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Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

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Page 1: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel

Moderated by Pennye ThurmondDirector of Administrator EvaluationsTennessee Department of Education

Page 2: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Welcome to our Panelists

• Tony Dalton, Ed.D. Instructional Coach, Hamblen County Schools • Caresa Brooks Coordinator, Reading and Instructional Interventions, Murfreesboro City Schools • Jennifer Jordan, Ed.S. School Psychologist, Lauderdale County Schools

Page 3: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Today our panelists will be discussing the following three questions:

• What are the key elements principals and teachers need to hear to improve core reading instruction?

• How do you identify gaps in skill and understanding for your students?

• How can intervention be structured to provide meaningful, targeted instruction for all students?

Page 4: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

What are the key elements principals and teachers need to hear to improve core reading instruction?

Tony Dalton Instructional Coach,

Hamblen County Schools

Page 5: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Improving Our School’s Core Reading Instruction

Tony Dalton

PreK-1st District Instructional Coach

Hamblen County

Page 6: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Scientifically Based Reading and Intervention Programs

Reading Components (Phonics, Phonemic Awareness, Vocabulary, Fluency, Comprehension, and Writing) each day

Scope and Sequence for consistency and to ensure all skills/standards are addressed

Differentiated Instruction/Materials to meet the need of all students

Grade level and High Expectations for allTechnology-based reinforcementRTI2 with Fidelity

Page 7: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Effective Scheduling

• Efficient, but flexible use of staff, resources, and time

• Prioritize responsibilities, skills, and strengths across staff

• Common Planning for teachers• 90-120 minutes of Reading/Language Arts

each day• Emphasis on small-group differentiated

instruction. Tier I implemented correctly!

Page 8: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

• On-going/follow-up training for all staff members on current, research-based, best practices and intervention

• Regular monthly staff meetings/training

• Empower teachers to lead PD

Professional Development

Page 9: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Parental Involvement

• Ongoing Communication• Flexible and Accommodating time for

parent meetings/training• Encourage assistance at home and offer

support• Involve them by keeping them informed

Page 10: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Data Analysis

• Valid and reliable assessments/screener

• Ongoing data management,

disaggregation, and utilization

• Grade-level meetings/PLC to analyze data and make instructional decisions

Page 11: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Strong Leadership – Strong Vision

• Recognize and identify staff needs

• Establish reading instruction as a priority

• Constant support and encouragement

Page 12: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

How do you identify gaps in skill and understanding for your students?

Caresa Brooks Coordinator, Reading and Instructional

Interventions, Murfreesboro City Schools

Page 13: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

The Reading Rope

Language Comprehension

● Background Knowledge● Vocabulary Knowledge● Language Structures● Verbal Reasoning● Literacy Knowledge

Word Recognition

● Phonological Awareness● Decoding (and Spelling)● Sight Recognition

Reading is a multifaceted skill, gradually acquired over years of instruction and practice

SKILLED READING: fluent execution and coordination of word recognition and text comprehension.

Increasingly strategic

Increasingly automatic

Page 14: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Areas of DeficitReading

• Basic Reading– Phonological Awareness– Decoding skills (and spelling)– Sight word recognition

• Reading Fluency– Retrieval speed– Reading quickly, correctly, and with expression

• Reading Comprehension– Background Knowledge– Vocabulary Knowledge– Language Structures– Verbal Reasoning– Literacy Knowledge

Page 15: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Identifying Skill Deficits

• Benchmark Testing– Red Flag that something is wrong– Much like a thermometer; a fever indicates something is

wrong….but what???? Have to go deeper• Skills Assessment

– Identify deficit then assess that skill for instruction

Page 16: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Example

• 3rd grade student flags in reading CBM (fluency measure) at the 8th percentile– Questions to ask:

• Is the fluency deficit due to a Basic Reading Deficit?– If you don’t ask this question, you could provide intervention for a

fluency deficit and never address the underlying deficit

• How far below the standard is the student?• What skills must be remediated to help the student reach the

standard?– INTERVENTION

Page 17: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Example (cont’d)

• 3rd grade student– RTI team feels the student has deficit Basic Reading

Skills– Administer a test of phonological processing and basic

decoding and sight word recognition• This student is found to have deficits in phonemic

segmentation, confusing short and long vowel patterns (reading and spelling), and poor retrieval speed

Page 18: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Example (cont’d)

Standard for third grade• Know and apply grade-

level phonics and word analysis skills in decoding words. – Prefixes and suffixes– Multisyllable words– Read irregularly spelled

words

SKILL DEFICIT (to reach this standard)• Phonemic Segmentation• Read and spell short vowel

sounds• Read common sight words

in first and second grade

Page 19: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Intervention

• Intervention should be focused to remediate these skill deficits!!

• This is how students will access the standard

Page 20: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Caresa BrooksMurfreesboro City Schools

[email protected]

Page 21: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

How can intervention be structured to provide meaningful, targeted

instruction for all students?

Jennifer Jordan, Ed.S. School Psychologist,

Lauderdale County Schools

Page 22: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

How can intervention be structured to provide meaningful, targeted instruction for all students.

Jennifer JordanLauderdale County Schools

Page 23: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

• [Intervention] is first and foremost, instruction focused on individual needs. It is carefully planned. It is intensive, urgent, relentless and goal directed. It is empirically supported practice, drawn from research.” (Zigmond, 1997, p.385).

Zigmond, N. (1997). Educating students with disabilities: The future of special education. In J.W. Lloyd, E.J. Kameenui, & D. Chard (Eds.). (1997). Issues in educating with disabilities. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Page 24: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Instruction and Intervention Matter!

• There is a convergence of research studies that show all but 2-5 percent of children can master basic reading skills in the early grades. (Mathes et al, 2005).

• In addition, interventions that are intensive, explicit, and long-term will close grade level gaps for older students (Torgensen, Alexander, et al 2001).

Mates, P. G., Denton, C. A., Fletcher, J. M., Anthony, J. L., Francis, D. J., & Schatschneider, C. (2005). The effects of theoretically different instruction and student characteristics on skills of struggling readers. Reading Research Quarterly, 40, 148-182. Torgesen, J. K., Alexander, A. W., Wagner, R. K., Rashotte, C. A., Voeller, K. S., & Conway T. (2001). Intensive remedial instruction for children with severe reading disabilities: Immediate and long-term outcomes from two instructional approaches. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 34, 33-58.

Page 25: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Why Students Struggle ….• Studies find that there are three broad reasons

students have difficulty reading: – problems with the alphabetic principal that lead to deficits

in fluent and accurate reading skills– failure to acquire verbal knowledge and reading strategies

that are necessary for comprehension– motivational issues due to continued reading struggles

(Perfetti, 2011; Torgesen, 2006)

Perfetti, C. A. (2011). Phonology is critical in reading: But a phonological deficit is not the only source of low reading skill. In S. A. Brady, D. Braze, & C. A. Fowler (Eds.), Explaining individual differences in reading: Theory and evidence (pp. 153-171). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group. Torgesen, J. K., (2006). Recent discoveries from research on remedial intervention for children with dyslexia. In M. Snowling and C. Hulme (Eds.). The Science of Reading: A Handbook. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.

Page 26: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

Phonics

Phonological and Phonemic Awareness

Language Comprehension

DECODINGWord Recognition

LANGUAGE COMPREHENSION

READING COMPREHENSION

FLUENCY

Text Comprehension

Simple View of Reading

Torgesen, 2006

Page 27: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

K – 5 Reading Tier 2 Intervention

Program Specialized, scientifically-based reading intervention program and/or research-based strategies.

Setting General Education Classroom

Interventionist General Education Teacher

Grouping Homogeneous small-group instruction (1:6 or less)

Time Minimum of 30 minutes per day

Assessment Progress monitoring twice a month on targeted skill at students’ instructional levels to ensure adequate progress and learning.

Page 28: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

K-5 ReadingTier 3

Program Sustained, intensive scientifically-based reading program emphasizing the five critical elements of beginning reading.

Setting Appropriate setting determine by school (usually pullout setting)

Interventionist Personnel determined by school to provide intensive interventions

Grouping Homogeneous small-group instruction (1:5 or less)

Time Minimum of 30 minutes per day (above Tier 1 and Tier 2)Assessment Progress monitoring weekly on targeted skill at students’

instructional levels to ensure adequate progress and learning.

Page 29: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education

High School Literacy Intervention Plan• Reading Lab

– All 9th grade students who reading between the 2nd and 8th grade are assigned to the Reading Lab.

• Students are served in the Reading Lab for 85 minutes daily for 18 weeks.• The instruction is provided by one certified teacher and one

paraprofessional (approximately a 1:15 ratio)• A research-based reading program (Cambium Learning Voyager) is used

in the Reading Lab.• Progress Monitoring is conduced three times during the intervention

period.

– 10th grade students are in a Literacy Circle 30 minutes per day during interdisciplinary studies to encourage out of school reading.

Page 30: Reading Instruction, Curriculum and Coaching Panel Moderated by Pennye Thurmond Director of Administrator Evaluations Tennessee Department of Education