Using Fluency Assessment to Guide Specialized Instruction for Students with Disabilities

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GIBSON HASBROUCK & ASSOCIATES Using Fluency Assessment to Guide Specialized Instruction for Students with Disabilities www.gha-pd.com My conclusions from reading research: Compelling evidence from a convergence of reading research is indicating that 90% to 95% of all students can achieve literacy levels at or approaching grade level through intensive, comprehensive, and high-quality prevention and early intervention instruction, provided by well-trained and well-supported teachers. These statistics include students with dyslexia and other learning disabilities. Torgesen, 2007; Vellutino & Fletcher, 2007; Rashotte, MacPhee, Torgeson, 2001; Al Otailba, Connor, Foorman, Schatschneider, Greulich, Sidler, 2009; Every Child Reading: An Action Plan and Every Child Reading: A Professional Development Guide. Available online from Learning First Alliance CCSS KEY REQUIREMENT: ALL students must be able to read increasingly complex literary and informational text independently and proficiently. www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 1

PREVENTION SYSTEMATIC & EXPLICIT instruction designed to assure at least adequate skill development for ALL children (prek-3) The GRAND CANYON between Gr 3 & Gr 4 INTERVENTION IMMEDIATE efforts to increase skill level of students by providing SUPPLEMENTAL, TARGETED instruction (prek-12) Studies show that 70-95% in the bottom 20%ile can be taught to read in the average range AXIOM FOR SCHOOLS in the real world Kroth & Edge, 2006 There is never enough There is never enough There is never enough ROLE? To efficiently collect appropriate data to enhance professional decision-making www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 2

BIG IDEA of ALL ASSESSMENTS All assessments are conducted to answer a QUESTION! KEY QUESTIONS 1. Which students MIGHT need assistance? 2. What KIND of assistance do they need? 3. Is the instruction WORKING? 3 BIG IDEAS about fluency assessments 1. Assessments of accuracy + rate (ORF) can help determine which students might need support 2. Assessments can diagnose a student s individual skill level in reading fluency 3. Assessments can help us determine if a student is making sufficient progress www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 3

Five Key Instructional Components Phonemic Awareness Phonics Fluency Vocabulary Comprehension Strategies National Reading Panel Report (2000) What is Reading Fluency? there are still a number of questions surrounding our understanding of what constitutes fluency Kuhn, Schwanenflugel, & Meisinger (2010) p. 230 What is Reading Fluency? Reasonably accurate reading at an appropriate rate with suitable prosody that leads to accurate and deep comprehension and motivation to read. Hasbrouck & Glaser (2012) www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 4

What is Reading Fluency? Reasonably ACCURATE? Aim for at least % accuracy (Rasinski, Reutzel, Chard, Thompson, 2011) Emerging readers: % What is Reading Fluency? Appropriate RATE? th %ile on oral reading fluency (ORF) norms on unpracticed, grade-level text What is Reading Fluency? Suitable PROSODY? Mirrors spoken language & conveys meaning BUT abnormal pitch, intonation, phrasing, pauses can be suitable www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 5

Robert borrowed my new bicycle. ROBERT borrowed my new bicycle. (Robert, not Raymond, borrowed my bike.) Robert BORROWED my new bicycle. (Robert did not steal my bike.) Robert borrowed MY new bicycle. (Robert didn't borrow your bike, he borrowed mine.) Robert borrowed my NEW bicycle. (Robert didn't borrow my old bike, he borrowed the new one.) Robert borrowed my new BICYCLE. (Robert didn't borrow my new book, he borrowed my bike.) Rasinski (2012) What is Reading Fluency? The ability to read accurately quickly with expression & phrasing COMPONENTS of fluency Expression & Phrasing? Prosody: pitch, tone, volume, emphasis, rhythm Prosody REFLECTS comprehension skill rather than CONTRIBUTING to it COMPONENTS of fluency www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 6

What is Reading Fluency? Word Decoding Skills Phoneme awareness Letter sounds Phonograms Comprehension Skills Metacognition Content knowledge Vocabulary Text Decoding Skills Orthographic knowledge Sight words Decoding connected text Multiple cue efficiency Passage context Social context MECHANICS of fluency Bridge to Comprehension Fluency forms the bridge between word identification & constructing meaning FLUENCY Identifying Words Constructing Meaning Vocabulary Comprehension Pikulski & Chard (2005) Doorway to Comprehension? Fluency a doorway between word identification & constructing meaning FLUENCY Identifying Words Constructing Meaning Vocabulary Comprehension Hasbrouck & Glaser (2012) www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 7

The Purpose of Fluency in Reading? ACCURACY: Comprehension is limited by inaccurate reading RATE: Comprehension is limited by inefficient, slow, laborious reading Lack of fluency = lack of motivation = fewer words read = smaller vocabulary = limited comprehension (self-perpetuating) What is Reading Fluency? A highly COMPLEX skill that is NECESSARY but not SUFFICIENT for students to read independently, proficiently, and with motivation. BIG IDEA #1 Fluency assessments of accuracy + rate (ORF) can help determine which students might need support www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 8

Assessments of ACCURACY and RATE (ORF) DIBELS Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills K-6 Reading Fluency Benchmark Assessor (RFBA) Read Naturally K-8 AIMSWeb Pearson K-8 EasyCBM Riverside K-8 Benchmark Screening 3x Year: Fall, Winter, Spring Benchmark Screener Significantly Below Benchmark Slightly Below Benchmark At or Above Benchmark May Need Extra Assistance Likely On Track Additional assessments or other information should also be considered Assessing Accuracy & Rate the number of words in text read correctly per minute (wcpm) or letters, sounds, words www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 9

Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM) 25+ years of research has shown that CBM-R measures that assess ACCURACY & RATE can: Accurately (reliable) & efficiently (validity) identify student s CURRENT READING PEFORMANCE compared to peers BENCHMARK / SCREENING WHICH STUDENTS MIGHT NEED ASSISTANCE? CBM-R ORF Scores Correlate with Reading Comprehension Fuchs, Fuchs, Hosp, & Jenkins, SSR, 2001 Measure Validity Coefficients Oral Recall / Retell Cloze Question Answering CBM-R ORF accuracy + rate measures indicate TOTAL reading skill Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM)- Reading STANDARDIZED PROCEDURES Production-based: Oral reading 1:1 for 60 seconds Unpracticed ( cold read) Do your best reading NEVER read as fast as you can! Standardized procedures for scoring errors Compute words correct per minute (wcpm) www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 10

Say these specific directions to the student: I would like you to read this story aloud for me. Please start here (point to the first word on the student s copy) and read aloud. This is not a race. Try each word. If you come to a word that you do not know, you may skip it and go to the next word. FROM: Hosp, Hosp, & Howell (2007). The ABCs of CBM, p. 145 Say these specific directions to the student: Please read this (point) out loud. If you get stuck I will tell you the word so you can keep reading. When I say Stop, I may ask you to tell me about what you read, so do your best reading. Start here (point to the first word of the passage). Start your stopwatch when the student says the first word of the passage. FROM: Good, R. H., & Kaminski, R. A., & Dill, S. (2007). DIBELS Oral Reading Fluency CBM-R ORF Scoring Mispronunciation/Substitutions (counted every time) Hesitations/No Attempt (3-5 seconds) Omissions Transposed words Note but DO NOT count as errors: Self-corrections Repetitions Dialect, speech impairments Punctuation errors Insertions www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 11

CBM Research Review April, 2007 Jrnl Special Education Wayman, Wallace, Wiley, Tichá, & Espin Concerns about Benchmark/Screening How can a very short measure of a single, isolated reading skill determine proficiency in the highly complex task of reading? Three Responses #1: ORF is NOT a measure of the skill of reading fluency!! Concerns about Benchmark/Screening How can a very short measure of a single, isolated reading skill determine proficiency in the highly complex task of reading? Three Responses #2: Accuracy + rate assessments function like a thermometer www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 12

QUICKLY provide information Valid (relevant, useful, & important) Accurate (reliable) Compared to benchmark FEVER FACTOIDS: 98.6 F or 37.0 C 1861 German physician Dr. Carl Reinhold August Wunderlich from a large sample of healthy individuals 1992 JAMA 98.2 F +/- 0.126 (98.1 F to 98.4 F normal ) QUICKLY provide information Valid (relevant, useful, & important) Accurate (reliable) Compared to benchmark BUT body temperature only one single indicator of general health or illness: Normal? 103 degrees? CBM-R measures of accuracy + rate provide one reasonably dependable indicator of a student s academic health or illness NEVER a diagnosis for a treatment plan! 25+ years of Curriculum-Based Measurement research! Reliable Valid Response # 3 Results useful for key decisions: Which students MIGHT need extra assistance? Benchmark/Screening Is learning happening? Progress Monitoring www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 13

OTHER SERIOUS CONCERNS Reading fluency has become a speed reading contest. Reading rate is considered a decent measure of reading fluency. Rasinski & Hamman Reading Today August/September 2010 HASBROUCK RESPONSE strongly agree that there is an inordinate amount of direct instruction emphasis given to increasing reading speed. I disagree with some of the reasons provided for this conclusion reading RATE (my emphasis) is considered a decent measure of reading fluency. This is a common misunderstanding. Reading Today October/November 2010 How FLUENT Should Students Be? # 1 NO COMPELLING EVIDENCE from research or theory or practice that suggest a benefit to reading significantly ABOVE the 50 th %ile # 2 SIGNIFICANT EVIDENCE that it is crucial to help students read with fluency at or near the 50 th %ile to support comprehension and motivation www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 14

BIG IDEA #2 Fluency assessments can diagnose a student s individual skill level in reading fluency (components AND mechanics) DIAGNOSTIC ASSESSMENTS Benchmark Screener Significantly Below Benchmark Slightly Below Benchmark At or Above Benchmark Consider diagnostic assessments Collect additional information as necessary Core + Intervention or Core Replacement Tier 3 Core + Supplementary Support Tier 2 Begin or Continue Core Instruction Tier 1 Diagnosing Reading Fluency Assess fluency COMPONENTS (accuracy, rate, prosody) at INSTRUCTIONAL level www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 15

Diagnosing Reading Fluency Assess fluency MECHANICS (word reading fluency; text fluency; comprehension) as appropriate DIAGNOSIS EXAMPLE: FALL 4th grader reading 4th grade passage 94% accuracy 5.5 / 7 comprehension instructional level ORF: 83 wcpm DIAGNOSIS EXAMPLE: WINTER 6th grader reading 4th grade passage 93% accuracy 6 / 8 comprehension instructional level ORF: 113 wcpm www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 16

BIG IDEA #3 Fluency assessments can help us determine if a student is making sufficient progress CBM-R for Progress Monitoring Scores compare students to individual goals rather than grade norms INTERPRETING Progress Monitoring Graphs General Rules: from National Center for Progress Monitoring Use 5 consecutive scores. If all ABOVE goal-line: Keep current intervention and increase goal If all BELOW goal-line: Keep current goal and modify the instruction If NEITHER ABOVE OR BELOW goal-line: Maintain current goal & instruction & continue monitoring www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 17

CBM Information Sources The ABCs of CBM Hosp, Hosp, & Howell (2007) CBM: From Skeptic to Advocate Hasbrouck & Ihnot (2007) National Center on Student Progress Monitoring www.studentprogress.org Fluent Reader.org www.fluentreader.org Reading Fluency: Understanding and Teaching this Complex Skill Deborah R. Glaser, Ed.D. FOUR MODULES Defining & Describing this Complex Skill Assessing Reading Fluency Planning and Teaching Fluency Teaching Fluency through Skill Integration Available online at www.gha-pd.com Educators as Physicians: Using RTI Data for Effective Decision-Making Four Modules Framework for Intervention Benchmark/Screening Diagnosis Progress Monitoring Summary booklets sold in sets of 4 Available online at www.gha-pd.com www.gha-pd.com www.jhasbrouck.com 18