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40 Ways to Support Struggling Readers in Content Classrooms, Grades 6-12

40 user-friendly, easy-to-implement strategies and three tables of contents (traditional, topical,
and problem-solving) formatted for quick
and easy reference

Supporting a School-Wide Reading Initiative with Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment

(2008)

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Leading the way in reading curriculum

  • Know the criteria for selecting a strong core reading program
  • Make sure that the reading program selected is strong enough to help most kids succeed
  • Know how your program reflects the "five big ideas" in reading
  • Help staff select supplemental and intervention programs that have been shown to work
  • Support staff in developing and using CSI maps (grade-level plans that specify which core, supplemental, and intervention programs will be taught and for how many minutes each day to students at each instructional level)
  • Learn the curriculum along with the teachers

Leading the way in reading assessment

  • Learn as much as you can about the formative assessment used by your school
  • Learn how to collect data in this system and help collect data periodically
  • Learn how to use & interpret these reports to guide instruction
  • Use these reports to guide the regular grade level reading planning meetings
  • Talk to teachers regularly about the data on their students' reading performance, including ideas for refining instruction

Leading the way in reading instruction

  • Conduct classroom walk throughs regularly to gauge the strengths and needs of teachers' reading instruction
  • Talk to teachers about the teaching and learning process, especially related to reading
  • Give lots of affirmation, praise, and encouragement about teachers' reading instruction
  • Provide further training, as needed, to strengthen teachers' reading instruction
  • Support grouping of students for reading lessons
  • Provide adequate time (through the schedule) for reading instruction and work to avoid interruptions of reading lessons
  • Support outcomes over processes; the process is only as good as the outcomes

Leading the way in motivation to read

  • Go to classes and read to students
  • Let students come to your office to read
  • Visit classes for reading groups; praise success
  • Read some of the books that kids are reading and talk to them about what they are reading
  • Motivate students to read through programs like Reading Counts and Battle of the Books
  • Facilitate reading related special events for kids
  • Be a progress monitor periodically
  • Teach a small group once in a while
  • Challenge kids to read to reach a goal
  • Take some of your reading to a class to read for silent reading time (let kids see you read)

Paine, S. (2004). Supporting a School-Wide Reading Initiative by Working with Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment Variables. Retrieved June 26, 2008, from http://reading.uoregon.edu/appendices/prin_tools.php.

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AdLit.org is funded by the Ann B. and Thomas L. Friedman Family Foundation and Carnegie Corporation of New York. The statements and views expressed are solely the responsibility of the author(s).

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