1 / 17

Guided Reading: An Important Component in Balanced Literacy and the School Improvement Plan

Guided Reading: An Important Component in Balanced Literacy and the School Improvement Plan. Lisa Guzzardo Asaro Dr. Lisa Rivard June 16, 2011. Today’s Outcomes. Introduce and raise awareness of Guided Reading as a STRATEGY

dyani
Download Presentation

Guided Reading: An Important Component in Balanced Literacy and the School Improvement Plan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Guided Reading: An Important Component in Balanced Literacy and the School Improvement Plan Lisa Guzzardo Asaro Dr. Lisa Rivard June 16, 2011

  2. Today’s Outcomes • Introduce and raise awareness of Guided Reading as a STRATEGY • Introduce a DRAFT template for a TIERED continuous school improvement approach to guided reading

  3. Agenda • What is Guided Reading? • What does it look like in the School Improvement Plan? • Goals • Objectives • Strategies • Activities • Fiscal Resources

  4. Stage Two: STUDYStep 7: Research Best Practice STUDY Analyze Data Set Goals Set Measurable Objectives Research Best Practice FOCUS

  5. Guided Reading a Researched Best Practice • “Guided reading is a teaching approach designed to help individual students in small groups learn how to process a variety of increasingly challenging texts with understanding and fluency.” (Fountas and Pinnell. Guided Readers and Writers Grades 3-6, Heinemann, 2000)

  6. The Purpose of Guided Reading The purpose of guided reading is to meet the varying instructional needs of all the students in the class. The teacher meets with a small group of children guiding them through material at their instructional level, assessing and documenting their progress.

  7. Guided Reading… • occurs in a small-group context • teacher selects and introduces both fiction and non-fiction texts to readers • provides support as needed • engages the reader in discussion • makes teaching points after reading • extends the meaning of the text through writing, text analysis or other learning experiences • the lesson may also include work with words • has a natural fit with the RTI model

  8. Problem-Solving Model Targeted students participate in guided reading intervention that is in addition to Tier 1 using different resources and additional 30 minutes of time Guided Reading at least 3x per week is one Targeted students participate in learning that is in addition to Tier 1 component of a Comprehensive Literacy Block

  9. Guided Reading within the School Improvement Plan

  10. Data Elements Fiscal Resources Goals Objectives Strategies Activities • Resource Name • Funding Source • Planned/Actual Amount • Activity Name • Activity Description • Activity Type • Planned/Actual Staff • Planned/Actual Timeline • Strategy Name • Strategy Statement • Target Areas • Research • Objective Name • Measurable Objective Statement • Goal Source • Content Area • Goal Name • Student Goal Statement • Gap Statement • Cause for Gap • Measures/ • Sources of Data • Criteria for Success • Person Responsible

  11. Goals • All students will increase their proficiency in reading both fiction and non-fiction texts.

  12. Objectives • Increase Reading Proficiency • Measurable Objective Statement to Support Goal: The percentage of students proficient in reading on the MEAP will stay at 100% for 3rd grade and increase to 100% for 4th grade by the 2011-2012 school year. The percentage of students proficient in reading on the GATES test will increase to 90% for 3rd grade and increase to 88% for 4th grade by the 2011-2012 school year. The percentage of students proficient in reading on the DRA test will increase by 10% at each grade level by the 2011-2012 school year. (78% of 1st, 77% of 2nd, 58% of 3rd, and 83% of 4th graders)

  13. Strategies • Reading Fluency and Comprehension • Teachers/staff will utilize reading fluency and comprehension to teach reading strategies in order to increase the students' capacity for reading fluently and comprehending both narrative and informational texts. • Cite Research

  14. Activities • Define the Activity: Guided Reading • Tier 1- Core Instruction • Tier 2/3- Interventions • List Professional Development needed to successfully implement and monitor progress including time frame and persons responsible • List time frame for implementation including persons responsible

  15. Fiscal Resources • List Resources needed for implementation Ex. • Houghton Mifflin Leveled Readers Grades K-6 (Tier 1) • Early Success – Intervention Tool Kit Grades K-2 (Tier 2) • Soar to Success – Intervention Toolkit with Leveled Readers Grades 3-6 (Tier 2) • Daily 5 Resource Manual for Teachers by Gail Boushey and Joan Moser (Tier 1- Supplemental support resource for teacher dialogue in professional learning communities) • Funding Sources used • Ex. General Funds

  16. Resources for You http://misdrti.weebly.com/

  17. Contact Information • Lisa Guzzardo Asaro lasaro@misd.net • Dr. Lisa Rivard lrivard@misd.net

More Related