Skip to main content
 
NYS READS
Assessment
Common Core State Standards
Early Reading First
English Language Learners
Families
Instruction
Professional Development
Race to the Top (RttT)
Reading Academies
  
Meeting Workspace icon

Fluency > Teaching Tools

Fluency

Fluency

 Teaching Tools

Reading Strategies

FOR-PD (Florida Online Reading-Professional Development) has established a Reading Strategy of the Month for educators to use. Each month FOR-PD features a different reading strategy. The research-base for the strategy is explained, directions on how to use the strategy are provided, ideas for adapting the strategy are explained, assessment tips are shared, and examples are provided from elementary and secondary levels. Past strategies are archived according to the Five Big Ideas, as well as instructional techniques.

 

Timothy Rasinski Interview

The FOR-PD (Florida Online Reading-Professional Development) Project actively seeks interviews with literacy experts across the country.  Each interview is then posted to their web site as a means of literacy support for teachers.  Interviews are provided in both text and audio formats.  FOR-PD interviewed Timothy Rasinski about the role of Fluency in Adolescent Literacy, including the use of poetry and Readers’ Theater to implement Repeated Reading strategies, with an interesting side-track about the importance of educators sharing with their students how reading enriches their own lives.

Resources developed by Dr. Timothy Rasinski
This link contains Fry word phrases, guides for making and writing words, Reader's Theater scripts and many other useful resources for teaching fluency.

The Literacy Tool Belt
This link contains 10 powerpoint presentations with phrases containing high frequency words.

ReadWriteThink, established in April, 2002, is a partnership between the International Reading Association (IRA), the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) and the Verizon Foundation.
 
Florida Center for Reading Research
The Florida Center for Reading Research is jointly administered at Florida State University by th Learning Systems Institute and the College of Arts and Sciences.  Its K-5 Student Center Activities (SCA) and K-3 Instructional Routines search page is designed to provide teacher’s access to the 522 individual SCA and the instructional routines from Empowering Teachers. Use the search tool to find and print specific instructional routines or student center activities and their accompanying activity masters by grade level, the 5 Big Ideas, or other categories.
 
PALS
PALS is a screening, diagnostic and progress monitoring tool for measuring the fundamental components of literacy.  It was developed at the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia and has been widely accepted across the nation as an effective assessment tool in early literacy. Additionally, this website provides classroom activities organized by skill to assist educators in making appropriate data-based instructional decisions.
 

Free-Reading

Free Reading is an “open source” instructional program that helps teachers teach early reading. Because it's open source, it represents the collective wisdom of a wide community of teachers and researchers. It's designed to contain a scope and sequence of activities that can support and supplement a typical “core” or “basal” program. Many of the activities are evaluated by DIBELS.

 

University of Oregon IDEA Curriculum Maps

Click on the link above to download the Curriculum Maps from the University of Oregon Big Ideas in Reading website. These curriculum maps will assist teachers in identifying and planning for essential skills for instruction throughout the school year. They are more comprehensive than the Instructional Priority Maps that are located within the NYS Reading Academy.

 

 

 

   
Sign In

This website is a collaboration between Eastern Suffolk BOCES Federal and State School Support Initiatives and the New York State Education Department – Office of Early Learning.  The contents of this website do not necessarily reflect views or policies of the NYS Education Department, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the NYS Education Department.