Session 5: Research-based Interventions to Promote Fluency and Oral Language

Research-based Interventions to Promote Fluency and Oral Language

  • Share fluency research-based interventions.
  • Share oral language research-based interventions.
  • Discuss methods and strategies to intensify fluency and oral language interventions.

 

Materials

 

Define Session Goals

  • Define oral reading fluency.
  • Identify effective methods to advance oral reading fluency.
  • Identify methods for differentiating oral reading fluency instruction that include increasing intensity of instruction.
  • Explain how to monitor oral language fluency progress.
  • Define oral language.
  • Explain how shared reading can be used to promote oral language skills.
  • Identify methods for building the oral language skills of English language learners (ELLs).
  • Identify methods to support learners with limited speech in shared reading interventions.
  • Identify tools to monitor oral language progress.

 

Cracking the Code: Research-Based Practices in Oral Reading Fluency

  • Define reading fluency (slides 4-5).
  • Identify strategies shown to support oral reading fluency.
    • Modeling fluent reading, repeated readings, repeated timed readings, goal setting with feedback.
    • Emphasize practicing and opportunities to practice reading aloud with feedback.
    • Explain that oral reading fluency instruction should be with text that the learner can read accurately (95% accuracy) to avoid frustration.
  • Example of Fluency Instruction
    • Click on the embedded video link on slide 6.
    • Show the Peer Assisted Learning in Action video on the PALS IRIS module.
      • Ask, is this explicit instruction?
      • Ask, what feedback is provided?
      • Ask, how does this strategy address fluency? (What strategies do you see?)
  • Another example of fluency instruction.
    • Define repeated reading on slide 7.
    • Click on the video link on slide 7.
    • Show the Institute of Education Sciences video 34: Repeated Reading.
      • Ask participants what they notice?
      • Ask participants if this is explicit instruction and why?
      • Ask how the teacher delivers feedback?
        • What do they notice about the feedback?
        • How did the child respond?
  • Explain how goal setting can be used to increase motivation while targeting fluency (slide 9).

 

Intensifying Fluency Interventions

  • Share handouts from the National Center on Intensive Intervention.
    • Example of planning to differentiate core instruction at tier 1, tier 3 and for students on alternate standards (slides 10).
    • Share the sample lesson plan (slide 11).
    • Ask people to discuss the questions on the slide and role play the sample script and procedures in groups of 3-4.
      • What is the target skill?
      • What makes this lesson explicit?
      • What example do you see related to transfer of the skill?
      • How could you make this more or less intensive based on learner need?
  • Share additional considerations for intensifying fluency interventions (slide 12).
    • Ask participants for their ideas.

 

Monitoring Fluency Progress

  • Review progress mentoring oral reading fluency measures (slide 13).
    • Refer back to competency 3.
    • Ask participants how they measure oral reading fluency.
    • Share that for ELLs oral reading fluency measures are only helpful when students are reading at the sentence level.
    • Review sample rubrics (slide 14 & 15). Explain that these also address prosody.

 

Research-Based Practices to Enhance Oral Language

  • Review oral language skills that influence reading (slide 17).
  • Discuss the use of shared reading to promote oral language skills (slide 18-26).
    • Emphasize the importance of making shared reading an interactive rather than passive activity.
    • Share DR as an example of an interactive shared reading strategy (slide 20-24).
    • Share an example video of DR.
      • Click on the embedded video link.
      • Click video link 6.8 Reading the Book Carrot Soup.
      • Ask participants to watch what the teacher is doing and think about connections to oral language.
      • After the video, ask the questions on the slide.
        • How is oral language addressed?
        • What is the teacher doing to promote oral language?
          • Share examples of building vocabulary knowledge, listening comprehension and understanding discourse.
    • Share the importance of creating opportunities to make inferences during shared reading (slide 26)

 

Considerations for ELLs

  • Discuss the use of interactive book reading to enhance English oral language development of ELLs (slide 27).
  • Share an example video lesson.
    • Click on the embedded link on slide 28.
    • Make links to the example lessons on vocabulary knowledge.
      • Also make links to syntax and discourse.
      • Ask, how do these skills influence reading development.

 

Intensifying Oral Language Interventions

 

Progress Monitoring

  • Share formal and informal measures of oral language progress.
    • Discuss how participants currently monitor oral language progress.

 

Review Culminating Project

  • Ask participants to get in groups of 3-4 and review their reflections from their first two lessons.
  • Ask them to generate ideas to support their final lessons based on student performance.
  • Report as a whole group.
  • Collect the first set of lessons and reflection 1.
  • Provide a reminder that the final set of lessons and reflection are due in session 6.