Welcome to the Reading Room! This is the place where you can get connected to Title 1 Reading Support. Through Title 1 Reading Support, children will work on a variety of reading and writing activities which will be aimed at helping students become an independent reader and writer. There will be a strong connection between the work students do in Title 1 sessions and the regular curriculum in the classroom. Title 1 services supplement the child's regular instruction.
A major component to the Title 1 Reading Support Service is a commitment from parents. A key to becoming an independent reader is reading at home. The resources listed here will provide information regarding emerging literacy skills and suggest at-home-activities to foster literacy growth.
Always remember: Reading is Fun!
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Successful Readers
Here is a sampling of students receiving their individual certificates and bands for successfully completing a level in Lexia Learning Core 5. The overall goal is to become a "Black Belt" in reading!!!
Putting All The Pieces Together = Fluency
Fluency
Fluency is defined as the ability to read with speed, accuracy, and proper expression. In order to understand what they read, children must be able to read fluently whether they are reading aloud or silently. When reading aloud, fluent readers read in phrases and add intonation appropriately. Their reading is smooth and has expression.
Children who do not read with fluency sound choppy and awkward. Those students may have difficulty with decoding skills or they may just need more practice with speed and smoothness in reading. Fluency is also important for motivation; children who find reading laborious tend not to want to read! As readers head into upper elementary grades, fluency becomes increasingly important. The volume of reading required in the upper elementary years escalates dramatically. Students whose reading is slow or labored will have trouble meeting the reading demands of their grade level.
How to put all the pieces together an increase fluency
With the help of parents and teachers, kids can learn strategies to cope with fluency issues that affect his or her reading. Below are some tips and specific things to do.
What kids can do to help themselves
- Track the words with your finger as a parent or teacher reads a passage aloud. Then you read it.
- Have a parent or teacher read aloud to you. Then, match your voice to theirs.
- Read your favorite books and poems over and over again. Practice getting smoother and reading with expression.
What parents can do to help at home
- Support and encourage your child. Realize that he or she is likely frustrated by reading.
- Check with your child's teachers to find out their assessment of your child's word decoding skills.
- If your child can decode words well, help him or her build speed and accuracy by:
- Reading aloud and having your child match his voice to yours
- Having your child practice reading the same list of words, phrase, or short passages several times
- Reminding your child to pause between sentences and phrases
- Read aloud to your child to provide an example of how fluent reading sounds.
- Give your child books with predictable vocabulary and clear rhythmic patterns so the child can "hear" the sound of fluent reading as he or she reads the book aloud.
- Use books on tapes; have the child follow along in the print copy.
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