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Mrs. DiNinno



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Reading Fluency

Fluency is necessary for good comprehension. When a reader is struggling to 
decode words, little mental energy is left for comprehension.  
 
A Fluent Reader 

Has automatic word recognition 
Is able to figure out unknown quickly using context and word patterns 
Reads with appropriate phrasing and expression 
***Don't be fooled, however. Just because a child is a fluent reader, does 
not mean that the child is comprehending. However, a child who struggles 
with fluency will also have difficulty comprehending. 

 Ways to Build Fluency 
 
Provide many opportunities to practice when children are starting to read. 
Allow children to use a finger, marker, or a transparent ruler as they read. 
Read, read, read. Like participating in individual or team sports or playing 
a musical instrument, it takes daily practice to be good. Automaticity comes 
with hours of reading practice. 
Read material at an easier level so that decoding is not an issue. Practice 
at independent levels of text difficulty is important. A suggested ratio of 
easier to difficult text is 80/20, 80 percent easy and 20 percent at the 
instructional level. 
Encourage children to read silently before reading orally. To be good at 
anything requires practice. 
Provide opportunities for reading aloud by scheduling practices for choral 
reading, reading dialogue from stories, and booktalks that include reading 
aloud excerpts of favorite, exciting, or humorous parts. 
Reread text. Fluency will develop when children reread text with a high rate 
of success. 
Model fluent reading. Children need to hear good models of text reading to 
understand how reading should sound.

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Last Modified: Friday January 04 2008

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