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This article was originally published on eSchool News.


See how a district is implementing a personalized approach to reading backed by extensive, ongoing PD

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Demographics:

Rockford Public Schools is one of the largest school districts in Illinois, with more than 28,800 students and 44 schools.

Biggest challenge:

There were many gaps in foundational reading across classrooms before we piloted our new reading program. It didn’t seem that we had a common methodology to teach foundational literacy. We were looking for a resource to fill this gap. We also were lacking in the area of personalized learning that supported foundational literacy skills. We were having trouble supporting students who needed extra help while providing enrichment for students who were already thriving.

Solution:

Every single student needs whole-group instruction that’s explicit, modeled, and demonstrated by teachers. Our literacy program supports best practice by encouraging teachers to implement the “I do, we do, you do,” approach to learning. After whole-group instruction, our teachers designate time for small-group learning. The expectation district-wide is for K–5 small-group lessons to happen every day. Teachers meet students where they are in their learning, using data to drive instruction. In Rockford, small-group instruction includes skill-based groups, guided reading, or literature circles.

With the combination of small groups and the time we give students to read and write independently, they are able to work towards mastery of foundational skills. Students also have additional time to flesh out skills using tech tools that support instruction. We’ve implemented Reading Horizons Discovery, a phonics-based literacy curriculum that tailors lessons to each student’s ability level. We use a blended approach to learning to support explicit instruction, small-group instruction, and the use of technology.

One thing Reading Horizons Discovery provides is the expectation for students to write, spell, and decode nonsense words. Unlike sight words that students might memorize, nonsense words provide the opportunity to demonstrate that they have mastered literacy skills.

Our district builds teacher capacity by supporting implementation. Before the beginning of each school year, our new teachers attend a two-day professional development training for the program. For ongoing support, we have monthly web training provided by implementation coaches, and also offer teachers two in-person coaching sessions a year.

Lessons learned:

  • Know your students, and believe they are capable of great things. Being reflective as educators and responsive to students is important for instructional strategies to be successful. One example of that success: We had a kindergarten classroom that saw 167-percent growth in reading scores from fall 2018 to this winter. The same classroom had some students score around 20 points higher than their projected growth scores.
  • Rather than just saying, “Oh, today you’re going to go read a book,” it’s important to be strategic and explicit with students. We’re aiming to overcome the idea that learning can be intimidating for students. In order to make a positive impact, educators have to scaffold instruction by not only modeling instruction, but modeling a positive attitude when learning.
  • The more comfortable our educators are with a new program of instruction, the more explicit and systematic it will look in the classroom, which will promote even more growth.
  • In order to improve comprehension, our literacy expectations include reading and writing as well as writing about reading.

Next steps:

We are expanding the use of a phonics-based approach to literacy. Our district will soon have four elementary buildings pilot the Reading Horizons Elevate program as an intervention with 4th- and 5th-grade students. If the pilot goes well, the goal is to use the program as an intervention tool starting next school year. This will allow educators to pinpoint which students need help with foundational skills, and provide lessons to help them master skills.

Starting next year, our district will implement benchmark goals for each grade level K-3. The idea is to set end-of-the-year goals for students while still collectively teaching to mastery. To ensure our students are working towards the goals, our educators are teaching all four parts of instruction (review, instruction, dictation, and transfer) every day, supporting small-group instruction, and analyzing data on a regular basis.

To support implementation and student growth, next year our district will have a certified implementation coach in each building. This requires a three-day intensive training, plus at least 30 hours of implementation in the classroom. We believe this will help teachers and students master the skills they need to grow in learning.


Mellissa Douglas is the dean of elementary literacy for Rockford (IL) Public Schools.

Originally published on The Learning Counsel

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When I was a math teacher, I was blown away by the in-depth discussions I was having with my students. I couldn’t have been more pleased with their progress on the material I was handing them. That’s also why I was also blown away by the fact that, when it was time for them to take their state exams, their math scores would come back abysmal. I was stuck. Why weren’t their math scores portraying their understanding of the concepts?

I was discussing my situation with a veteran colleague when she said, “If they comprehend when you teach them verbally, it’s not a comprehension problem.” I could have cried. It’s not a comprehension problem, it’s a reading problem. My students didn’t have the literacy skills to understand exam questions. Now that I had identified the problem, I needed to find the solution. I found that using data would show the district how important it is for students to have reading comprehension skills to succeed across all subjects.

It wasn’t long before I took an administrator role as a facilitator, and I eventually became Director of Teaching and Learning for my district. Using scores from a state assessment, we found that 87% of K–12 students needed reading intervention; we had an inverted RTI pyramid. I created a task force of colleagues to brainstorm and implement a plan to flip this pyramid. We started by incorporating Reading Horizons, a phonics-based approach to language instruction that allows students of all ages and abilities to decode what they are reading to dramatically increase comprehension. The program helped us monitor which students needed to be pulled for intervention and to ensure that our curriculum was consistent and effective.

We decided to be open with our students and share our data. In every school in the Watson-Chapel school district, you’ll see one of my data walls. Each wall shows the school’s goals for the previous, current, and following years. This way, I didn’t have to be present to emphasize the importance of reading comprehension. The data told that story for me. We established goals by keeping the end in mind. We looked at where we were at by the end of the previous year, and what we wanted to accomplish in the next year. Teachers used our data to drive their lessons. If our data was showing that students didn’t quite have the appropriate level of reading comprehension, they would dive deeper into Reading Horizons until their scores improved. Once their reading comprehension skills were up to par, teachers started seeing test scores rise across all subjects. Students had a deeper understanding of their test questions, and they started improving in all of their classes.

In just two years, the district climbed 15 points on the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills, from 35th to the 50th percentile. There was suddenly a statewide push to improve literacy skills. My task force started analyzing the effectiveness of the 27-plus state assessment exams required for our students. For those scores to accurately convey their understanding of concepts, they will need to have the appropriate reading comprehension skills. We picked out the exams that would be the best bang for the buck, and established plans for each.


Karen Fuller is the Director of Teaching and Learning at Watson-Chapel School District in Arkansas.

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Addition expands partnership with MetaMetrics® to provide deeper support for student mastery

North Salt Lake, UT- Feb. 23, 2016 Reading Horizons and MetaMetrics® are thrilled to announce the expansion of their partnership with the addition of Lexile® measures in the Reading Horizons Discovery® program. Reading Horizons and MetaMetrics, developer of the widely adopted Lexile® Framework for Reading, first announced their partnership in May 2015 when Lexile measures launched in the Reading Horizons Elevate reading program.

Reading Horizons Discovery is a strategy-based reading solution designed for students in Kindergarten through third grade that incorporates multi-sensory, Orton-Gillingham principles of instruction and a unique marking system that delivers superior results. The effective, easy-to-use software utilizes the most current technology and instructional best practices to deliver assessments and skill-based lessons for each grade level, K-3. Initial assessments ensure that teachers have an accurate measure of each student’s ability and the software adapts to meet the needs and skill levels of those students and provides differentiation as they progress through the program.

The software includes formative assessments as well as vocabulary, games, and activities. Reading Horizons Discovery fulfills 92% of the standards for foundational reading skills for students in K-3, as well as other standards outlined by the Common Core State Standards, and is correlated to the findings of the National Reading Panel.

“We consistently strive to provide the most robust literacy solutions possible for our customers, including the ability to adjust instruction in order to meet readers where they are,” commented Reading Horizons President and CEO Tyson Smith. “Adding the Lexile® Framework for Reading in Reading Horizons Discovery immediately provides educators with yet another layer to truly assess where their students are at and how to best support their learning moving forward.”

The assessment’s initial Lexile measure serves as a benchmark for gauging both a student’s reading ability and the complexity of text so that appropriate reading materials can be matched to the student as they progress. Reading Horizons Discovery automatically unlocks reading passages in the software library as additional skills are mastered. Each book in the library has been measured by MetaMetrics and has an official Lexile level.

“I applaud Reading Horizons for extending their use of Lexile measures to K-3,” stated Malbert Smith III, Ph.D., president and co-founder of MetaMetrics. “More than that, Reading Horizons is measuring their readers at the start of their academic career. This allows for early detection of struggling readers, and then immediate intervention to strengthen the reader’s ability before they fall too far behind their peers. The power of Lexile measures also allows educators to seamlessly track their students reading growth throughout their K-12 progression.”

About Reading Horizons

Founded in 1984, Reading Horizons provides teacher training, direct instruction materials, and interactive software that empower teachers to effectively teach beginning readers, intervene with struggling readers, and provide instruction and support to English Language Learners. To learn more about Reading Horizons, please visit them online at www.readinghorizons.com or follow them on twitter @ReadingHorizons.

About MetaMetrics

MetaMetrics is focused on improving education for learners of all ages and ability levels. The organization develops scientific measures of academic, achievement, and complementary technologies that link assessment results with real-world instruction. To learn more about MetaMetrics, please visit them online at www.metametricsinc.com.

North Salt Lake, UT, February 4, 2015

To better prepare pre-service teachers to teach reading, Reading Horizons has been working with college and university professors to make its online training tool available to students for free. With Texas Southern University being the most recently added partner, 50 colleges and universities now use the Reading Horizons Online Reading Workshop to train pre-service teachers. By providing this service, they help educators begin their careers with the knowledge and strategies needed to teach emerging and struggling readers.

List of colleges using Reading Workshop.

The Workshop simplifies the challenge of teaching reading by providing a framework of strategies that show students how to read. With this framework, which includes the Five Phonetic Skills, Two Decoding Skills, and the 44 Sounds of the Alphabet, any educator can simply explain the rules of the English language to beginning readers, struggling readers, and ESL students.

Recognizing that pre-service teachers can sometimes have difficulty finding time for professional development, Reading Horizons has designed the workshop to fit even the busiest of schedules. The 6-hour training course can be saved and paused at any time.


Click here to learn more about using the workshop in your college or university ›


The workshop is also friendly to university professors’ schedules. According to Dr. Brian Ludlow, a professor of reading and elementary education at Southern Utah University, the workshop “enables professors to expose teachers to the basic fundamental skills of phonics instruction without encroaching on class time at all.”

Upon completing the workshop, participants can take an assessment to prove their understanding of the material and receive a certificate of completion that can be submitted for free professional development credit.

The workshop can also be used by other educators that want to learn strategies for simply explaining the rules of the English language to beginning readers, struggling readers, and ESL students. Every educator is allotted 30 days of free access and customers have unlimited access to the workshop.


Click here to learn more about using the workshop in your school or district ›


The workshop is aligned to most key curriculum standards, including those outlined by the International Reading Association, the International Dyslexia Association, Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages, the National Board of Professional Teaching Standards, and the National Council of Accreditation in Teacher Education.


About Reading Horizons:

Founded in 1984, Reading Horizons provides teacher training, teacher’s manuals, and interactive software that empower teachers to effectively teach beginning readers, struggling readers, and English Language Learners. By learning the core of the Reading Horizons framework (The 42 Sounds of the Alphabet, Five Phonetic Skills, and Two Decoding Skills), students have all of the skills they need to read the vast majority of words in the English language. The Reading Horizons program is currently offered in over 10,000 schools across the country. Follow Reading Horizons at www.readinghorizons.com.

A popular kit for teaching reading to ESL and intervention students builds on success with new release.

North Salt Lake, UT, July 14, 2014

On July 14, 2014, Reading Horizons is releasing its updated Reading Horizons Elevate Teacher’s Kit, enhancing what was already a popular literacy program for ESL and intervention students with a colorful format and new features designed to engage teachers and students alike.

reading-horizons-reading-intervention-direct-instructionAt the heart of the Reading Horizons Elevate Teacher’s Kit is the Reading Horizons Elevate Comprehensive Teacher’s Manual—a multi-volume, non-consumable guide for teaching foundational reading strategies to students fourth grade through adult. Originally a black and white manual, it now features a two-color format with distinct, easy-to-read font styles that clearly contrast what teachers say (instruction) and what teachers do (actions, such as writing on the board). Graphics are used more extensively in the updated manual to make sure each step in this explicit, sequential program is taught correctly and completely.

The enhancements to the manual are not merely cosmetic; content has been added. Each skill lesson now includes numerous Enrichment Activities that reinforce the skills students are learning, and references to specific Transfer Cards so students practice not only spelling and decoding but also reading and pronunciation. At regular intervals throughout the new manual, teachers are encouraged to make use of Accelerate, a section on the Reading Horizons website that supports educators with how-to instruction videos and helpful resources.

Other components in the Reading Horizons Elevate Teacher’s Kit have also been updated or added. The Supplementary Materials Manual combines in one handy volume resources that were previously separated (the Teacher Supplement, the ELL Supplement, and the Games Supplement). The newly added Special Vowel Combinations Poster can be used for display during instruction and for student reference after instruction.

In addition to the components already mentioned, the Reading Horizons Elevate Teacher’s Kit features five more classroom posters and two consumable workbooks: the English Language Enhancement, which supports non-native speakers who are learning to read English, and the Student Workbook.

Given the success with the earlier version of the kit, Reading Horizons President, Tyson Smith, is understandably excited about the update. “The latest version of the Reading Horizons Elevate Teacher’s Kit represents the finest material we have ever published for teachers of adolescents and adults. The new format will make instruction even more intuitive and teacher friendly, and the Enrichment Activities will add a new level of engagement for students. I am proud of the efforts of our curriculum team in publishing this wonderful resource.”


About Reading Horizons:

Founded in 1984, Reading Horizons provides teacher training, teacher’s manuals, and interactive software that empower teachers to effectively teach beginning readers, struggling readers, and English Language Learners. By learning the core of the Reading Horizons framework, students have all of the skills they need to read the vast majority of words in the English language. The Reading Horizons program is currently offered in over 10,000 schools across the country. Follow Reading Horizons at www.readinghorizons.com.