Category Archives: Teaching Tips

Acquiring Reading Fluency: The Elementary Years

By Ann Bowers

Not long ago, the National Assessment of Educational Progress conducted a study of elementary-school reading skills. The study showed that 44% of fourth graders in the United States have low reading scores. In 2000, a report by The National Reading Panel stated that oral reading fluency is a critical part of effective reading instruction. Parents and teachers can help improve reading scores by building reading fluency skills in their children.

What is Fluency?

Fluency is the ability to accurately and quickly read text. People who read with fluency immediately understand words they read and comprehend sentence structures. If a person has not developed reading fluency, words are difficult to understand and pronounce. They read at a slow pace, and have to sound out many words. To develop fluency, a reader must practice reading and receive instruction. Gradually, reading fluency develops as the reader is exposed to varied text and word familiarity is developed.

Assessing Fluency in Reading

Fluency should be assessed to ensure that students are progressing. At home, parents can test fluency by asking the child to read aloud from an age appropriate book for one minute. The child’s school reader will work fine. As he/she reads, make a checkmark on a piece of paper for each missed word, substitution, reversal, omission, or words on which the child needed help. Count the number of words read correctly in one minute (WPM = words per minute). Do not count words the child did not have time to read. The WPM should go up as the child progresses. Listen to see if the child reads smoothly, with pauses and inflections, emotion, and expression. Does he or she react appropriately to punctuation cues? Or, does the child spend extra time trying to &quotsound out” words?

Fluency Instruction

There are numerous approaches to reading fluency instruction. One of the most effective is Repeated Reading, during which the student reads text aloud several times while being monitored by a parent, teacher, or tutor. After reading, the student is given feedback and guidance. Other approaches include: silent, independent reading, reading in phrases, listening to fluent reading models, and performance feedback.

Repeated Reading

Oral repeated reading consists of the student being monitored while he reads, then rereads, text. Practitioners of Repeated Reading have found that students who read a passage four times, and are given assistance with decoding words, word meanings, etc., will increase their fluency significantly. At home, the student should read orally, with help from a parent or tutor, for one-half to one hour per day.

Silent, Independent Reading

Teachers who maximize the time spent on reading skills instruction in the classroom will see the most rapid comprehension and fluency growth in students. While solitary reading can be productive for students, it should be kept to a minimum to free class time for skills instruction. Students should be encouraged to read more at home to replace independent reading in school. For parents, this means that you should have your child read independently for another one-half to one hour.

Reading in Phrases

When students read, they are exposed to phrases in sentences. Reading fluency improves when the reader reads the text in phrases. When teaching reading in phrases, the adult acts as a role model and reads a selection of text to the child, which has been divided into phrases by slash marks. Then the student is asked to read the same text aloud, three to four times.

Listening to Fluent Reading Models

Role modeling fluency in reading should be performed on a daily basis at school and at home. The student should read one-on-one with an adult who provides a model of fluent reading. The adult should point to the words being read. Then, the student reads the same text several times with assistance. When students hear exemplary role models of reading fluency, they observe and imitate correct pronunciation, emotion, enunciation, pauses, and reactions to punctuation.

In choral reading, students read as a group with an adult. They follow along while the adult reads from a big book, or read from their own copy of the book. Then the students reread the book in unison several times.

In tape-assisted reading, students read along and point to each word as they hear a fluent reader read a book on audiotape. The students read aloud along with the tape until they are able to read the book independently.

In partner reading, more fluent readers are paired with less fluent readers. The more fluent reader provides a model of fluent reading. Then, the less fluent reader reads the book aloud several times. The more fluent student helps with word recognition, showing emotion, and reacting to punctuation.

Performance Feedback

Research indicates that performance feedback, with incentives, improves reading fluency. Students who are told, specifically, how they have done on tests of fluency, improve more than students who are not informed of their progress. Incentives, such as certificates of improvement motivate students to improve reading fluency.

Conclusion

Using proven skills-building techniques, parents and tutors can help children improve reading fluency. If parents have concerns about their child’s progress, they should speak with the child’s teacher and then assist the child at home.

About the author

Ann Bowers is a former teacher and a writer for TeamUP! Tutors, an in-home tutoring company. www.TeamUpTutors.com

Looking for a private tutor in San Francisco or near San Diego, Los Angeles, San Jose, Oakland, or Seattle? Find out how TeamUP! Tutors can help. Call toll-free 888.383.2687.

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Writing Lessons That Work

If you must teach writing, you know how nebulous and difficult it can be to define exactly what good writing entails. As a writer myself, I love to teach writing. I find that giving specific goals and focusing on one small aspect in each lesson has been highly successful. Not only do my students turn out excellent written work, they love to write and actually ask for more writing assignments. It doesn’t get much better than that!

 

Try these lessons in your class and see what happens.

 

Writing Lesson: Teach With Baby Steps

 

Five Day Descriptive Writing Lesson This is my most popular writing article.

 

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Emphasize Mastery Over Grades

Every teacher wants to help students master the material, not just pass the test, then forget it. Here is how to focus your teaching on mastery. When you teach to mastery, you’ll find your students are more relaxed about their learning, as well as more focused.

 

Here’s the article: Emphasize Mastery Over Grades

 

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How to Deal With Pushy Parents

Every teacher, at some point in his or her career will have to deal with parents that are over-enthusiastic about their children’s educations. These are the parents that will interrupt class, because what they have to say is more important than what you have to teach your class. They will tell you how to teach, because they know the best way to do it. They will demand you make exceptions for their children.

 

Here are some ways to Deal With Pushy Parents.

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Get Ready for Back to School Night

If you’ve been following my classroom organization tips on this blog, then you should be able to prepare for back to school night easily. This article from September 2008 gives you a three day plan to get yourself, your students, and your classroom ready.

 

Teaching Tip: Back to School Night

 

Next Tuesday, I’ll have some tips for dealing with everyone’s favorite: The Pushy Parent. Don’t miss it! Subscribe to the TeacherWriter RSS feed or follow me on Twitter.

Classroom Instruction That Works

What are the most effective ways to teach students? Robert Marzano has dedicated his life’s work to researching and developing the best teaching practices. If you only buy one teaching book a year, this should be the one you purchase. You can read my review of it in this article, Classroom Instruction That Works.

 

Teach With Your Strengths is a book to check out from the library. It will help you find your own unique teaching style.

 

Finally, no teaching can take place until you have a positive classroom. Student need to feel safe before they can learn. Positive Classroom Discipline will give you teaching strategies that will make your students more responsive.

 

Coming next Tuesday: Get Ready for Back to School Night

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Teachers Organize Your Time by Using a Timer

Time is the most precious thing a teacher has. Unless you want to be one of those teachers who takes work home every night, works all weekend, and has no social life at all, you’ll need to start early to organize your time.

 

In your first year of teaching, that’s exceptionally hard to do, because you’re still learning what works for you. I tell all of my new teachers to use a timer, so you don’t end up spending too much time on one task and not getting other things done. As you mature in your teaching practice, you’ll find a timer will help you be more efficient, you’ll feel less overwhelmed, and you’ll be able to relax and enjoy your teaching.

 

Teaching Tip: Use a Timer

 

I also follow the Flylady’s organizing tips. She has designed a special system for teachers which will help you organize your time. She calls it FLYing, (Finally Loving Yourself).

 

Flylady’s Teacher Control Journal

 

 

Next month, each Tuesday I’ll have articles for you about Back to School night, dealing with pushy parents, and teaching for mastery. You can RSS feed TeacherWriter or follow me on Twitter if you don’t want to miss a single one!

Records Management for Teachers: How to Handle All the Papers

It’s never to early to plan how to handle the huge paper load that teacher have to deal with. Plan now, so you don’t get inundated with too much. More than almost anything else, stacks and stacks of papers will depress you and kill your teaching joy.

 

How will you handle grading, notes to and from parents, school records management, assessment papers and assessment records, lesson plans, and all the other assorted papers that will be coming your way?

 

Start by reading this article: Classroom Records Management for Teachers

 

There are many gradebook programs out there, but the one I recommend is Gradekeeper. It works on Macs, PC, and handhelds, it’s inexpensive, reliable, and I’ve used it for 8 years now.

 

Planbook is a lesson planner that I recently found. I tend to go back and forth between paper planners and electronic planners. The thing I like about Planbook is you can embed your teaching documents right into the plan. You’ll never need to hunt down a worksheet or transparency again.

 

 

Next Tuesday, the topic will be how to organize your time.

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Back to School Activity: Creating a Me Bag

What do you plan to do the first week of school? I’ve used this activity for a few years now, and the students love it. It works for all age groups. Students tell me it’s one of their favorite beginning of the year activities that we do.

 

Back to School Activity Idea

 

 

Next Tuesday, the TeacherWriter blog will help you learn how to handle all the papers a teacher must deal with.

 

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How to Organize a Classroom Library

Getting students to read is the goal of teachers everywhere. To minimize the time spent looking for books, and to help students find new genres they enjoy reading, organize your classroom library. It can be organized by genre, or by reading level, and even by themes or authors.

 

I once walked into a classroom where the books for independent reading were simply stacked in a pile in the back of the room. Students had to dig through the pile looking for books. The books were old and battered, and many were damaged. I felt so sorry for the students in that classroom. There’s no reason to have old, disorganized books in your library. Don’t let that happen to you.

 

The Suite101.com article, How to Organize a Classroom Library will show you how easy it is to create an inviting classroom library.

 

Next Tuesday, I’ll give you an exciting and fun back to school activity. Don’t miss it! Subscribe to my RSS feed or follow me on Twitter.