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SUMMER READING CLINIC

SUMMER READING CLINIC. CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY. Reading Clinic. The Summer Reading Clinic offers remediation and enrichment for children in grades K-8. Instruction is tailored for each student’s needs and interests to foster skill development as well as an interest in reading/writing.

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SUMMER READING CLINIC

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  1. SUMMER READING CLINIC CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY

  2. Reading Clinic • The Summer Reading Clinic offers remediation and enrichment for children in grades K-8. • Instruction is tailored for each student’s needs and interests to foster skill development as well as an interest in reading/writing.

  3. Program Philosophy The philosophy framework for the reading clinic is balanced literacy. All areas of literacy are important to becoming a lifelong participant in literacy. The program focuses on enjoyment, skills, literacy workshop approaches, and student ownership.

  4. Program Features • Supervised practice to maintain and improve children’s reading/writing skills • Assessment of reading/writing strengths and needs • Individual and small group instructional sessions designed to match student needs and strengths

  5. More… • Focus on improving student self-confidence and motivation to engage in reading and writing • A final report on student strengths, needs, and recommendations for further growth; and • An individual parent/student/teacher conference to share results and successful teaching strategies

  6. Student-Led Conference

  7. Target Areas of Instruction • All areas of the language arts are part of the program • Reading and writing are the main focus • Enjoyment of literacy activities is another area of importance • Writing target areas are the elements of the writing process: prewriting, drafting, revising, editing, and publishing

  8. Typical Reading Difficulties • Comprehension – difficulty retelling or retaining information, difficulty understanding what is being read • Vocabulary – difficulty understanding the meaning of words, especially in non-fiction

  9. Typical Reading Difficulties • Fluency – reading is halting without accuracy, speed, or prosody • Phonics – difficulty with letter/sound correspondences, sight words, blending sounds/letters, etc. • Phonemic Awareness – difficulty manipulating the individual sounds of language orally (rhyming, deleting sounds, segmenting, etc.)

  10. Typical Reading Difficulties • Study Strategies – not having repair or fix-up strategies for comprehension and/or decoding; how to retain information • Difficulty reading non-fiction materials more than fiction; understanding text structures in narrative or expository

  11. Typical Writing Difficulties • Content – finding a topic, producing clear and focused writing, including relevant details and appropriate examples • Organization – having good leads, connections between ideas, logical order, and/or a satisfying ending • Style and Voice – limited vocabulary, needs precise word choices, author’s voice is missing • Conventions – spelling, usage, capitalization, punctuation issues

  12. Clinic Staff • Director • Associate Director • Literacy Coaches • Clinicians • Tutors • Volunteers

  13. Director – CMU Professor • Makes arrangements with PEAK to hold the reading clinic during the summer • Meets with the principal of the designated school to arrange which facilities will be used in the building • Arranges the schedule for the clinic and how staff will be utilized. • Handles plans for advertising for clinicians and students

  14. Director • Makes contacts with parents • Orders materials • Manages the day to day operation of the clinic • Usually teaches EDU 533 Diagnosis and Treatment of Reading Difficulties for clinic tutors

  15. Associate Director • Is usually a CMU Professor • Assists the Director in planning for the clinic • Assists in assigning children to classrooms, clinicians, and tutors • Usually teaches EDU 632 Practicum in Diagnosis and Treatment of Literacy Difficulties for the clinicians

  16. Literacy Coaches • Are certified teachers enrolled in EDU 632 who have had a previous reading clinic experience • Are responsible for one or more classrooms or teacher clinicians and tutors • Check lesson plans, model best practice instruction, and assist in report writing • Assist university students in understanding how to use assessments and check them for accuracy

  17. Clinicians • Are certified teachers enrolled in EDU 632 who have ideally had classroom teaching experience • Have one or more children assigned to them • Are responsible for two or more tutors who work with children • Assist tutors in lesson planning, assessing children’s strengths and needs and writing reports • Model best practices in literacy instruction

  18. Tutors • Are CMU students enrolled in EDU 533, their last class which is a practicum for the Reading Minor • Have one to two children assigned to them for assessing, teaching, and report writing

  19. America Reads Volunteers • Set up the materials center with assessments and instructional materials to be checked out by staff • Manage the check out of all materials • Handle library time for classes • Take attendance and report to the director • Work with children on assigned tasks such as listening to children read

  20. Reading Clinic Set-Up • First week of the course is preparation for when the children attend the remaining weeks. • The two courses (EDU 533 and EDU 632) are taught together part of the time and separately part of each day depending on the topic.

  21. Reading Clinic Set-Up • Classrooms are determined by how many children from each grade and ability are enrolled. • Using the teacher referral/evaluations forms, the Director and Associate Director divide the children into classrooms by level and assign one – two children to each university student.

  22. Reading Clinic Set-Up • Typically there are no more than twelve children in a classroom with three tutors, one or two clinicians, and a literacy coach in charge of two classrooms. • Each classroom team sets up their classroom using a broad theme based upon the materials available to them.

  23. Assessing Students • During the first week that the children attend, the instructional team sets up a temporary schedule designed to rotate group activities while individual testing is conducted. • A variety of assessments are administered that week: Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Slosson Oral Reading Test, Michigan Literacy Progress Profile assessments, and other assessments as needed such as Brigance, DIBELS, TORC.

  24. Instructional Materials • Leveled Books/Big Books/Chapter Books • Books on Tape • Word Study Materials such as tiles for Making Words • Teaching Supplies

  25. A Variety of Materials that teachers make and bring too!

  26. Instructional Sequence • Children have library for twenty minutes twice a week and may check out two books. • Each room has two hours and a half to work with children individually, in small groups, and in a large group.

  27. Children are Active Participants

  28. Instructional Practices • These practices are included everyday: read alouds, writing, word study, guided reading, independent reading, literacy centers. • Depending upon the grade level and student abilities, other instructional practices include: modeled writing, shared writing, interactive writing and independent writing.

  29. Additional Instructional Practices • Reader’s theater • Literature circles • Repeated readings • Shared reading • Phonic skill activities related to materials read • Connections to self, text, and world • Narrative and expository profundity • Phonemic awareness exercises • Metacognitive strategies • Graphic organizers • Cross age tutoring once or twice a week.

  30. Reading Camp • Last day of Reading Clinic • Each class has a special literacy activity for twenty minutes. • The children rotate through the classrooms and enjoy their time together.

  31. Clinicians and Students Graduate

  32. Reading Clinic 2014 The CMU Reading Clinic is partnering with the Mt. Pleasant PEAK Program. • Location: Vowles Elementary School • Dates: Monday – Thursday each week July 7 – July 31 • Time: 9:00 – 11:30 a.m. Please note that students do not have to participate in the PEAK Program in order to register for the Summer Reading Clinic.

  33. Reading Clinic 2014 • Reading Clinic Fee: • $250 per child • $100 Scholarship rate, based on free/reduced lunch income guidelines • The Reading Clinic starts at 9:00 am and ends at 11:30 am from Monday, July 7th through Thursday, July 31. 

  34. Reading Clinic 2014 For Registration: • Contact Mt. Pleasant Parks and Recreation at (989) 779-5331. • Application is available at the Parks and Recreation Office in City Hall, or online at www.mt-pleasant.org/summercamps • Registration Deadline: June 27, 2014

  35. Reading Clinic 2014 A Partnership with Mt. Pleasant PEAK 2014 Summer Camps The clinic will meet on the days listed below at Vowles Elementary School.The Reading Clinic starts at 9:00 am and ends at 11:30 am.  “We hoped to maintain and build our son's reading skills. The program was very helpful on this. We hope to sign up again next summer.” "We absolutely loved our teachers! They made my child comfortable and confident! Thank you!" From Parents

  36. Contact Information • Dr. Xiaoping Li, Director 989-774-2581 li2X@cmich.edu • Dr. Kristina Rouech , Associate Director 989-774-1106 rouec1k@cmich.edu • PEAK: Mt. Pleasant Parks and Recreation 989-779-5331 http://www.mt-pleasant.org/departments/division_of_community_services/parks_and_recreation/peak/

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