Obstacles and School
Programs:
Impact of Reading Problems
Gilbert R. Guerin, Ph.D.
San José State University
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Module 1, Session 2~
Handout
Teaching Guide for Reading Instruction in the Upper Grades
Focus on appropriate knowledge and skills.
[ ] Use simple, concrete vocabulary (many poor readers have language
difficulty).
[ ] Begin instruction at a point that guarantees success (recognize
the discouraging effect of years of failure).
[ ] With the lowest reading levelsfocus on acquisition and application
of word analysis skills followed by the development of fluency in the
recognition of words and their meaning
[ ] With intermediate reading levelsprovide direct instruction
of new words, concepts and ideas, including text reading.
[ ] With advanced reading levelsfocus on tasks that require a
wide range of reading and writing as tools of integrating information
and problem solving.
Use structured and planned instruction.
[ ] Students with a history of failure need to know where their instruction
is going and have confidence that their teacher knows where he/she is
going. A sensible and predictable program provides hope.
Use materials and strategies that are age-appropriate.
[ ] Avoid using materials that are obviously designed for youth at
a younger age.
[ ] With poor readers who are working on decoding skills introduce appropriate
words that are hard enough to be outside their reading vocabulary but
within their comprehension vocabulary.
Use sequential instructional steps and provide learning in stages.
[ ] Progress slowly but with great confidence of success (students
need assurance that you can help).
[ ] Be realistic in goals and expectations (progress should be consistent
but can be slow).
[ ] Work in short time periods10 to 20 minutes (reading is hard
work for poor readers).
[ ] Follow a predictable sequence, such as: a) instructional objectives,
b) direct instruction with modeling and demonstration, c) guided practice,
d) independent practice, and e) monitored results.
[ ] Learning takes time and practice. Forgetting is common and, even
with good intentions and persistence, some students back slide
and need encouragement.
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