Establishing Instructional Congruence Across Learning Settings: One Path to Success for Struggling Third-Grade Readers gave a new take on guided reading. It was similar to the chapter on higher-order thinking for all learners (which I posted earlier this week). This chapter focused on the lack of exposure to grade-level concepts, vocabulary, and syntax struggling readers have, which may prevent them from acquiring information that contributes to their development of language, comprehension, and writing. While most teachers use guided reading, this study provided children access to grade-appropriate language, ideas, and concepts, and at the same time, helped them to improve their ability to read unknown words and therefore, to advance toward independence in reading. By doing this, they had entire classes reading text on the same level. With a lot of cooperation and planning on the teachers’ and reading specialist’ part, they helped bring the majority of the struggling readers, including special education students, up to grade level by mid year and the others by the end of the year.
They used the same text with all students and formed a “pull-aside” intervention program. It was called a “pull-aside” program, not “pull-out”, because they were using the same text, but their instruction was “beefed up” with more systematic and intensive instruction in word-study strategies, increased opportunities for repeated readings to build fluency, and more explicit and systematic instruction in comprehension strategies. They drew from evidence that instructional strategies such as preteaching of vocabulary, discussion of background knowledge and repeated readings would allow children to read and reread text that might otherwise prove too difficult. So that the students would not feel a stigmatism from being “pulled- aside”, when they returned to the room they rejoined the classroom literacy community. Along with their peers, they recorded their responses to the focal selection in their reading journals, and then all children were given time to read self-selected books. This is what a typical session with the reading specialist looked like:
• Before reading: students reviewed and practiced retelling what they had read the previous day. Next, students were introduced to new vocabulary essential to the comprehension of the day’s focal selection. Sight words were introduced, practiced and added to the classroom word wall. Decodable words were introduced and practiced using appropriate word-making strategies and activities. Following word study, children browsed through the selection and previewed text and illustrations, shared predictions, and posed questions.
• During reading: the reading specialist read the text aloud while students followed along in their own copies of the book. As she read, she used think-alouds to model comprehension-monitoring strategies such as self-question, visualizing, and summarizing.
• After the read-aloud, the children shared their reactions, returned to and discussed their predictions, and attempted to answer any questions they themselves had posed. Following the discussion, students read the selection with a peer using a variety of oral reading strategies (echo reading, choral reading, Readers Theatre, and buddy reading). After peer reading, students reread a selected passage to the reading teacher, individually or in pairs. They ended the reading hour by self-selecting books to read independently or in pairs.
Almost everyday students reread at least one page of text to the reading specialist- these rereadings were used to determine whether or not instructional strategies were effective in helping the students to read difficult text on their own.
Sorry this was such a long post….but I really enjoyed this article, but am left somewhat confused. I thought guided reading was the best method for teaching reading? This proves the exact contrary. That being said, this model would take A LOT of cooperation, good teaching, and planning time for a grade level and reading specialist to implement this in order for it to be as huge of a success as it was for this group. What are your thoughts on using the same text for the whole class and just “beefing up” your instructional strategies for your struggling readers? Would you attempt this with a grade level if you were a reading specialist? I think it would definitely depend on the grade level. Part of the difficulty in implementing this, is that all teachers had to read the same text at the same time (because students were pulled from 4 different classes), and there was no room for “planning on the fly”. The results were amazing. This was an extremely informative article and I recommend that anyone who wants to improve their reading instruction read it.