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photo by Hannah Reel

McLaurin Elementary School third graders Austin Carman, 8, Zina Patel, 8, Alina Sharp, 8, Cristin Smith, 8, and Robert Smith, 8, read aloud an article about George Washington while performing their fluency exercise during their language arts class Friday afternoon.

District reading program sets foundations for learning

Published Monday, September 14, 2009

NATCHEZ — Everyday at McLaurin Elementary School, teachers are focused on setting a foundation for learning by Reading First.

Third-grade students in the school participate in a two-hour block of intensive reading and English activities outlined by a grant-funded reading program called Reading First.

This is the fifth year the school has utilized the program. It is also used at West Primary School and Frazier Primary School.

“Reading First is a process,” said Margery Bennett, reading coach at McLaurin. “It isn’t a program. It is strategies that we use to improve the students’ achievement in reading comprehension, vocabulary, fluency and phonics.”

McLaurin Elementary School third graders Benyatta Reed, 9, and Pless Strickland, 8, work together at the Word Wall Center during their language arts class Friday afternoon.

Photo by Hannah Reel

McLaurin Elementary School third graders Benyatta Reed, 9, and Pless Strickland, 8, work together at the Word Wall Center during their language arts class Friday afternoon.

McLaurin Elementary School third graders Zach Tarver, 9, and Kejuan King, 9, work together to complete their vocabulary assignment during their language arts class Friday afternoon.

Photo by Hannah Reel

McLaurin Elementary School third graders Zach Tarver, 9, and Kejuan King, 9, work together to complete their vocabulary assignment during their language arts class Friday afternoon.

The students use reading based activities to further cement vocabulary words, plot understanding, pronunciation, spelling and reading comprehension.

The program allows for the use of board games, matching games and word games as well as writing activities, oral presentations and computer based learning.

“There is flexibility built into the program because not all students learn the same way and not all teachers teach the same way,” Bennett said.

Students have a specific folder for their reading work that teachers review on an almost daily basis to identify early students who might be having trouble grasping a certain skill.

Bennett said the skills being focused on during Reading First are in-line with the Mississippi education framework.

Students are tested three times a year to track progress. Their work is also assessed on a regular basis so students who are at risk of falling behind are identified and given extra attention to bring them up to speed.

Through the use of interventionist, tutors and a reading coach, students who are having trouble mastering a reading skill are given one-on-one attention for at least 30 minutes during the two-hour reading block, Bennett said.

The goal of the program is to have students at or above grade level before the end of the school year. At McLaurin that means third-grade students should be able to read at that level before entering the fourth grade.

Students take a test called Dibbles to test for fluency and accuracy in reading. Bennet said third grade students should be able to read 110 words a minute “with the correct expression, pace and understanding.”

Reading comprehension and vocabulary is tested through Woodcock-Johnson and Peabody. Students must score a 96 on that test to be considered at grade-level.

“We’ve seen a major growth, especially last year,” Bennett said. “Last year, we started seeing students who had been exposed to the program since they started school. There is great improvement in those students. We don’t have nearly as many that are at risk.

“We aren’t having to back up and teach as much phonics because when they get to us they are able to read and comprehend.”

Having students who are reading and understanding what they should for their particular grade sets them up for success in all areas of learning, Bennett said.

“Reading is the foundation for everything,” she said. “If we have students who aren’t reading on the level they should be that hurts us in all subject areas. If a student can’t read and understand a math word-problem, they can’t do that problem.”

Comments

Posted by Lilsister (anonymous) on September 14, 2009 at 12:38 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I am confused by this program, and I need more information. It was stated in this article that this is the fifth year that Natchez has used this program, which is funded through grant money. If the evaluation used with this program measures expression, pacing and understanding, are these the same skills measured on the MCT2? I have had some experience with this program,and I don't see much of a parallel. The students are engaged in word games. puzzles, and lots of independent work. What has happened to guided practice, a basal reader, word lists that parents can assist with at home, oral reading,vocabulary words, and comprehension skills?
Maybe I am just old school and out of touch, but the old school way worked, and what we are now using isn't working. Check out the test scores.
Please if someone out there can help me understand this program and its relationship to the MCT2, help me!

Posted by Crakalakin (anonymous) on September 14, 2009 at 2:30 p.m. (Suggest removal)

What is "language arts"? Is that like calligraphy? lol

I guess "English" is just too PC, huh?

Posted by juju (anonymous) on September 14, 2009 at 6:07 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Lilsister, I believe that whatever company (books) the county chooses to buy, that company's products are aligned with that state's content standards. And the same old methods are used as before but more controlled and monitored with Reading First.

Posted by Lilsister (anonymous) on September 14, 2009 at 10:55 p.m. (Suggest removal)

Juju, if the Reading First Program is aligned with the state's curriculum, why are the third grade scores so bad? Apparently something is not working. Only 25% of the third graders last year scored proficient, and 4.3 scored advanced. On the other hand, 45.4 of the third graders last year scored basic, and 25.3 % scored minimal. I have also been informed that during the reading block no one, not even parents can visit the classrooms. Therefore, how can anyone determine if this program is the best one to prepare our students for MCT2?

Posted by gemccull (Gary McCullars) on September 15, 2009 at 12:31 p.m. (Suggest removal)

If you seach back on previous newspaper stories on the ND website, you will find a school in southwest Mississippi that is performing.

Our school system can make all the excuses it wants and it can have all the defenders but the reality is that it can be done!

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