Sailing Away with

Growing
Rational:
Materials:
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-
Copies of one chapter that will be read by each student (Chapter 1),
the copies are for the students to
record their
partners fluency
on and the copies will also have the
words numbered
so it is
easier for the students to record their
time and
words a minute
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Stopwatch
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Pencils
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Crayons
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Fluency bar graph chart
Procedure:
1. “Today students we are going to work on
reading fluently.” “What does fluency
mean to you?” “Fluency is not just how
fast you read, but it is reading smoothly and allowing the words that
are being
read to sound as if they are just being said, like you are talking to
somebody.” “I am going to read a page
from this book, Sea Foam; I want you to pay close attention to
how I am
reading.” I will proceed to read a page
or two from the Sea Foam, and I am going to drag out my words,
reading
them choppy and sounding out most words that I am trying to read. “Did you enjoy me reading this story?” “Could you tell me what the story was
about?” “Ok, now I am going to read the
same thing to you a second time” I will begin to read the same pages a
second
time this time reading regularly with fluency and expression. “Did you enjoy me reading that to you?” “Why, tell me what you enjoyed about my
reading.” “Did you understand what I
read?” “Well I want us to practice your
reading so that each and every one of you will read fluently and with
expression.”
2. I will write a sample sentence on the board
after introducing fluency to the students.
My sister went to the mall to
shop. “I want you to read this
sentence with me sounding out each letter in each word slowly.” “Did this sentence come together and make
sense to you?” “Ok, I am going to read
it to you super fast.” My sis
went to mall and shop. “Did I leave
out any words or mispronounce
anything?” “Now, I am going to read this
sentence to you using fluency.” “I want
you to read it with me the second time.”
The students join in with me and we read the sentence together
using
fluency and saying each word correctly.
3. I am going to explain to the students that
they will be paired up with a partner, and they are going to read a
chapter
from the Sea Foam, until they are reading it fluently. “Your partner is going to help you with
mistakes and they are going to keep count of the words that you read
correctly. You will then make note of
how many words you read correctly. You
are going to take a break while you listen to your partner read for 1
minute. I want you listening because you
need to make
marks of words that your partner skips through or has a hard time
reading. If someone is having a hard time
reading, and
you are not sure of the word I want you to try your best at decoding
the word,
but as I’m walking around you can point the word out to me and I can
try to
help you decode it. We will then go back
and reread the sentence to put it all together to make sure that you
understand. Ok, I am going to show you an example of what you are going
to be
doing with your partner. Ok, Meredith
and I are partners. I will listen to
Meredith read. I am going to mark all of
the words that she misses, and then either when the stopwatch goes off
or she
is at the end of the chapter, I will count up all of the words and make
note of
that. I will share the number of words
that Meredith has read per minute. She
is going to color in that number in her bar graph.
Then we will switch, Meredith is going to
listen to me read and do the same for me.
After I color in my number of words a minute, she will read
again. We are going to repeat this for
about 20
minutes. The idea here is for you to
read the same passage over and over that way you become familiar with
how
reading with fluency sounds and feels. After
reading this a few times you should start getting familiar with the
text and
with the story.”
4. The students are going to break into their
pairs. Each student will be given a copy
of the chapter that they will be reading, and will also be given the
book that
the copies were made from. The stopwatch
will help them keep track of their 1 minute reads, and will be better
for the
student to hear the alarm to go off instead of their partner
interrupting and
yelling at them STOP! Or TIMES UP! The
students will use the copies of the story to mark their partner’s words
that
have been missed and to record where their partner stopped reading at. By having the students color in the different
bar graphs for each time they have completed reading for 1 minute,
hopefully
the students will begin to see a curve going up because of them
becoming
familiar with the text and with the words that are being read.
Assessment: I am going
to walk around to
each group and listen to them read for 1 minute. The
bar graphs that the children will be
recording their words for 1 minute reads will help me determine if they
are
reading quickly. It will depend on what
benchmark is for certain grades to see if the student’s pace while
reading is
acceptable or if something needs to be worked on.
Reference:
The
Sea Foam by: Matt Sims,
High Noon
Books, 2002.
Nall,
Allison. Ready and Action! Reading Time!
Ready
and Action! Reading Time!
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