Culled from http://www.righttrackreading.com/readproblem.html
Incorrect Approach to Reading / Not Processing Print Phonetically: If
the student does not ‘sound out’ words and instead relies on visual
‘what the word looks like’ or ‘whole word’ recognition approaches they
are reading the ‘wrong way’. To read proficiently the student must read
by converting print to sound. **If you have any
indications the student is not processing print phonologically you must
intervene and help the student establish this essential foundation of
proficient reading**. Indicators a student is not processing print
phonetically include whole word type errors, word guessing, memorizing
text, inability to ‘read’ simple phonetic words, poor spelling skills
(inability to spell words that have not been memorized), lacking
knowledge of the phonemic code (print=sound relationships), not ‘sounding out’ words, and reading with much effort. These
students who are not converting print to sound are literally on the
‘wrong track’ and must be redirected. To intentionally develop
proficient phonologic processing of print in struggling readers, you
must intervene with an effective direct systematic phonics program. The
validated results based research clearly shows direct systematic phonics
programs are the most effective way to teach children to read. In
addition, neural research proves instruction with direct phonologic
based reading programs both improved reading and actually ‘re-wired’
neural activity from incorrect pathways to the ‘correct/good reader’
phonologic based pathways.
Gaps in Foundational Skills & Knowledge Necessary for Proficient Phonologic Processing: Remember,
correct phonologic processing of print requires the mastery,
integration and application of several critical subskills. See the
article Foundational Skills Necessary for Proficient Phonologic Processing of Print.
If the student is deficient in one or more of the essential subskills
they can struggle with proficient reading even if they have mastered
other skills. If there are any indicators the child lacks or is weak in
any of the foundational skills you need to target instruction to
directly help the child acquire these essential skills.
- Poor Phonemic Awareness: If the student isn’t aware of the sound structure of language and can’t recognize and manipulate sounds within words he needs direct phonemic awareness training. See Phonemic Awareness Explained for additional information
- Choppy Sounding Out / Unable to Blend Smoothly: If the student ‘chops’ or segments sounds apart as they sound out they need instruction so they learn how to smoothly blend sounds together. See Blending Explained for additional information and instructions on how to help students learn to blend.
- Improper Directional Tracking: If the student frequently processes letters out of order it indicates they have not developed necessary left to right tracking. Tracking errors are commonly associated with ‘whole word’ errors. Sometimes the student attempt to sound out but says sounds out of order. For more information, see the article Directional Tracking Explained.
- Gaps in direct Knowledge of the Complete Phonemic Code: The student needs to automatically know the correct sound(s) for the letter(s). Indicators a student is lacking necessary knowledge of the code include not knowing sounds in isolation, frequently missing complexities, problems in spelling (major gaps in print=sound relationship), indicators of indirect processing, inability to ‘sound out’ words. Slow processing can also be an indicator of lack of direct knowledge. If the student processes sounds indirectly (such as thinking of another word with the sound) or has to ‘think’ before they remember sounds, they need practice of the direct print=sound knowledge until it is automatic. The knowledge needs to be direct, automatic and complete. See The Building Blocks of Written English for further information.
- Not Paying Attention to Detail: The student needs to carefully process all the letters in words. Problems with attention to detail include missing sounds, adding sounds that are not present, missing endings and other details. Accuracy is critical. Help the student learn to process words carefully and pay attention to detail. Stopping students when they miss a word and having them re-read it helps teach careful attention to detail.
Difficulty with complex code:
Many students have a foundation of correct phonologic processing of the
basic sounds; however, they lack direct knowledge of the complexities.
Frequently the most difficult parts of our phonemic code are never
directly taught to students. While some students pick up the
complexities from imbedded instruction many do not and begin to
struggle. The vast majority of vocabulary contains advanced code. Indicators
of lack of knowledge of the complexities are when the student
accurately reads simple words and appears to have acquired fundamental
skills in phonemic awareness, tracking, and blending but struggles with
words containing vowel combinations, r-controlled vowel combinations,
and other complexities. If the student has foundational skills and is
only lacking knowledge of the complete code, you can focus on directly
teaching the advanced code. However, be sure the student has learned the
multiple sounds for the vowels and letters like s, and have mastered
the basic tracking and blending skills before systematically advancing
to all the vowel combination and r-controlled vowel combinations.
Gaps in Advanced Skills: Remember, proficient reading is more than phonologic processing. See Advanced Skills Necessary for Proficient Reading for
additional information. If the student has any weakness or has not yet
developed these higher level skills, use direct instruction to
intentionally help them build necessary advanced skills.
- Difficulty handling multisyllable words: If the student is only struggling with multisyllable words, then you can work directly on handling multisyllable words. Help the student learn how to break these ‘long’ words into syllables and practice common affixes.
- Poor comprehension: If the students decoding skills are strong (fast and accurate decoding with no indications of deficiencies in foundational skills) but they are struggling with comprehension you can begin with guided reading and specific actions to develop comprehension skills. See the articles Developing Reading Comprehension and The Importance of Guided Reading.
- Limited Vocabulary: If the student can decode words accurately but does not know what the word means, he needs to expand his vocabulary knowledge. For further information on helping your student expand their vocabulary see the article Expanding Vocabulary Knowledge
- Lack of Fluency: If the student processes words correctly but slowly, they may need to build fluency, or the apparent ‘automatic’ fast reading. This fluency is built word by word based on repeated correct phonologic processing. See the article Reading Fluency Explained for further information on fluency and how to help your student build fluency.
Evaluations
require interpretation. If you are in doubt about what skills the
student has mastered and what skills they need work on, it is best to
start at the beginning to ensure the student establishes a strong
foundation of phonologic processing and then systematically add advanced
skills. If you repeat a skill the student already knows, they simply
gain a little extra practice. Remember,
even the professional elite players practice fundamental drills.
Problems arise when the student fails to acquire a necessary
foundational skill. Older students, especially those with some of the
skills in place, advance very rapidly. Don’t cut out necessary
instruction just to save time. A few extra days is cheap insurance for
making sure fundamental skills are established and practiced. The strong
foundation of phonologic processing is essential to proficient reading.
See the article Elements of an Effective Reading Remediation Program for further detail on how to help your student acquire necessary skills and develop proficient reading.
A very important point to remember!
If
your student faces problems reading, you need to intervene with an
effective remediation program. In almost all cases, students do not
‘outgrow’ reading problems on their own. The facts clearly prove most
struggling readers continue to face reading problems. The brain imaging
research also shows incorrect processing forms in beginning readers and
persists UNLESS direct effective intervention occurs. The
neural research proves intensive intervention with effective direct
systematic phonics programs can improve reading skills and form correct
phonologic processing pathways. We can achieve reading success! For more information see the article How You Can Help a Student Who Struggles With Reading Overcome Difficulties and Achieve Success.
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