Sunday, September 13, 2009

"What Gets Measured, Gets Improved"

Comprehension is limited without fluency. Think about material that is difficult for you to read. For me, one item that falls under this category is legal documents. I often have to slow my reading down and re-read the material in order to comprehend it. Good readers know these strategies; poor readers do not. I think there are several strategies that can be done in the classroom to help improve fluency.

First, I feel it is important for teachers to model good reading. The modeling should include expressive tone; it is recommended this is done daily, even if it is for a few short minutes. When teachers have a few minutes just before the dismissal bell and the lesson has concluded, this is the ideal time to model good reading; this should also help with classroom management.

There are many activities that help improve fluency. Reader's theater is one format for improving fluency. It allows for ample opportunities for students to work on expression and delivery. Other possibilities include: taping students and providing feedback, pairing a strong, fluent reader with a struggling reader and have them echo read, using fractured fairy tales, putting different people/perspectives on the board and having students practice voice. It is important to find what works for your students. I caution that Round Robin Reading is one of the least effective tools to use.

Another strategy for improving fluency is providing continuous reading practice with direct feedback. This should include repeated readings of the same text and can include emphasis on pacing, expression and chunking.

I think our next step, fluency running records in addition to Star testing, will be a key component to helping our students become better readers. If we are continually monitoring our students' progress, we will be better able to assist them with what they need. Fluency checks are an essential piece.

2 comments:

  1. I agree. As painful as it may be to have my students practice reading fluency and record the results, it does have them concentrate on fluency and therefore helps with comprehension.

    I also totally agree with modeling for students. We often realize this with struggling readers, but it is also good for higher functioning readers.

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  2. We decided that students really enjoy being read to, but we are having difficulty finding time to do this on a daily basis with as many as we would like to. We do this in small groups, but this limits the numbers.

    Fluency is important and we are trying to incorporate more of these strategies into our RR time.

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