How to fit interventions for struggling readers into your day | Brookes Publishing Co.

How to fit interventions for struggling readers into your day

Setting up centers in your classroom enables you to work with small groups or individuals

Finding time to provide extra support for struggling readers in the classroom is just one challenge busy teachers face. Often, the authors of the new edition of Interventions for Reading Success hear teachers say, “If the other 17 students were not in the room, then I could really work with my students who are most at risk.”

This would be wonderful, of course, but it’s simply not realistic. The answer to providing effective supplemental instruction for struggling readers while keeping the whole class engaged lies in planning and time management.

Interventions for Reading Success, Second Edition

This book includes hundreds of ready-to-teach activities for supplemental small-group reading instruction

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Sample Chapter

Here are some common questions the Interventions for Reading Success authors get from teachers. See if any of their pointers will work for you:

Setting up centers is an effective way of managing students’ independent work time.

At the end of the week, if they have visited all of the centers, students may receive a sticker or stamp.

How one teacher organized her day to fit in reading interventions

Monday: Listening center

The purpose of the listening center is for students to listen to audio books to hear models of fluent reading. Students must learn

Tuesday: Writing center

The writing center has all of the materials necessary for students to independently work with the writing process. Directions are posted, with an example of the step-by-step procedures for the writing process. Students must learn

Wednesday: Fluency center

The purpose of the fluency center is to practice fluency activities using words and materials posted throughout the room and in a specific place in the classroom. Students must learn

Thursday: Word games center

The word games center is stocked with word puzzles and games that allow the students to practice decoding concepts taught in class. Teachers might also include lists of decodable words to use in pairs with a timer. Students can work in pairs or individually. Teachers will need to demonstrate

Explore ways to differentiate instruction. For example: Partner two students reading at different levels in a reading fluency activity. Have them work at their own level, which will minimize behavior problems while prescribing the appropriate intervention work for each student. Reading is not a one-size-fits-all-model!

How one teacher introduced centers in her classroom

Morning:

When students enter the classroom, Ms. Shaw begins the day with one of the fluency activities. This focuses the entire class on beginning the day with a quick intervention activity (e.g., **One Minute, Please!; Echo Reading).

Before recess:

The time between the start of school and recess is typically spent in a reading block. Structured intervention is usually part of this time unless it is scheduled for after recess or after lunchtime.

After recess:

Ms. Shaw usually conducts her math lessons after recess. When students are working independently on their follow-up assignment, she pulls a student or two aside for 5-10 minutes and gives them extra help in reading intervention.

After lunch:

Students come in from lunch and have sustained silent reading for about 10 minutes. Ms. Shaw pulls a few more students to conduct 10 minutes of reading intervention at this time. She typically works with the students who have difficulty reading alone, focusing on needed early reading intervention activities.

End of day and after school:

While the homework monitors are distributing the day’s homework assignment and students are readying themselves to go home, Ms. Shaw pulls a few students aside to read words from the word wall. Ms. Shaw has said that any spare minute is filled with reading intervention activities. There are a few students who always have permission to stay after school. Ms. Shaw gets those students and works on 10 more minutes of reading intervention.