Strategies for Improving Fluency
The Literacy Architects
We break down complex literacy routines into step-by-step plans and deliver PD to support you along the way.
What comes to mind when you hear the term fluency? Is it fast, timed reading? The number of words a student can read in one minute? While speed and accuracy are two factors to include when assessing fluency, fluency also includes expression, smoothness, pace and prosody. Fluent readers use their word recognition skills to read words with automaticity while also using their comprehension of the text to add expression while they read. The National Reading Panel recommends up to 30 minutes of fluency practice as part of daily reading instruction, but remember that this can occur across content areas – it doesn’t have to be contained to your literacy block or ELA class.?
Why is fluency so important? When thinking about the science of reading, phonics and phonemic awareness usually comes to mind. However, we shouldn’t neglect fluency. Literacy expert Dr. Tim Rasinski views fluency as the bridge from word recognition to comprehension. The National Reading Panel describes the fluent reader as “one who can perform multiple tasks—such as word recognition and comprehension—at the same time. The non-fluent reader, on the other hand, can perform only one task at a time. [. . .] The ‘multitask functioning’ of the fluent reader is made possible by the reduced cognitive demands needed for word recognition and other reading processes, thus freeing cognitive resources for other functions, such as drawing inferences. [ . . .]?Because the cognitive demands for word recognition are so small while the word recognition process is occurring, there are sufficient cognitive resources available for grouping the words into syntactic units and for understanding or interpreting the text.” (National Reading Panel Report of the Subgroups, 2000).
So how do we improve the fluency of our readers? In?Know Better, Do Better: Teaching the Foundations So Every Child Can Read, authors David Liben and Meredith Liben explain:?“There are just two ways to improve fluency. The research is wonderfully clear. Fluency is one of the most straightforward aspects of all literacy. One is for children to follow along with the text while a skilled reader reads it aloud. The second is to do repeated reading of the same passage after hearing a fluent model of what that passage should sound like.”?
The following suggestions can be used for whole class or small group routines.?
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As you incorporate a fluency routine into your lessons, think about how you will assess its effectiveness and the tools students will use to self-monitor their fluency and give feedback to their peers. Over the years, we’ve seen many students track their own words correct per minute (WCPM) progress on bar graphs, but — given the role that prosody plays in fluency — consider asking students to use a fluency rubric or checklist that addresses tone, expression and pace, as well.?And, since the goal of reading is comprehension, don’t forget to include some way of assessing a student’s understanding of the text!
When considering the research base connected with the science of reading, we know that incorporating daily fluency practice into instruction can help students improve their reading. We hope you can use some of these ideas with your students!
Sources and Further Reading:
Eunice Kennedy Shriver?National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, NIH, DHHS. (2000). Report of the National Reading Panel: Teaching Children to Read: Reports of the Subgroups (00-4754). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved from: https://www.nichd.nih.gov/sites/default/files/publications/pubs/nrp/Documents/ch3.pdf
Rasinski, T. V. (2012). Why reading fluency should be hot.?The Reading Teacher,?65(8), 516–522. https://doi.org/10.1002/TRTR.01077