Developing Fluent Readers (2024)

The research literature provides some clear directions on what to do with struggling readers: Interventions must combine the modeling, repeated reading, and feedback that research has demonstrated effective (Shaywitz, 2003). Several commercial programs have been developed, including Read Naturally (Ihnot, 1991), the Six Minute Solution (Adams and Brown, 2003), Quick Reads (Heibert, 2002), and the Great Leaps Reading program (Campbell, 1996). Each of these programs includes at least some of the instructional components that have been shown to improve students’ reading fluency and has its own approach to student engagement.

Unfortunately, research that directly compares the effectiveness of these various programs has yet to be done. In my own review of the available research, I’ve concluded that the strategy developed by Read Naturally makes the best use of the research base on fluency and has the strongest evidence of effectiveness as a fluency intervention. And, in using the Read Naturally strategy with students in many different grade levels, I’ve found that it engages them in the repeated reading they so desperately need.

However, I encourage readers to keep in mind that over the next several years, research may provide evidence of effectiveness on these other programs that equals or surpasses that of the Read Naturally strategy.

The Read Naturally (RN) strategy was developed by Candyce Ihnot, a Title I reading teacher from Minneapolis. Candyce developed and tested it in 1989 as part of her master’s thesis in special education. After finding that her approach was effective with struggling students in her school, Candyce and her husband, Tom Ihnot, developed a set of instructional materials that are commercially available from their company, Read Naturally, Inc.

To implement the RN strategy, students’ fluency levels (WCPM) are assessed to place students at an appropriate instructional level. The teacher then helps each student set a reasonable, achievable fluency goal (approximately 80-90 WCPM for primary students or older students reading at a primary level; from 90-120 WCPM for upper elementary students).

Instruction begins with an unpracticed, “cold reading” of a student-selected passage from the targeted level. Passages may range in length from approximately 100 words at the mid-first-grade level to 350 words at the sixth-grade level. As they read, students use a timer and keep track of the words they skip or stumble over (by lightly underlining the problem word). They then calculate their WCPM and graph this first, unpracticed WCPM score on a bar graph.

In step two, students practice reading this same passage three to four times along with a model to learn how to accurately pronounce all the words in the text. This step is not timed, and the students read the entire passage. The modeled reading can come from a recording or a person trained to read the passage at a rate that is comfortable for the student.

The key here is that a student does not just listen to the model, but actually reads aloud (softly) with the narrator’s voice, giving full attention to the text. Encouraging students to point to the text being read and informing them that they will be responsible for answering a set of comprehension questions after completing all the steps in the strategy helps students stay focused.

Once students feel comfortable with the text, they begin step three in which they read the text independently, again aloud, but softly. Students set a timer for one minute and read the text several times until they are comfortably reaching their predetermined goal level-and are ready to be checked by the teacher. Having some kind of silent signal for the teacher such as a flag or colored card at the students’ desk can help manage this step. Students keep practicing the passage until the teacher can meet with them because this maximizes their engaged practice time-a key to improved skills in low-performing students (Brophy, 1988).

In the final step, the student reads for the teacher, who then calculates the WCPM score. The student “passes” if four criteria are met:

  1. the WCPM score meets or exceeds the predetermined goal;
  2. three or fewer errors are made;
  3. the student reads the passage with correct phrasing and attention to punctuation; and,
  4. the student can correctly answer a few comprehension questions.

When students do not pass, they continue practicing this same text. When they do pass, they graph their new score onto the same bar with their initial, unpracticed score, using a different colored pencil or marker. This graph gives tangible evidence to the students that they are improving-and keeps motivation high by showing them that their own effort makes the difference. For an external check on progress, the teacher should also periodically assess students’ performance on an unpracticed passage by following the progress monitoring procedure described in the article “Screening, Diagnosing, and Progress Monitoring: The Details.”

Students repeat these steps until they complete 10-12 passages of equivalent difficulty. At that point the student and teacher collaboratively examine the data on the student’s graph to decide what step to take next. If the student is making steady progress in the current level, but is not yet approaching his goal level on the first, unpracticed reading, he should stay in that same level for another 10-12 passages.

If the student’s first unpracticed readings are occasionally meeting or approaching the goal, the teacher and student may decide to move the student up to the next level of difficulty with the same goal, or stay in the current level of difficulty and raise the “pass” goal a bit higher. Of course, if at any time the student is having difficulty reading at the goal level after the practice readings, the decision can be made to move the student down to an easier level or make a downward adjustment in the WCPM goal.

In addition to requiring the students to answer a set of comprehension questions at the end of each passage, some teachers have added other comprehension activities to this process, such as having the students write a five-minute re-tell response after each passage.

Using the RN strategy for 20-30 minutes per day, for three or more days per week, can have a significant impact on improving students’ reading fluency. In two studies reported on by Hasbrouck, Ihnot, and Rogers (1999), second- and third-grade Title I students, as well as sixth-grade special education students, showed significant improvement in their fluency. The second- and third-graders received, on average, 32 weeks of RN instruction. From fall to spring, the second-graders’ average WCPM increased from 17.9 to 71.6, meaning that they moved from well below the 25th percentile to well above it (see norms table in “Screening, Diagnosing, and Progress Monitoring: The Details”); they showed an average gain of 1.68 WCPM per week, much greater than the 1.2 WCPM per week gain that second-graders typically make.

Third-grade students had similar results. From fall to spring, their average WCPM increased from 42 to 93, meaning that they moved from just below the 25th percentile to well above it; they gained 1.60 WCPM per week, as compared to the typical growth of 1.1 WCPM per week. The study of sixth-grade special education students also found significant improvements. These students were reading at levels ranging from grade 1.5 to 4.0. They received RN instruction in a special education class for 20 to 32 weeks and improved their fluency by an average of 1.4 WCPM per week, which is double the 0.7 words per week that sixth-graders typically gain.

Developing Fluent Readers (2024)

FAQs

How do you develop fluent readers? ›

Here are some ways kids can improve their fluency:
  1. Listen to models of fluent reading, like read-alouds. Audiobooks can also be great models of reading fluency.
  2. Practice sight words so kids can automatically recognize words.
  3. Have kids read a short text at their reading level several times. ...
  4. Read a sentence together.

What are four 4 considerations to identify a fluent reader? ›

Fact: Fluency includes rate, accuracy, prosody, and comprehension. Reading Fluency is defined as "accurate reading at a minimal rate with appropriate prosodic features and deep understanding" (Hudson, Mercer, & Lane, 2000).

How reading fluency can be developed? ›

The direct approach: Repeated readings

In repeated reading, children work on reading as they would work at making music: They continue working with each text until it is fluent. Repeated reading works best with readers who have reached at least a primer instructional level.

What are the three keys to building reading fluency? ›

Young readers learn how to self-direct when they read in pairs, read the same text repeatedly, and use fluency trackers.

What are the three main components of fluent reading? ›

Text or passage reading fluency is generally defined as having three components: accuracy, rate, and prosody (or expression). Children have poor text reading fluency if they read many words of a passage incorrectly, if they read text slowly and with obvious effort, or if they read in a stilted or robotic way.

What activity works best for increasing fluency? ›

Activities for students to increase fluency
  • Student-adult reading. In student-adult reading, the student reads one-on-one with an adult. ...
  • Choral reading. In choral, or unison, reading, students read along as a group with you (or another fluent adult reader). ...
  • Tape-assisted reading. ...
  • Partner reading. ...
  • Readers' theatre.

What is the 4 3 2 fluency technique? ›

This technique invites students to give the same talk three different times; each time, the length of time (first 4 minutes, second, 3 minutes third 2 minutes) decreases to make students accelerate the way they speak, in other words, students repeat the same speech three different times with different durations.

What is the best intervention for struggling readers? ›

The most commonly used strategy to improve reading fluency is the reading and rereading of familiar texts. Opportunities to read aloud, with guidance from teachers, peers or parents, are also associated with the development of fluent reading.

How to teach reading to struggling readers? ›

For example, educators can encourage students to:
  1. Make connections between the readers' experiences and the text.
  2. Predict what will happen next.
  3. Visualize the scenes, characters, and setting to remember what is being read.
  4. Monitor one's understanding while reading.
  5. Ask questions based on the text.

What are the activities for struggling readers? ›

The recommended seven hands-on learning strategies that can promote learning and support for struggling readers during literacy instruction include Build the Words, Feel the Words, Whole Body Letters, Five Finger Retell, Sight Word BINGO, Elkonin Boxes, and Word Swat. Young children learn in a variety of sensory ways.

How to teach a child to read fluently? ›

If your child can decode words well, help him or her build speed and accuracy by:
  1. Reading aloud and having your child match his voice to yours.
  2. Having your child practice reading the same list of words, phrase, or short passages several times.
  3. Reminding your child to pause between sentences and phrases.

What are the six areas to develop to read fluently? ›

Research has shown that there are six key components that contribute to successful beginning reading. Because of the importance of these components, they have become known as the 'Big Six': oral language, phonological awareness, phonics, vocabulary, fluency and comprehension.

What are the three pillars of fluency? ›

The Three Components of Fluency: Accuracy, Speed, and Expression
  • Accuracy. An integral component of fluency is the ability to identify letters, letter patterns, and isolated words accurately and quickly. ...
  • Speed. While speed isn't everything, it is still important. ...
  • Expression. ...
  • Automaticity. ...
  • Fluency.
Mar 21, 2023

What makes you a fluent reader? ›

To be fluent readers, students must recognize words quickly enough to have a good rate (the speed at which we read). But they must also understand how to read with proper phrasing (naturally chunking words together) and intonation (the emphasis and tone given to certain words).

What makes a student a fluent reader? ›

When fluent readers read silently, they recognize words automatically. They group words quickly to help them gain meaning from what they read. Fluent readers read aloud effortlessly and with expression. Their reading sounds natural, as if they are speaking.

What is needed for students to become fluent proficient readers? ›

Fundamental Skills Necessary for Proficient Phonologic Processing:
  • Phonemic Awareness.
  • Knowledge of Complete Phonetic Code.
  • Directional Tracking.
  • Blending.
  • Attention to Detail.
  • Skill in handling multisyllable words.
  • Fluency.

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