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|Students learn to '''read word families, compound words, contractions, double-letter words, silent-letter words, ''-ed'' words, and ''-s'' words.''' |Students learn to '''read word families, compound words, contractions, double-letter words, silent-letter words, ''-ed'' words, and ''-s'' words.'''
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! [[Program 101-1, Week 36 | Week 36]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 37 | Week 37]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 38 | Week 38]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 39 | Week 39]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 40 | Week 40]] ! [[Program 101-1, Week 36 | Week 36]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 37 | Week 37]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 38 | Week 38]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 39 | Week 39]] || [[Program 101-1, Week 40 | Week 40]]
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===Adjusting the intervention as you deliver it=== ===Adjusting the intervention as you deliver it===
-As you will see, the directions for activities in Free-Reading are explicit, right down to what you should say to students. Of course, you don't have to read exactly these words (though they have been chosen very carefully), but you should stay as close as you can to the meaning of them and you should stay very close indeed to the sequence of steps in the ''What to do'' section for each activity.+As you will see, the directions for activities in FreeReading are explicit, right down to what you should say to students. Of course, you don't have to read exactly these words (though they have been chosen very carefully), but you should stay as close as you can to the meaning of them and you should stay very close indeed to the sequence of steps in the ''What to do'' section for each activity.
If you find you are finishing intervention sessions early having completed all the activities, you can either go back over that day's activities to provide more practice and ensure all students mastered all activities, or you can follow the ''Related Activities'' links to find similar supplemental activities to work on. If you find you are finishing intervention sessions early having completed all the activities, you can either go back over that day's activities to provide more practice and ensure all students mastered all activities, or you can follow the ''Related Activities'' links to find similar supplemental activities to work on.
If you find you are regularly completing sessions early and students are finding the material easy, consider jumping ahead in the program--though obviously be careful that all the students in the group are ready for this (if some are and some are not, that suggests re-grouping students may be called for). If you find you are regularly completing sessions early and students are finding the material easy, consider jumping ahead in the program--though obviously be careful that all the students in the group are ready for this (if some are and some are not, that suggests re-grouping students may be called for).
 +
 +You'll notice that there are a small number of lesson formats that are used systematically throughout FreeReading so, for instance, sounding out activities follow a common pattern. This structure helps create consistency in the daily routine and allows you to focus your attention on the content of the lesson and the individual students rather than being presented with different lesson formats every day.
==Using assessments with Intervention A== ==Using assessments with Intervention A==

Revision as of 19:46, 30 March 2008

Welcome to FreeReading's Intervention A, a reading intervention program for small groups of one to six kindergarten or first grade students who need additional help with phonological awareness and phonics.

FreeReading is currently used by educators in all 50 states and in over 160 countries. FreeReading Intervention A is the first open-source instructional program to be approved through an official state adoption. The state of Florida recently approved FreeReading as a supplemental reading program that state schools may use during the 2008-2009 school year. To see how FreeReading correlates to Florida state instructional standards, click here. To learn more about FreeReading and the advantages of the program, click here.

The program consists of multiple overlapping strands of instruction (click any title to read more about that strand):

Instructional Strands
Strand Description
Phonological Awareness Students learn to blend and segment the sounds in spoken words.
Letter Sounds Students learn to say the most common sound for printed letters.
Letter Writing Students learn the correct way to write letters.
Sounding Out Students put everything they have learned so far together, so that they can take a regular word in print, such as sat, produce the letter-sound pattern, sssaaat, and blend to produce the word, sat. For the first time, they read words.
Word-Form Recognition Students take a regular word in print and say it without sounding out aloud
Irregular Words Students learn to read high-frequency irregular words such as the and was by sight.
Reading Connected Text Students learn to read their first sentence-long stories.
Letter Combinations Students learn to say the most common sounds for letter combinations such as sh and oa and correctly decode VCe words.
Irregular Words II Students expand the set of high-frequency irregular words that they can read by sight.
Advanced Phonics Students learn to read word families, compound words, contractions, double-letter words, silent-letter words, -ed words, and -s words.


















The Program

The program comprises 40 weeks of instruction, 5 days per week, 30 minutes per day. (The timings given for individual activities in the program are generous--most teachers complete the activities in less time.) Click on a week to view and print the activities for that week. You can also download and print a multi-page version of the complete map here.

Intervention A
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5
Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Week 10
Week 11 Week 12 Week 13 Week 14 Week 15
Week 16 Week 17 Week 18 Week 19 Week 20
Week 21 Week 22 Week 23 Week 24 Week 25
Week 26 Week 27 Week 28 Week 29 Week 30
Week 31 Week 32 Week 33 Week 34 Week 35
Week 36 Week 37 Week 38 Week 39 Week 40










Where to start

First, read this page and the pages it links to (especially the strand pages listed at the top). Then print the first few weeks of instruction. Determine what week to start at as follows:

  • For kindergarten students at risk for reading, start at Week 1, Day 1.
  • For first grade students at risk for reading, start at Week 21, Day 1.

If you have access to reading assessment tools, you can fine tune the best place to start the intervention for an individual student or small group. This is described below.

Intervention A as eight, five-week sequences of instruction

Some teachers may find it helpful to think of the complete 40-week sequence as eight five-week chunks with overlapping elements of practicing existing skills and introducing new skills:

  • Weeks 1-5: Basic phonological awareness (rhyming, onset-rime, introduce phoneme blending and segmenting); letter sounds and letter writing.
  • Weeks 6-10: Segmenting first, last, and middle phonemes; continue letter sounds and letter writing; begin sounding out (CVC and CVCC words).
  • Weeks 11-15: Phoneme substitution; continue letter sounds and letter writing; continue sounding out (stop sounds and CVCC words); introduce word-form recognition; introduce irregular (sight) words.
  • Weeks 16-20: Complete letter sounds and letter writing; continue sounding out (CCVCC and CCCVCC words) and word-form recognition; more irregular words.
  • Weeks 21-25: More irregular words; introduce letter combinations; introduce VCe words.
  • Weeks 26-30: Accelerate the introduction of irregular words; continue letter combinations.
  • Weeks 31-35: Complete letter combinations; more irregular words; begin advanced phonics (word families, double-letter words, silent-letter words, compound words, contractions, -ed and -s words); introduce reading connected text.
  • Weeks 36-40: More irregular words; longer connected text passages fiction and non-fiction up to 80 words.


Adjusting the intervention as you deliver it

As you will see, the directions for activities in FreeReading are explicit, right down to what you should say to students. Of course, you don't have to read exactly these words (though they have been chosen very carefully), but you should stay as close as you can to the meaning of them and you should stay very close indeed to the sequence of steps in the What to do section for each activity.

If you find you are finishing intervention sessions early having completed all the activities, you can either go back over that day's activities to provide more practice and ensure all students mastered all activities, or you can follow the Related Activities links to find similar supplemental activities to work on.

If you find you are regularly completing sessions early and students are finding the material easy, consider jumping ahead in the program--though obviously be careful that all the students in the group are ready for this (if some are and some are not, that suggests re-grouping students may be called for).

You'll notice that there are a small number of lesson formats that are used systematically throughout FreeReading so, for instance, sounding out activities follow a common pattern. This structure helps create consistency in the daily routine and allows you to focus your attention on the content of the lesson and the individual students rather than being presented with different lesson formats every day.

Using assessments with Intervention A

It is strongly recommended that you assess and progress monitor at-risk students with whom you are using Intervention A. This will enable you to:

  • Place students at the right starting point in the program
  • Accelerate or decelerate the program based on progress
  • Determine whether the program is effective for that student or group.

Choose an assessment that (a) can be quickly administered and scored, (c) gives reliable and valid guidance on whether a student is at risk, (b) allows progress to be monitored, and (d) provides sufficient diagnostic information to place a student in the program. There are many available assessments. One that meets the above criteria and is widely used is DIBELS and a page describing how to use DIBELS to place a student in Intervention A is here: Using DIBELS to place a student in Intervention A.

Program resources

Free-Reading includes a large body of high-quality materials for classroom use. Everything you need to teach Intervention A is here:

Additional useful resources for teachers and administrators

Some notes about the program

What's not included

The program does not explicitly address the following, which should be the subject of the core reading program or other supplemental material:

  • Fluency
  • Comprehension strategies
  • Vocabulary
  • Vocabulary-learning strategies
  • Oral language
  • Conceptual understanding
  • Content knowledge
  • Spelling and writing (other than letter writing)
  • Affect and motivation to read.

Pedagogy

The program is:

  • Explicit: The teacher gives explicit instruction and then models all skills being taught. Correction routines are also made explicit.
  • Systematic: The program comprises multiple overlapping sequences of instruction, each addressing a critical skill thoroughly.
  • Research-based: You can see references here.

A key feature of the pedagogy is the use of an Introduce, Reintroduce, Build Accuracy, Build Fluency progression for each strand of instruction. By accuracy we mean helping students discriminate between similar items such as letters m and n or irregular words this and that. By fluency we mean helping students become automatic in foundation skills such as blending. Further discussion of the pedagogical approach can be found in these articles:

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