Interested in learning to read


by Brenda Geier

Copyright (c) 2007 Brenda Geier

Parents and Teachers assist your children in becoming fluent readers using short text with rhythm such as poems. Using these materials as a starting point always assist children/students in becoming fluent readers. Parents and teachers: Assist your children/students in becoming fluent readers by:

1. Providing them with models of fluent reading. Find someone who will read to the children if you are not a fluent reader. Allowing the voice to fall and rise (vary pitch) with enthusiasm at appropriate times throughout the reading exercise would be the perfect way to model read. For example, if a question is being read, the reader should allow his/her voice to rise at the end. For example, "Is this sufficient?" should be read as if the reader is actually asking the question to someone in person. The voice will rise at the last word because it is after all a question.

2. Ask children/students to repeatedly read passages as you offer guidance. They should practice reading passages until they can read them as the model did, assuming the model is an adequate reader. Do not allow someone to model reading unless that person is an efficient reader. A child's interest in learning to read can be hindered by an inadequare reader.

3. Model fluent reading. Ask the children to reread the text once the text has been modeled. By doing this, the students are engaging in repeated reading. Rereading will adequatly improve fluency if text is usually read four times. Text with rhythm and/or poems is a good choice for this activity. It is the actual time that students are actively engaged in reading that produces reading gains. Use text that is interesting to the child and contains 100-200 words.

By listening to adequate models of fluent reading, students learn how a reader's voice can make written text make sense. I cannot stress enough the importance of reading aloud daily to children/students. By reading effortlessly and with expression, you are modeling and teaching how a fluent reader sounds during reading.

Ask the children to reread the text once the text has been modeled. By doing this, the students are engaging in repeated reading. Rereading will adequatly improve fluency if text is usually read four times. It is the actual time that students are actively engaged in reading that produces reading gains.

Encourage parents or other family members to read aloud to their children at home. As children/students hear several models of fluent readers, they are exposed to many ways a reader can sound. Soon they will see that some sound more interesting than others or that some make the text come alive more than others. A reader that comes alive and keeps children attention is generally what the child would like to sound like when they spend time reading.

In addition, students improve their fluency by combining reading instruction with opportunities to read books that are at their independent level of reading ability. Parents and Teachers assistance will be mimimal if books that are provided for a child to read are at the child's independent level. (see the three levels of text readability below)

Readability Levels

Independent level text - This type of text is easy to read with approximately 1 out of 20 words difficult for the reader (95% success)

Instructional level text - This type of text is challenging to read but manageable with approximately 1 out of 10 words difficult for the reader (90% success)

Frustration level text - This type of text is too hard to read with more than 1 out of 10 words difficult for the reader (less than 90% success)

About the Author

Your child's development is important and here at child font, each lesson builds on skills from the previous lesson; home schooling has never looked brighter: http://www.childfont.com

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