I am a K-1 Title I reading teacher upstate NY.  The best source for "authentic" 
fluency practice ideas that I've found is in the book No More round Robin.  The 
activities that Rasinski suggests can be integrated smoothly into whatever text 
you are using with your students. They also help the children direct their own 
fluency work by using real reasons to do repeated readings of material.  I do 
find with the population that I work with, fluency work helps all areas of 
their reading development. 
 
Cathy
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, 9 Feb 2007 9:10 AM
Subject: Re: [MOSAIC] Fluency


I am working on my MA in Educational Literacy.  Fluency is important, as 
reading 
is a form of communication.  If the children can't read, they aren't able to 
"communicate" of be communicated to by the author.  Just as we make sure our 
students are using sentence fluency in writing, oral reading for fluency is 
just 
as important.  

The way that I incorporate fluency in my 4th grade class is by making a copy of 
the Passage Summaries (We also use Houghton Mifflin).  For the students that 
are 
below grade level, I use the ELL Handbook Summaries-as they are not as "wordy". 
 
For those that need a lot of work, I even send it home and have them practice 
with their parents.  I have seen so much improvement.  By using the summaries, 
the students are exposed to the story.

I hope that this helps!
Julie
----- Original Message -----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, February 8, 2007 6:17:09 PM (GMT-0800) US/Pacific
Subject: [MOSAIC] Fluency

I am sorry if this sounds negative but I am trying to get some  clarification 
on something.  My school is a low-performing school that is  required to 
teach exclusively from the Houghton Mifflin basal.  We MUST do  a fluency 
record 

on each child who is not reading at grade level every  week.  We are the lowest 
level third grade leveled reader passage for the  fluency record.  Most of my 
students being checked weekly are reading at  least a grade below.  
 
My first question is:  Should these checks be done after the student  has 
been exposed to the passages?  They are taken directly from the leveled  reader 
that we read each week, however, I test most of my students prior to us  
reading the leveled reader.  My theory was if they were fluent readers, it  
shouldn't matter if it is a "cold reading".  
 
I got a sticky note today telling me that I need to consult with the  
literacy coach on fluency strategies since my students fluency is  dropping.  
Seems 
perfectly natural to me since the texts we are reading are  becoming more and 
more difficult and the vocabulary mose sophiscated.  
 
What is the point of this weekly recording?  It isn't making them  better 
readers.  Is this just a cover your rear type of  documentation?
 
Help!!!!
 
Rosie
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