The Reading Coach
Making the Most
Of Guided Reading
Researchers Irene C. Fountas and Gay Su Pinnell identify the ultimate guided reading goal as helping children learn how to use independent reading strategies successfully.
So how can you make the most of guided reading in your classroom? Use the checklist below.
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Ensure that the heart of each guided reading is actual reading and practice. At first, support students heavily with explanation, coaching, and interaction. Gradually release support as students learn to use guided reading strategies independently. Commit at least 2/3 of total guided reading time to actual reading practice. Never do anything that isn’t aimed directly at the goal of independent reading.
Let students’ needs drive instruction.One group of students might need extensive decoding support; another might call words well, but get no meaning from what they read. Examine the results of informal observations and formal assessments, and then create an “I want This Student to Learn…” checklist for each member of the class, based on the gaps you see. The checklist will double as an informal progress report. When your guided reading groups meet, keep students’ individual goals on the front burner. Don’t deviate, and give them time to mature the skill.
I WANT ____________________(student’s name) TO LEARN
Identified Need | Targeted Teaching | Success! (date) |
* Can’t read multi-syllabic words (intimidated, doesn’t understand patterns) | Create a checklist: questions the student can ask himself or herself to solve mystery words. | 1. 2. 3. 4. |
Highlight the three top needs in your class, integrate and repeatedly focus on them throughout the day, no matter what you are teaching. Otherwise, students might learn to use specific strategies during special instruction time, but fail to use them elsewhere when they read.
When teaching independent reading strategies:
- model it;
- when the class reads together, ask “does that make sense?” and show them what to do when it doesn’t;
- remind students to ask the same question when they read independently;
- explicitly describe to students the strategy you used.
Dissolve and create new groups whenever students’ needs change.
Miller, Cathy. "The Reading Coach: Making the Most Of Guided Reading."Education World 08 Sep 2005: 1. Web. 14 Oct 2010. <http://www.educationworld.com/a_curr/columnists/miller/miller011.shtml>
*I found out early on in my teaching that when instructing students, one of the most important things is to MODEL the lesson or instruction I was teaching. I think when we model for the students what we are looking for when we are reading, they are able to pick up the lesson much quicker and they understand what they should be doing a lot easier. It's like when we were in college. When the professor gives us a project to work on, we usually asked for an example or we would go talk to someone who had already completed the project. We do this for more clarification and to help us better understand what we should be doing. So why wouldn't we do this for students also?*
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