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ß What is reading fluency?
                      ß Why is fluency important?
      Reading         ß What instruction helps students
      Fluency           develop fluency?
                      ß How can we adapt instruction for
                        students with special needs?
                      ß How can we monitor students’
                        progress in fluency?




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   1
Fluency: reading quickly, accurately,
                               and with expression

                      ß Combines rate and accuracy
                      ß Requires automaticity
       Fluency        ß Includes reading with prosody


                                    Rate
                              +     Accuracy
                                    Fluency
                              Comprehension


©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   2
Automaticity:
                      ß Is quick, accurate recognition of
                        letters and words
Automaticity          ß Frees cognitive resources to
                        process meaning
                      ß Is achieved through corrected
                        practice




©2002 UT System/TEA              Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   3
What does fluent reading
                      sound like?

  Fluent
Reading . . .         Fluent reading flows. It
                      sounds smooth, with
                      natural pauses.




©2002 UT System/TEA          Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   4
ß “Fluency provides a bridge
                        between word recognition and
                        comprehension.”
                           —National Institute for Literacy (NIFL),
    Why Is                  2001, p. 22
   Reading
                      ß Fluent readers are able to focus
    Fluency             their attention on understanding
  Important?            text.
                      ß Because non-fluent readers
                        focus much of their attention on
                        figuring out words, they have
                        less attention to devote to
                        comprehension.



©2002 UT System/TEA                 Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   5
What           ß   How to decode words (in isolation and in
     Students             connected text)
     Need to          ß   How to automatically recognize words
                          (accurately and quickly with little attention
       Learn              or effort)
                      ß   How to increase speed (or rate) of reading
                          while maintaining accuracy



                      ß   Provide opportunities for guided oral
                          repeated reading that includes support and
      How We              feedback from teachers, peers, and/or
                          parents
      Teach It
                      ß   Match reading texts and instruction to
                          individual students
                      ß   Apply systematic classroom-based
                          instructional assessment to monitor
                          student progress in both rate and accuracy


©2002 UT System/TEA                    Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   6
Repeated reading procedures that
                      offer guidance and feedback are
                      effective for improving word
                      recognition, fluency,
                      comprehension, and overall
     Research         reading achievement through
     Evidence         Grade 5.
                                  —National Reading Panel, 2000


                      Students with low fluency
                      benefit from repeated reading
                      with a model and reading text
                      that is “chunked” in words or
                      phrases.


©2002 UT System/TEA             Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   7
“Typical” first graders read 60 wpm.
                      “Typical” second graders read 70 wpm.
                      “Typical” third graders read 80 wpm.

                                   INDEPENDENT-LEVEL
Fluency and
  the TEKS             ≤1 in 20 words is                   95%–100%
                       difficult                           accuracy
   (TEKS 1.9,
    2.6, 3.6)                      INSTRUCTIONAL-LEVEL
                       ≤1 in 10 words is                    90%–94%
                       difficult                            accuracy


                                   FRUSTRATIONAL-LEVEL

                       Difficulty with >1 in 10              < 90%
                       words                                 accuracy

©2002 UT System/TEA                    Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   8
ß Measure students’ fluency
                      ß Set fluency goals for individual
    Steps to
                        students
   Providing
    Fluency           ß Select appropriate texts for
  Instruction           fluency-building instruction
                      ß Model fluent reading
                      ß Provide repeated reading
                        opportunities with corrected
                        feedback
                      ß Monitor student progress



©2002 UT System/TEA                Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   9
ß Assess fluency regularly and
                        systematically
  Measuring
  Students’           ß Use formal or informal measures
   Fluency            ß Establish baseline data
                      ß Monitor progress




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   10
One-Minute Reading

                       Total                                            Words
                                      Number
                      Number
                        of      -            of               =         Correct
                                                                          Per
                       Words             Errors                         Minute
  Calculating          Read                                               (wpm)
   Reading
   Fluency            Example:
                      If a student reads 66 words and
                      has 8 errors, the student reads 58
                      words correct per minute.

                      Always encourage students to do
                      their best reading.

©2002 UT System/TEA                 Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   11
Mrs. Mooney was a butcher’s daughter. She was                                                 8
                      a woman who was quite able to keep things to herself:                                        19
                      a determined woman. She had married her father’s                                             27
                      foreman and opened a butcher’s shop near Spring                                              35
                      Gardens. But as soon as his father-in-law was dead                                           44
                      Mr. Mooney began to go to the devil. He drank,                                               54
                      plundered the till, ran headlong into debt. It was no                                        64
                      use making him take the pledge: he was sure to                                               74
      Practice        break out again a few days after. By fighting his                                            84
                      wife in the presence of customers and by buying                                              93
                      bad meat he ruined his business.                                                             99

                      One night he went for his wife with the cleaver                                              109
                      and she had to sleep in a neighbor’s house. After                                            119
                      that they lived apart. She went to the priest and                                            129
                      got a separation from him with care of the children.                                         139
                      She would give him neither money or food nor                                                 148
                      house-room; and so he was obliged to enlist himself                                          157
                      as a sheriff’s man.                                                                          161



                       —Joyce, J. (1996). The boarding house. In Dubliners (pp. 61-69). New York: Penguin Books.



©2002 UT System/TEA                                    Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring        12
Establishing baseline fluency
                      scores helps determine students’
                      fluency goals.
                      Recommended weekly
       Setting        improvement = 1.5 to 2.0 wpm
       Fluency
        Goals
                      ß   Determine the number of
                          words the student needs to
                          improve each week to reach
                          an end-of-year goal.
                      ß   Set a goal for the student to
                          reach by the middle of the
                          year.


©2002 UT System/TEA              Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   13
ß Begin when students
 Guidelines             demonstrate requisite skills
    for               ß Select appropriate texts
 Developing
  Fluency             ß Model fluent reading
                      ß Provide practice opportunities




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   14
Fluency-Related Instructional Decisions

   Student Data Shows         Instructional Decision

   Makes steady progress      Continue in same level of
   but does not meet goals    text

   Meets goals on first       Move to higher level of text
   reading                    or raise the fluency goal

   Has difficulty achieving   Move to lower or easier
   goals                      level of text or lower the
                              fluency goal




©2002 UT System/TEA              Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   15
                                                                                         15
To determine a student’s reading
                          level for a specific text, calculate:

                            Correct number of words read
A Closer Look
 at Reading
                      ÷      Total number of words read
   Levels


                                  Percent accuracy



                             Ex: 48 ÷ 50 = (.96) 96%
                                 (Independent level)

©2002 UT System/TEA                   Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   16
Repeated Reading


                         Pair students to practice
       Partner Reading   rereading text

                         Students listen, read along, or record
       Computer-Based/
                         their own reading, point to text,
       Tape-Assisted
                         subvocalize words, and reread texts
       Reading
                         independently


       Readers Theatre   Small groups rehearse and read a play




©2002 UT System/TEA                      Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   17
Teach ways to provide feedback:
                      ß Model
    Providing         ß Provide guided practice
    Feedback
                      ß Monitor students




©2002 UT System/TEA             Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   18
ß   Involves pairing students
  Partner                 to practice rereading text
Reading . . .
                      ß   Increases the amount of
                          time students are reading
                          and can provide a model
                          of fluent reading




©2002 UT System/TEA              Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   19
Adapt partner reading for
                      struggling readers:
                      ß Modify setting
  Partner             ß Adapt instructional content
 Reading              ß Modify delivery of instruction
Adaptations
                      ß Consider requisite abilities
                      ß Adapt material or use assistive
                        technology
                      ß Consider strategies or
                        interventions




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   20
Computer-Based/Tape-
                      Assisted Reading
   Repeated-          ß Models the proper phrasing and
                        speed of fluent reading
    Reading
   Practices
                      Readers Theatre
                      ß Involves small groups of students
                        rehearsing and reading a play




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   21
Choral reading
                      ß Actively involves students as they
       More             read in unison
     Fluency-
     Building
                      Chunking
     Practices
                      ß Involves reading phrases,
                        clauses, and
                        sentences by parsing, or
                        dividing text into chunks




©2002 UT System/TEA                Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   22
Fluency practice for English
                      language learners involves:
    Consider
   Diversity:         ß Listening to models
     English
                      ß Repeated readings
   Language
    Learners          ß Choral reading
                      ß Partner reading




©2002 UT System/TEA              Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   23
Students with disabilities
                      usually benefit from:

Students with         ß Repeated reading practice,
Special Needs           especially in expository or
                        informational texts
                      ß More time on task
                      ß Paired reading and rereading
                      ß Additional feedback and
                        progress monitoring




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   24
Students:

                      ß Independently read
   Monitoring           unpracticed text to the teacher
    Fluency             and graph their wpm
    Progress          ß Practice rereading the same
                        text several times
                      ß Independently read the text
                        again to the teacher
                      ß Graph score in a different color




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   25
ß identify fluency-related skills to
    When                target in instruction
  Students            ß set individual goals
Need Fluency          ß provide intensive instruction with
Interventions           lots of practice
                      ß monitor progress




©2002 UT System/TEA                Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   26
Fluency is increased when
                      students:
                      ß Develop instant, efficient word
Remember . . .          recognition (automaticity)
                      ß Practice repeated reading of
                        texts
                      ß Receive feedback and guidance
                        from others




©2002 UT System/TEA               Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring   27

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Fluency Presentation

  • 1. ß What is reading fluency? ß Why is fluency important? Reading ß What instruction helps students Fluency develop fluency? ß How can we adapt instruction for students with special needs? ß How can we monitor students’ progress in fluency? ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 1
  • 2. Fluency: reading quickly, accurately, and with expression ß Combines rate and accuracy ß Requires automaticity Fluency ß Includes reading with prosody Rate + Accuracy Fluency Comprehension ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 2
  • 3. Automaticity: ß Is quick, accurate recognition of letters and words Automaticity ß Frees cognitive resources to process meaning ß Is achieved through corrected practice ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 3
  • 4. What does fluent reading sound like? Fluent Reading . . . Fluent reading flows. It sounds smooth, with natural pauses. ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 4
  • 5. ß “Fluency provides a bridge between word recognition and comprehension.” —National Institute for Literacy (NIFL), Why Is 2001, p. 22 Reading ß Fluent readers are able to focus Fluency their attention on understanding Important? text. ß Because non-fluent readers focus much of their attention on figuring out words, they have less attention to devote to comprehension. ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 5
  • 6. What ß How to decode words (in isolation and in Students connected text) Need to ß How to automatically recognize words (accurately and quickly with little attention Learn or effort) ß How to increase speed (or rate) of reading while maintaining accuracy ß Provide opportunities for guided oral repeated reading that includes support and How We feedback from teachers, peers, and/or parents Teach It ß Match reading texts and instruction to individual students ß Apply systematic classroom-based instructional assessment to monitor student progress in both rate and accuracy ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 6
  • 7. Repeated reading procedures that offer guidance and feedback are effective for improving word recognition, fluency, comprehension, and overall Research reading achievement through Evidence Grade 5. —National Reading Panel, 2000 Students with low fluency benefit from repeated reading with a model and reading text that is “chunked” in words or phrases. ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 7
  • 8. “Typical” first graders read 60 wpm. “Typical” second graders read 70 wpm. “Typical” third graders read 80 wpm. INDEPENDENT-LEVEL Fluency and the TEKS ≤1 in 20 words is 95%–100% difficult accuracy (TEKS 1.9, 2.6, 3.6) INSTRUCTIONAL-LEVEL ≤1 in 10 words is 90%–94% difficult accuracy FRUSTRATIONAL-LEVEL Difficulty with >1 in 10 < 90% words accuracy ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 8
  • 9. ß Measure students’ fluency ß Set fluency goals for individual Steps to students Providing Fluency ß Select appropriate texts for Instruction fluency-building instruction ß Model fluent reading ß Provide repeated reading opportunities with corrected feedback ß Monitor student progress ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 9
  • 10. ß Assess fluency regularly and systematically Measuring Students’ ß Use formal or informal measures Fluency ß Establish baseline data ß Monitor progress ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 10
  • 11. One-Minute Reading Total Words Number Number of - of = Correct Per Words Errors Minute Calculating Read (wpm) Reading Fluency Example: If a student reads 66 words and has 8 errors, the student reads 58 words correct per minute. Always encourage students to do their best reading. ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 11
  • 12. Mrs. Mooney was a butcher’s daughter. She was 8 a woman who was quite able to keep things to herself: 19 a determined woman. She had married her father’s 27 foreman and opened a butcher’s shop near Spring 35 Gardens. But as soon as his father-in-law was dead 44 Mr. Mooney began to go to the devil. He drank, 54 plundered the till, ran headlong into debt. It was no 64 use making him take the pledge: he was sure to 74 Practice break out again a few days after. By fighting his 84 wife in the presence of customers and by buying 93 bad meat he ruined his business. 99 One night he went for his wife with the cleaver 109 and she had to sleep in a neighbor’s house. After 119 that they lived apart. She went to the priest and 129 got a separation from him with care of the children. 139 She would give him neither money or food nor 148 house-room; and so he was obliged to enlist himself 157 as a sheriff’s man. 161 —Joyce, J. (1996). The boarding house. In Dubliners (pp. 61-69). New York: Penguin Books. ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 12
  • 13. Establishing baseline fluency scores helps determine students’ fluency goals. Recommended weekly Setting improvement = 1.5 to 2.0 wpm Fluency Goals ß Determine the number of words the student needs to improve each week to reach an end-of-year goal. ß Set a goal for the student to reach by the middle of the year. ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 13
  • 14. ß Begin when students Guidelines demonstrate requisite skills for ß Select appropriate texts Developing Fluency ß Model fluent reading ß Provide practice opportunities ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 14
  • 15. Fluency-Related Instructional Decisions Student Data Shows Instructional Decision Makes steady progress Continue in same level of but does not meet goals text Meets goals on first Move to higher level of text reading or raise the fluency goal Has difficulty achieving Move to lower or easier goals level of text or lower the fluency goal ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 15 15
  • 16. To determine a student’s reading level for a specific text, calculate: Correct number of words read A Closer Look at Reading ÷ Total number of words read Levels Percent accuracy Ex: 48 ÷ 50 = (.96) 96% (Independent level) ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 16
  • 17. Repeated Reading Pair students to practice Partner Reading rereading text Students listen, read along, or record Computer-Based/ their own reading, point to text, Tape-Assisted subvocalize words, and reread texts Reading independently Readers Theatre Small groups rehearse and read a play ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 17
  • 18. Teach ways to provide feedback: ß Model Providing ß Provide guided practice Feedback ß Monitor students ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 18
  • 19. ß Involves pairing students Partner to practice rereading text Reading . . . ß Increases the amount of time students are reading and can provide a model of fluent reading ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 19
  • 20. Adapt partner reading for struggling readers: ß Modify setting Partner ß Adapt instructional content Reading ß Modify delivery of instruction Adaptations ß Consider requisite abilities ß Adapt material or use assistive technology ß Consider strategies or interventions ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 20
  • 21. Computer-Based/Tape- Assisted Reading Repeated- ß Models the proper phrasing and speed of fluent reading Reading Practices Readers Theatre ß Involves small groups of students rehearsing and reading a play ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 21
  • 22. Choral reading ß Actively involves students as they More read in unison Fluency- Building Chunking Practices ß Involves reading phrases, clauses, and sentences by parsing, or dividing text into chunks ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 22
  • 23. Fluency practice for English language learners involves: Consider Diversity: ß Listening to models English ß Repeated readings Language Learners ß Choral reading ß Partner reading ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 23
  • 24. Students with disabilities usually benefit from: Students with ß Repeated reading practice, Special Needs especially in expository or informational texts ß More time on task ß Paired reading and rereading ß Additional feedback and progress monitoring ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 24
  • 25. Students: ß Independently read Monitoring unpracticed text to the teacher Fluency and graph their wpm Progress ß Practice rereading the same text several times ß Independently read the text again to the teacher ß Graph score in a different color ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 25
  • 26. ß identify fluency-related skills to When target in instruction Students ß set individual goals Need Fluency ß provide intensive instruction with Interventions lots of practice ß monitor progress ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 26
  • 27. Fluency is increased when students: ß Develop instant, efficient word Remember . . . recognition (automaticity) ß Practice repeated reading of texts ß Receive feedback and guidance from others ©2002 UT System/TEA Effective Fluency Instruction and Progress Monitoring 27