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Engaging the Reluctant Reader

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With colleagues at your table, discuss a time when you may have had difficulty ... One-Minute Mysteries or Brain Teasers. Internet articles or emails ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Engaging the Reluctant Reader


1
Engaging the Reluctant Reader
  • Reading Fluency
  • Module
  • by ReLeah A. Lent

2
Are You a Fluent Reader?
  • With colleagues at your table, discuss a time
    when you may have had difficulty reading
    something fluently, such as while reading a tax
    document or insurance policy.

3
Barriers to Fluent Reading
  • Decoding A reader should be able to decode text
    with an accuracy rate of 90-95 (from Rashinski,
    The Fluent Reader, p. 35).
  • Unfamiliarity with Text Structure
  • Word Recognition Technical or subject specific
    vocabulary
  • Lack of text chunking or phrasing, demonstrated
    by word-by-word reading
  • Lack of prosody intonation, expression
  • Difficulty with punctuation

4
What Does a Fluent Reader Sound Like?
  • Fluent readers. . .are able to read words
    accurately and effortlessly. They recognize
    words and phases instantly on sight. Very little
    cognitive energy is expended in decoding the
    words. This means, then, that the maximum amount
    of cognitive energy can be directed to the
    all-important task of making sense of the text.
  • Timothy Rasinski, The Fluent Reader, p. 26

5
Oral Reading Improves Fluency
  • Oral reading can, indeed, foster comprehension.
    For example, one study (Cohen, 1968) found that,
    by listening to their teacher read aloud to them
    over the course of a school year, students
    achieved better vocabulary and comprehension
    skills than students who had not been read to
    regularly by the teacher.
  • Timothy Rasinski, The Fluent Reader, p. 34.

6
Examples of Read-Aloud Text
  • Discuss Appendices
  • Poetry
  • Newspaper /Magazine Articles
  • Student Writing
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Columns, Op-Ed Pieces
  • Short Stories
  • One-Minute Mysteries or Brain Teasers
  • Internet articles or emails
  • Non-fiction related to content area study
  • Fiction related to content area study
  • Jokes

7
Who is the Better Reader?
  • Why was it easier for the second partner to read
    the passage?

8
Keys to Fluent Reading
  • Phrasing
  • Punctuation
  • Prosody
  • Practice

9
Simple Sentences
  • The poor people inner cities.
  • That is a man eating tiger.

10
The Pledge of Allegiance to the American Flag
  • I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United
    States of America and to the republic for which
    it stands one nation under God with liberty and
    justice for all.

11
Definition of Prosody
  • Prosody is intonation, rhythm, and vocal stress
    in speech.

12
What Happened to Lani Garver
  • We dont talk about the drowning around the
    island.
  • --By Carol Plum-Ucci

13
Repeated Readings
  • While the science of teaching tells us that
    repeated reading can be an effective
    instructional practice, the art of teaching
    challenges us to make repeated reading engaging
    for all students.
  • Rasinski, T. The Fluent Reader p. 102

14
Fluency in a Nutshell
  • Students lacking fluency read slowly, a word at a
    time, often pausing between words or phrases
    they make frequent mistakes, ignore punctuation
    marks, and read in a monotone. Fluent readers
    know the words automatically, and therefore move
    easily from word to word, spending their
    cognitive energy on constructing meaning.
  • --taken from Beers, K. When Kids Cant Read,
    What Teachers Can Do, pg. 205
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