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RICA Test Prep

The document provides guidance on differentiating reading instruction for various student groups and skills. It recommends focusing on key skills, using reteaching and multisensory strategies for struggling readers. For English learners, it suggests building on their first language and modeling vocabulary. Advanced learners should experience increased complexity. A comprehensive balanced literacy program incorporates standards, assessments, and instruction in all foundational reading skills from phonological awareness to comprehension.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
171 views

RICA Test Prep

The document provides guidance on differentiating reading instruction for various student groups and skills. It recommends focusing on key skills, using reteaching and multisensory strategies for struggling readers. For English learners, it suggests building on their first language and modeling vocabulary. Advanced learners should experience increased complexity. A comprehensive balanced literacy program incorporates standards, assessments, and instruction in all foundational reading skills from phonological awareness to comprehension.

Uploaded by

anewnothing
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Differentiation

Struggling Readers
Focus on Key Skills: identify important skills and allocate time
Reteach: based on assessment, use different strategies/materials to reteach
Chunking: break lesson into small steps, students monitor progress
Concrete Examples: 3 dimensional resources, realia
Additional Practice
Multisensory – visual, kinesthetic, tactile
English Learners
Transfer from L1: cognates, prior knowledge
Differences: directionality, false cognates, sounds, grammar
Key Vocabulary: definitions, realia, pictures, charts, diagrams
Modeling
Advanced Learners
Increase pace and complexity: critical thinking/analysis
Extend Depth: more items, broader scope
Build on Skills: apply learned to novel situation, challenge problems, extensions
Planning, Organizing, Managing Reading Instruction
Based on standards
Balanced, Comprehensive Program: covers all GL Standards, strategically select skills
Skill – something a reader does automatically
Strategy – something a reader consciously does
Scaffold – temporary support to help student master complex task
Lesson Format – orientation, presentation, guided practice, independent practice
Independent Reading: self-selected, self paced
 I+I Strategy: Independent reading level, Interest survey
 SSR, reader’s workshop, at home reading
Assessment
1. Entry Level – before instruction, prerequisite skills and knowledge
a. Will students have difficulty? Who has mastery?
2. Progress Monitoring – during instruction, progress, In/formal
a. Analyze on the individual and classroom level
3. Summative – measure achievement of standards
a. Skill transfer? New task
4. Modifications: More time, small chunks, change format, provide practice, simplify
Standardized Assessments
Reliability: consistent scores across administrations
Validity: does it measure what it claims to measure
Score Types: percentile, grade equivalent, stanine (9 point)
Independent, Instructional, Frustration Levels
Assessments: informal reading inventory, word recognition list, graded reading passage
Independent: 95% fluency, 90% questions
Instructional: 90% fluency, 60% questions
Frustration: <90% fluency, <60% questions
Phonological + Phonemic Awareness
Phonological Awareness: identify, manipulate sounds, words, syllables
Phonemic Awareness: distinguish + manipulate phonemes in spoken words
Alphabetic Principle: speech sounds represented by letters
Grapheme: letter or letters that represent phonemes
Onset/Rime – parts of a syllable
Phonogram: rimes that have the same spelling (at—cat, bat, sat)
Phonological Awareness Instruction: word awareness, syllable awareness, word blending, syllable blending,
onset/rime blending
Phonemic Awareness Instruction: sound isolation (beg, mid, end sound), sound identity (what is same in lake,
light, low?), sound blending, sound substitution, sound deletion, sound segmentation
Phonics: which letters represent which sounds
Print Concepts, Letter Recognition, Alphabetic Principle
Letter recognition, letter naming, letter formation, alphabetic principle,
Print Concepts: print carries meaning; letters, words, and sentences; directionality; book handling
Assessing Print Concepts – point to front, back, identify start, point to beg. of word
Phonics and Sight Words
Word Identification: read aloud/decode word correctly
Word Recognition: connect pronunciation to meaning
Word Identification strategies: phonics, sight words, morphology, context clues

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Sight words – high frequency, sound-symbol not covered til later
Digraph – two letters, one sound (ph in phone, sh in share)
Blend – two/three letters said rapidly but have own sounds (bl in blend)
Dipthong – vowel combinations (oi in oil, oy in boy)
Syllabification Rules
1. Single syllable prefix (un-kind, pre-test)
2. Don’t divide consonant digraph (bush-el, teach-er)
3. Divide between consonants if not a digraph (sis-ter, but-ter)
4. Consonant after a short vowel (cab-in, lev-el)
5. Consonant after a long vowel (be-long, fe-ver)
Sequence
Consonants (continuous, stop), Consonant digraphs, Consonant Blends, Vowels, Vowel digraphs, Diphtongs, R-
Controlled, L-Controlled
Phonics Instruction
Whole to Part:start with sentences, look at words, focus on sound-symbol relationship
Part to Whole: start with sound, blend sounds to build words
Spelling Development
Precommunicative
Semiphonetic – use letters to represent sound
Phonetic – at least one letter represents each sound in a word
Transitional – knows most spelling patterns
Conventional – spells almost all words correctly
Spelling Instruction
Selecting spelling words (common patterns, hi-frequency, common-need, content area)
Self Study – look at word, say letters, spell word, write, repeat
Multisensory – visual, color, auditory, kinesthetic, tactile, mental imagery, group
Reading Fluency
Accuracy, Rate, Prosody
Problems: word analysis, content vocab, background knowledge, sentence structure
Fluency Instruction
Oral reading w/ teacher, teacher model, repeated readings, paired silent reading
Vocabulary
Vocabulary effects fluency, comprehension,
Choosing vocab: frequency, utility, level of knowledge, nontechnical academic vocab
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Vocab Instruction
Morphemes, affixes
Use target words in sentences and paragraphs
Repeated exposure
Direct Instruction
Contextual Redefinition: read word, give definition, see word in context, arrive at definition
Semantic Map: link word to related terms
Semantic Features Analysis: identify shared traits of target words
Independent Word-Learning
Morphemic Analysis: affixes, roots
Contextual Analysis: definition, synonym, antonym, example (explicit context clues uncommon in text)
Dictionary: age appropriate, slow, trouble understanding definition, multiple meanings
Word Consciousness
Synonyms and antonyms, homophones + homographs, idioms + puns, etymology
Activities
Speaking/listening, discussion, reading/writing, sentence structure/grammar
Differentiation
Struggling Readers: focus on key vocab, reteach, concrete examples/multisensory, total physical response
ELs: cognates, concrete examples, morphology
Advanced: increase pace, more items, connect to other topics
Assessment
Use words in a sentence
Choose synonym/definition from a list (word appears in context)
Analogies
Morphemic Analysis: identify nonsense words, define common prefixes
Comprehension
Factors: automaticity, vocabulary, academic language, background knowledge, sentence structure
Narrative comprehension vs. expository comprehension
Activities: read alouds, text-based discussion, questioning the author, KWL, prereading, picture walk, graphic
features, purpose for reading, QAR (right there, think and search, author and you, on my own), connections
Strategic Reading: visualizing, paraphrasing, clarifying, predicting, asking questions, summarizing
Text Structures: cause effect, problem/solution, compare/contrast, sequence, description
Using text features: TOC, index, glossary, guide words, graphic features
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Comprehension Instruction
Small group, matched reading level, instructional level text, strategies, selective rereading
Differentiation
Struggling Readers: fundamental skills, background knowledge, audio text, story maps, graphic organizers
ELs: transfer strategies (predict, summarize, etc.), cultural context, preteach vocab,
Advanced: more advanced texts
Assessment of Comprehension
Determine reading levels, Literal, Inferential, and Evaluative, Question Answer Relationships (QAR), retelling,
think alouds,
Test Taking Strategy
Multiple Choice – 90 minutes
Short Essay – 30 minutes (15 minutes each) (75-125 words)
Long Essay – 50 minutes (25 minutes each) (150-300 words)
Identify needs, describe strategy to address the need, explain efficacy of strategy, use subtitles
Case Study – 60 Minutes (300-600 words)
Identify 3 strengths + needs (cite evidence for each)
Describe two instructional strategies – what will T + S do?
Explain how strategy will help – connect strategy to need, explain underlying rationale
Criteria for Analysis:
 Independent Reading
 Phonological Awareness
 Print Concepts + Letter Recognition
 Phonics and Sight Words
 Syllabic + Morphemic Analysis
 Orthography
 Fluency
 Vocabulay + Academic Language
 Comprehension (narrative + expository)

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