Beginning Reading
Features of Known and Unknown Words for First Graders of Different Proficiency Levels in Winter and Spring
This study describes the features of words known and unknown by first graders of different proficiency levels in six instances of an oral reading fluency assessment: three in winter and three in spring. A sample of 411 students was placed into four groups (very high, high, middle, and low) based on their median correct words per minute in spring. Each word in the assessment was coded on 11 features: numbers of phonemes, letters, syllables, blends, morphemes, percentages of multisyllabic and of morphologically complex words, concreteness, age of acquisition, decodability, and U function. Words were classified as known if more than 50% of the students within a group were able to correctly read those words. Features of known and unknown words were contrasted for all but the highest group, which made no errors, at each point in time. An analysis of the patterns of known words across groups from winter to spring shows that students followed a similar general progression in the number and type of words recognized. The most prominent feature of unknown words in winter and spring for the middle group of students was the presence of multiple syllables. The lowest-performing group of students continued to be limited by word length and frequency in their recognition of words, but on both features, their proficiency increased from winter to spring. The discussion addresses several critical issues, most notably the relationship of words in oral reading assessments to the word recognition curriculum of many beginning reading programs.
Keywords: word recognition development; assessment texts
Changing Readers, Changing Texts: Beginning Reading Texts from 1960 to 2010
Freddy summarizes the changes in readers and text given to beginning readers.
A Comparison of the Effects of Two Phonetically Regular Text Types on Young English Learners’ Literacy
Long after Chall (1967/1983) described the choice of reading pedagogy for beginning reading as “the great debate,” the topic of the kinds of texts that… Read More »A Comparison of the Effects of Two Phonetically Regular Text Types on Young English Learners’ Literacy
An Analysis of Two Reading Intervention Programs
In this study, the student texts and teacher guides of two reading intervention programs for at-risk, first-grade students were analyzed and compared: Fountas and Pinnell’s Leveled Literacy Intervention My Sidewalks <(MS). The analyses drew on the framework of available theory and research on beginning texts developed by Mesmer, Cunningham, and Hiebert (2012). This framework includes attention to word-level, text-level, and program-level features. The student texts of the two programs had similar average percentages of single-appearing words and words that can elicit a mental picture (concrete words); however, LLI texts featured more repetition of words, a slightly higher percentage of highly frequent words, and a considerably higher percentage of multisyllable words. MS texts contained a higher percentage of phonetically regular words and a higher lesson-to-text match (LTTM) between phonics elements in teacher guides and the words in student texts. Instructional implications and future research directions are discussed.
An Examination of Current Text Difficulty Indices with Early Reading Texts
This report examines the difficulty of early reading texts over the years as measured by today’s prevailing indices.
The Critical Word Factor in Texts for Beginning Readers
The Critical Word Factor, based on word recognition demands of texts, is a measure of text difficulty designed specifically for texts used by beginning readers.… Read More »The Critical Word Factor in Texts for Beginning Readers