & Broaddus, K. (2001/2002). Fluency beyond the primary grades: From group performance to silent, independent reading. The Reading Teacher, 55 (4), 334-344.
Summary Worthy and Broaddus encourage teachers to teach strategies that improve fluency in upper elementary and middle schools. They argue that oral reading fluency is an essential aspect of mature reading but instruction in fluency has been missing in many classrooms. The authors draw a parallel between fluent reading and playing music; noting that rate, accuracy and automaticity are similar to phrasing, smoothness, and expressiveness. Several strategies appropriate for students in the upper elementary and middle schools are explained.
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Applications
SourceRichards, M. (2000). Be a good detective: Solve the case of oral reading fluency. The Reading Teacher, 53 (7), 534-539.
Summary Richards determines that oral reading fluency is a critical component of reading performance and instruction. Teachers must understand the three clues to fluency: the importance of reading rate, automatic word recognition, and reading with expression (prosody) in order to improve students’ reading ability. Oral reading fluency can be incorporated in the regular classroom and in individualized reading lessons. Richards suggests five methods for capturing students’ reading fluency. They follow under implications.
Implications
Applications
Source Martinez, M., Roser, N., & Strecker, S. (1999). “I never thought I could be a star”: A Readers Theatre ticket to fluency. The Reading Teacher, 52(4), 326-334.
Summary Martinez, Roser, & Strecker’s powerful article describes how Readers Theatre can be used to help young students develop meaningful and oral fluent reading skills. Readers Theatre also encourages students’ appreciation of literature and eagerness to read. The authors determine that Readers Theatre helps children “go ‘inside’ the story, experiencing the thoughts and feelings of the characters” (p. 332). Suggestions for successfully integrating Readers Theatre in students’ instruction follow under implications.
Implications · Students need manageable texts to practice fluency. · Stories with straightforward plots that present characters grappling with dilemmas requiring thought and talk can be easily turned into scripts. · Readers Theatre can build on children’s enthusiasm for series books. · Students need to hear effective models in order to know what fluent reading sounds like. · Students who have opportunities for repeatedly reading the same texts become fluent. · Students who receive instruction and feedback are more likely to develop reading fluency. Applications · Use books that students are familiar with to implement Readers Theatre. · Model fluent reading for students so they understand what is expected of them.
Source Rasinski, T.V. (1998). Fluency for everyone: Incorporating fluency instruction in the classroom. In R. Allington (Ed.), Teaching struggling readers: Articles from The Reading Teacher (pp. 257-260). Newark, DE: International Reading Association. Summary Although an important aspect of proficient reading, fluency is often neglected by published reading programs and teachers. Several methods have been shown to be effective with struggling readers. Most of these methods can be imbedded into the instructional program for all learners, using principles identified in this article.
Implications
Applications A set of principles for fluency instruction has been identified and include:
Source Tankersley, K. (2003). The threads of reading: Strategies for literacy development. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Summary Fluent readers read with expression, recognize words quickly, make connections with their backgrounds, have good reading vocabularies, and comprehend what they read. Fluency changes continuously based on background knowledge and interest of the reader, as well as difficulty of the text. Teachers can help students develop fluency through a number of strategies. Tankersley states “...it is essential that the thread of fluency be deliberately focused and strengthened as readers grow and develop.”
Implications Fluency is not automatic for all students. It is important that teachers weave instructional strategies that focus on fluency into the daily activities in the classroom. Many of these strategies are effective with all learners and additionally provide a higher level of motivation to read. The teacher must insure that the materials are on either an independent or instructional level for fluency training. Otherwise the students will become discouraged and not do the necessary practice.
Applications The author identifies the following strategies for the development of fluency: · Model fluent reading, pointing out expressive language or correct phrasing. · Provide coaching as the students participate in oral language activities. · Work with students on reading rate using independent reading materials. · Use the Shared Book approach, which uses modeling and multiple reading of text. · Practice reading conversational parts in text. · Have students perform ‘radio plays’ or Readers Theatre. · Encourage students to use different voices for characters in text. · Change punctuation and have students read the indicated changes in expression. · Have students choral read. · Provide time for students to dictate stories for transcription/publication in the classroom. · Ask students to “echo” read a story with you once. Then have student rotate parts. · Have students read in pairs or buddy read. · Use a book or play to act out characters in a story for audio taping or live performance. · Select high interest stories from the basal and have students read and reread with partners. · Use rhythmic poems, short passages, songs, raps, rhymes to motivate and encourage practice. · Help students visualize the events; model “your own thinking and visualization process.” · Have students tape record their reading, allowing them to listen to the tapes and identify needs on their own and chart growth as the reading improves.
Source Strickland, D. S., Ganske, K., & Monroe, J. K. (2002). Supporting struggling readers and writers: Strategies for classroom intervention 3-6. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.
Summary Fluency appears to be an overlooked aspect of reading instruction. Struggling readers need to see and hear fluent reading modeled. They should receive direct instruction in using techniques such as attending to phrasing and chunking words. Assessing fluency should be an integral part of any reading program. Running records and miscue analysis can provide direction for best practices in working with the struggling reader. “For many struggling readers acquiring fluency is a major step toward becoming a skilled reader.”
Implications · Teachers must provide instructional strategies that foster fluency, especially for struggling readers, who often do not have opportunities to hear fluent reading. These strategies are readily available and provide excellent instruction for all readers. · Struggling readers “...need many opportunities to orally and silently read text that is not too difficult so they can learn to read expressively, increase their sight vocabularies, and discover reading as a pleasurable, meaning-making activity.”
Applications Instructional strategies that foster fluency include · Modeling · Read-alouds · Choral reading · Using appropriate text · Multiple readings of text · Readers Theatre · Visiting readers (Buddy reading) · Dictated experience stories · Paired repeated reading · Timed repeated readings · Teaching phrasing, expression, and attention to punctuation · Engaging in silent reading
Source Rasinski, T.V. & Hoffman, J. V. (2003).Oral reading in the school literacy curriculum. Reading Research Quarterly, 38, 510-523.
Summary The authors explore the role of oral reading for instructing elementary levels students, and particularly those who struggle. They discuss the positive role of oral reading in instruction. They describe and advocate several types of oral reading fluency instruction that have been found to improve students’ reading achievement. Techniques discussed include: repeated reading, guided reading with direct instruction of strategies, buddy reading, talking books, and reader’s theatre. The authors conclude that researchers and practitioners need to systematically and scientifically study the nature of oral reading and develop models of effective reading curricula and instruction.
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Applications
Source Taylor, R. T. & McAtee, R. (2003). Turning a New Page to life and literacy. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy , 46 (6), 476-480. Retrieved February 21, 2004, from EBSCOhost database.
SummaryOlder, reluctant readers often lack the motivation necessary to engage in any intervention designed for them. Taylor and McAtee address both motivation and the necessary skill development in their work with 65 inmates at the Westmorland Institution in Canada. Inmates develop their reading skills by preparing tapes of children’s books for the primary classes at local elementary schools. Because the material must be read perfectly and with expression, the heretofore reluctant readers read and reread the material. With this strong motivation, they were more willing to work through the less compelling mechanics of reading. “In one calendar year the mean growth in reading as measured by the SRI (Scholastic Reading Inventory) was 2.6 years, and some inmates experienced as much improvement as 3 to 4 years.” Furthermore, more than 1,600 elementary students benefited from these recordings.
Implications · Rereading develops fluency for older reluctant readers. · Motivation is an important factor in convincing older reluctant readers to reread material to develop fluency. · Older students must often read very low level material in order to read at their independent level. · Students who feel success are encouraged to work on sound-symbol relationships, word patterns, and other elements of successful reading. Applications· Look for creative ways to encourage students to read and reread material at their independent level. · Include repeated readings as part of on-going classroom practice for all learners. · Allow time for students to read interesting and manageable texts every day, ideally at their independent or easy reading level. · Match students with manageable and appropriate text.
Source Strecker, S. K., Roser, N. L., & Martinez, M.G. (1998). Toward understanding oral reading fluency. In T. Shanahan & F. Rodriguez-Brown (Eds.), Forty-seventy yearbook of the National Reading Conference (pp. 215-223). Chicago: National Reading Conference. Summary The authors discussed varied definitions and views of oral reading fluency held by reading researchers. Many assume a single factor is responsible for fluent reading. However, current evidence suggests that fluency depends on a confluence of variables. Studies point to three key instructional opportunities that foster fluency development: reading manageable text, repeated reading of the same text, and observing effective models of fluent reading. Wide reading of many texts may also foster fluency development. Further research is needed into the components of fluency. Implications
· Fluency and comprehension are interrelated.
Applications
Source Homan, S. P., Klesius, J. P., & Hite, C. (1993). Effects of repeated readings and nonrepetitive strategies on students’ fluency and comprehension. Journal of Educational Research, 87 (2), 94-99.
SummaryHoman et al. compared the effectiveness of repeated reading to echo reading, unison reading, and cloze reading assisted strategies that required no rereading as a means of improving fluency and comprehension among sixth-grade Chapter 1 students who read at 4th or 5th grade level. Students engaged in the reading activities during 20-minute sessions, 3 times a week for a 7-week period. Results of the study indicated that both methods improved comprehension. The researchers concluded that “additional time spent on connected reading apparently improves comprehension,” (99). Implications
Applications
Source Eckert, T. L., Ardoin, S. P., Daly III, E. J., & Martens, B.K. (2002). Improving oral reading fluency: A brief experimental analysis of combining an antecedent intervention with consequences. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 35(3), 271-278.
Summary The researchers investigated the effects of two consequences (contingent reinforcement or performance feedback) and antecedent interventions (of listening passage previews and/or repeated readings) on the oral reading fluency of six primary students. After listening to the oral reading passage, the student practiced reading the passage twice with fluency rates recorded. The child then selected a reinforcer (pencil, eraser, etc.) and was told he could have the item if he increased the correct words per minute on this reading. The antecedent intervention increased the number of correctly read words per minute for all students. For four of the students, pairing the antecedent intervention with either of the consequences resulted in higher reading rates over the antecedent intervention alone. Implications
Applications
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