Identifying the barriers to reading at the early stages of primary school. How can we best cater for the different needs, reduce these barriers to raise student achievement?
Researching into why decode?
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This study is taken from Roxanne Hudson 2005
The graphs above show that Alphabetic work, word attack skills and manipulating letters is an integral part of improving reading levels, especially in years 1-3.
My openness to facing the challenge of reducing barriers in reading. As part of my community of learning Teaching inquiry goal I’ve been looking into what are the barriers in reading and identify what we can do to overcome these barriers. I work in an innovative learning environment, in a hub with 86 learners and 4 teachers. 12 of the learners have been below national standards in reading. This has allowed me to work intensely with learners who are below their chronological age group throughout the year. After looking at the huge range of challenges these learners are faced with, it’s given me a sense of urgency and motivation to build their learning capacity and cognitively engage these learners so they can make an accelerated shift in their achievement. We are a 1:1 Ipad hub, so students have the opportunity to become digitally literate and drive their learning. I’ve created rich tasks that specifically work on decoding, phonological awareness and comprehension depending o
Today I was inspired by Jannie van Hees who later thanked me for being ' …reflective, critiquing…inspired and willing to be discomforted'. I began to think.. Why do we group our learners according to their colour level? Is that what is going to give us bang for buck ? Maori learners data from end of 2017 shows... How am I ensuring a balance between the digital world and hands on experiences to create a love for reading? The struggling reader, how do I open a new world of reading for them? Are learning spelling words helping learners to read? Are these words transferring in their writing? Do I know my learner's knowledge about reading? wouldn't reading about learners breakthrough passions help to increase their vocabulary, knowledge and language? Link to this article So when I read this article I see some areas to work on: Organise reading challenges "We challenged students to read one book, fiction or non-fiction, from a wide ran
My child loves reading, but writing is so much harder for them. I can teach reading, but not writing. They are just not interested in writing If they don’t know a word should I tell them or do I let them guess? Kia ora, Great to be back here to share my 2022 Inquiry. whānau voice is asking us to partner alongside to help them support their child in writing, The data collected from earlier this year, EASTle, Overall Teacher Judgements, Gap Analysis in School Talk, Our school-wide data, and tracking attitude and confidence show there is a dip in progress and learners are not making the expected rate of shift or are below standard in writing. I saw this as an opportunity to strengthen relationships and educate whanau on how to help their child at home. I led a parent writing workshop to upskill them on how we use the LP and to engage their child in writing. We unpacked writing samples to notice what is happening to their child. At Whānau day learners shared their writing success and ne
Looks good Anita. I was wondering what you intend to do with this - or have done? Do you see similarities to Reading Recovery strategies and Quick60?
ReplyDeleteGreat sources of evidence gathered to show the shift!
ReplyDelete