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Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013

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Page 1: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

Read to Achieve

Webinar 3

February 26, 2013

Page 2: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

Agenda

•Attendance Report•Program Evaluation Report•Non-fiction

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Program Evaluation Report

• 88.7% of the teachers providing RTA interventions are full time.

• 47.8% of classroom teachers use differentiated instruction a significant amount of time.

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Remediated Instruction

Differentiated texts

Modified assignments

Peer tutors Additional readings

Small groups0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Classroom Activities for

RTA students

Page 5: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

1 Day 2-3 Days 1 Week 2-3 Weeks

1 Month More than 1 Month

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Time elapsed between RTA referral and meeting to discuss needs of student

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0

20

40

60

80

100

120

RTA

Team Meetings

Page 7: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

The RTA grant is a legal binding document. Every school that applied

for the grant must adhere to the requested research based program.

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On the average, fewer than 10% of elementary English language arts texts

are nonfiction (Duke, 2004).

Page 10: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

In your school,how much time do

kindergarten students spendengaged in nonfiction?

What about first graders?

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The Common Core State Standards, academic benchmarks that have been

adopted by 46 states, call for 12th grade reading to be 70 percent nonfiction, or

"informational texts" -- gradually stepping up from the 50 percent

nonfiction reading required of elementary school students.

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Red: Divide the text into three sections: introduction, main body, and review.

Gray: Box the illustrations.Black: Box labels that help a reader understand the illustration.Green: Circle each heading and box its corresponding section. Blue: Circle each sub heading and box its corresponding sub-

section.Purple: Box all questions in the main body of the text.Yellow: Highlight vocabulary words in main body of the text.Brown: Box graphs and charts.

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Write one word or phrase on a sticky note that summarizes the message of the passage.

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To find an effect, ask yourselfWhat happened?

To find a cause, ask yourselfWhy did this happen?

becausebecause

so so

the effect ofthe effect of

consequently

Page 16: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

ReadWorks.orgA leading non-profit organization that provides a FREE research based, and

Common Core-aligned reading comprehension curriculum for grades

K-6.

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Amelia’s Road by Linda Jacobs Altman

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CONTRAST FACT AND FICTION

Waiting for Wings by Lois EhlertCaterpillar Diary by David DrewThe Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle

Page 22: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

EVALUATE REALISM

The Biggest Bear by Lynd WardBlueberries for Sal by Robert McCloskeyGoldilocks and the Three Bears

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DEVELOP PERSPECTIVE

The Pain and the Great One by Judy BlumeAlexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No-Good Very Bad Day by Judith Viorst

Page 24: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

According to NEAP’s 2011 National Report Card

only 25%of U.S. 12th graders write at a proficient level and only

3% write at an advanced level.

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Page 26: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

KRS 158.305Evidence of implementation shall be

submitted by the district to the department for:

Reading/Writing Interventions August 1, 2013

Math Interventions August 1, 2014

Behavior Interventions August 1, 2015

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Two necessary conditions for students to improve the

quality of their writing are explicit instruction in

writing techniques and sustained writing practice.

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Essentials for a writing workshop• Gathering space for mini lessons• Clipboards for research• Clustered desks for partner work• Writing resource area• Classroom library• Word walls• Shared topic lists

Page 33: Read to Achieve Webinar 3 February 26, 2013. Agenda Attendance Report Program Evaluation Report Non-fiction

DO NOT EXPECT PERFECTIONEXPECT GROWTH

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Attendance Code

[email protected]

0094

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ResourcesAnderson, E., & Guthrie, J. T. (1999, April). Motivating children to gain conceptual knowledge from text: The combination of science observation and interesting texts. Paper presented to the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Montreal, Canada. Caswell, L. J., & Duke, N. K. (1998). Non-narratives as a catalyst for literacy development. Language Arts, 75 , 108-117. Dreher, M. J. (2000). Fostering reading for learning. In L. Baker, M. J. Dreher, & J. Guthrie (Eds.), Engaging young readers: Promoting achievement and motivation (pp. 94-118). New York: Guilford. Duke, N. K., Bennett-Armistead, V. S., & Roberts, E. M. (2002). Incorporating information text in the primary grades. In C. Roller (Ed.), Comprehensive reading instruction across grade levels (pp. 40-54). Newark, DE: International Reading Association. Duke, N. K., & Kays, J. (1998). Can I say Once upon a time: Kindergarten children developing knowledge of information book language. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 13, 295-318. Duke, N. K., Bennett-Armistead, V. S., & Roberts, E. M. (2003). Bridging the gap between learning to read and reading to learn. In D. M. Barone & L. M. Morrow (Eds.),Guthrie, J. T., Van Meter, P., McCann, A. D., Wigfield, A., Bennett, L., Poundstone, et al. (1996). Growth in literacy engagement: Changes in motivations and strategies during concept-oriented reading instruction. Reading Research Quarterly, 31, 306-332. Jobe, R. & Dayton-Sakari,M. (2002). Info-kids: How to use nonfiction to turn reluctant readers into enthusiastic learners. Markham, Ontario, Canada: Pembroke. Joint reading between Head Start children and their mothers. Child Development, 61 , 443-453. Kamil, M. L. & Lane D. M. (1998). Researching the relation between technology and literacy: An agenda for the 21st century. In D. R. Reinking, L. D. Labbo, M. McKenna, & R. Kieffer (Eds.), Literacy for the 21st century: Technological transformations in a post-typographical world (pp. 235-251). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum. Literacy and young children: Research-based practices (pp. 226-242). New York: Guilford Press. (Note: This is an only slightly different version of the chapter listed immediately above.) Mason, J. M., Peterman, C. L., Powell, B. M., & Kerr, B. M. (1989). Reading and writing attempts by kindergarteners after book reading by teachers, In J. M. Mason (Ed.) Rationale for Teaching Nonfiction Writing Grades K-2 Explorations in Nonfiction Writing by Tony Stead and Linda Hoyt an imprint of Heinemann 2011Reading and writing connections (pp. 105-120). Boston: Allyn & Bacon. Pelligrini, A. D., Perlmutter, J. C., Galda, L., Brody, G. H. (1990). Report of The National Commission on Writing in America’s Schools and Colleges The Neglected “R” The Need for a Writing Revolution. April 2003Smith, M. C. (2000). The real-world reading practices of adults. Journal of Literacy Research, 32 , 25-32.Venezky, R. L. (1982) The origins of the present-day chasm between adult literacy needs and school literacy instruction. Visible Language, 16, 112-127. Williams J., et. al. “Embedding Reading Comprehension Training in Content-AreaInstruction.” Journal of Educational Psychology, 101.1 (2009), pp. 1-20.http://bit.ly/ruTbrW (subscription only)Wilson, P. T., Anderson, R. C. (1986). What they don't know will hurt them: The role of prior knowledge in comprehension. In J. Oransano (Ed.), Reading comprehension from research to practice (pp. 31-48), Hillside, NJ: Erlbaum.