Progress Monitoring Progress Monitoring with Curriculum with Curriculum Based Measurement Based Measurement Tracey Hall CAST Oral Reading Fluency
Mar 26, 2015
Progress Monitoring with Progress Monitoring with Curriculum Based Curriculum Based
MeasurementMeasurement
Tracey HallCAST
Oral Reading Fluency
CBM in ReadingCBM in Reading
• Oral Reading Fluency– one minute timing– individually
administered– words read correctly– also measure errors– high correlation with
reading comprehension
(students don’t read faster than they can understand what they are reading)
• Maze and cloze procedures– passage reading– words missing –
systematically– fill in or selection of
correct word– may be fluency
• Letter or sound identification
• Word Recognition
CBM in ReadingCBM in Reading Develop Measures
Administration
Scoring
Graphic Display
Analysis of Graphic Display
Error Analysis
Implications for Instruction
CBM Oral Reading FluencyCBM Oral Reading Fluency
• For students in Infant and early standard
• Student reads grade-appropriate passage for 1 minute from ORF Student copy
• Teacher marks errors of ORF Teacher copy
What is measured?What is measured?• Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) is a measure of
the number of words a student reads correctly in one minute.– Measure of reading rate and accuracy– Measure related to reading comprehension
(kids don’t read faster than they can understand what it is that they are reading)
• Specific errors are recorded to provide useful error analysis information.
• Sensitive to change achievement over time
Developing ORF MeasuresDeveloping ORF Measures• Teacher copy - numbers down right side of passage for
easy scoring • Student copy- Passage should be:
– Void of illustration– Text that is representative of curriculum(usually random selection from materials used in class:
font, passage style)
Grade Number of Words1-2 100- 1503-4 150-2006+ 250
CBM Oral Reading FluencyCBM Oral Reading Fluency• Student copy
CBM Oral Reading FluencyCBM Oral Reading Fluency
• ORF Teacher copy• Cumulative count of
words along margin allow for easy calculation of words attempted
Administration
Directions for 1-Minute Administration of Oral Reading Fluency Passages
1. Quiet setting
2. Individual administration
3. Unnumbered passage to student
4. Numbered passage for administrator
5. Stopwatch or (sweep second hand on watch)6. Say, "Start reading here." (point to the
title of the story).
Administration Directions
7. Say "begin" and start your stopwatch when the student says the first word.
8. Follow along on the examiner copy of the passage, marking the words that are read incorrectly. Use the markings for error types as best you can.
9. If a student comes to the end of a passage before the time is up, point to the beginning of the passage and say to the student, "start again."
10. At the end of one minute (60 seconds) say, "stop" and place a bracket ( ] ) after the last word read.
Administration Directions
“When I say 'begin,' start reading aloud at the top of the page. Try to read each word. If you come to a word you don't know, I'll tell it to you. Be sure to do your best reading. Do you have any questions?”
“You are going to read this story titled I Want to be Big Now out loud. This story is about a girl named June who wants to play. In order to play she thinks she needs to be big. Read this story until I say stop. If you come to a word you don't know, I'll tell it to you. Show me your best reading.”
If desired administrators may provide some background information:
thick misidentification (students decodes word incorrectly).Slash word and if possible, write word student said.
she hadsmiled
omission (student leaves out word).Circle word omitted
lefthesitation (student doesn't decode word within 3 sec.)Tell student word and mark H over the word.
mother word substitution (student uses word or similar meaning).Slash word and write word substituted.
sawhe said
reversal (student says "was" for "saw" or "said he" for "hesaid").Mark transposed part with a loop.
dogself-correct (student says dot, then self-corrects and says dog).Write SC or C over the word.
he wassad
insertion (student adds word).Mark a carat and write in word added.
Mom saidto go thereyesterday
repetition (student repeats word or phrase more than once).Underline word or phrase repeated with wavy line.
ORF Error Markings
very
n
mom
Scoring SampleScoring Sample
Ernie learned to knit one October afternoon when he was home
waiting for the scabs from his chicken pox spots to fall off. Even
though nobody could catch the chicken pox from him anymore, he
looked pretty awful. Now that he didn't itch and feel terrible, he was
bored. Ernie was so bored be couldn't wait to get back to school. He
wondered what exciting things his friends in the fourth grade and
Mrs. Crownfield, his teacher, were doing while he spent his time
waiting for scabs to fall off. When the doorbell] suddenly rang,
Ernie was glad. Even answering the door was something to do.
When Ernie looked through the peephole in the door to find out
11
24
35
48
62
73
84
95
106
118
wa-it-ing
wa-it-ing
wa-it
a
Scoring Practice
• Please listen to the “student” read the passage. Follow along, mark any errors you hear using the error marking procedures in your packet.
• We’ll check reliability when finished.
Benefits of Graphic DisplaysBenefits of Graphic Displays1. Accurate display of facts about the
behavior
2. Cumulative record - ongoing access to all data collected
3. Observe variations of behavior – cycles– relation of behavior to time– across phases of intervention
Benefits of graphic displays Benefits of graphic displays (cont.)(cont.)
4. Formative information(don’t wait for final condition to review for
statistical differences)
5. Display relationship between dependent and independent variable
6. Screen out weak variables in favor of robust intervention
Benefits of graphic displaysBenefits of graphic displays (cont.)
7. allow for individual interpretation graph provides direct access to original data
8. actual source of feedback for subject
9. subject may graph own behavior