Entry #7
I did a running record on two of my 2nd graders
this week (for their privacy I am only including their first initial). T is a 2nd grader originally from
Romania. S is a 2nd grader
originally from Mexico. I pulled a grade
level passage from easycbm.com to use for this assignment. (This is a GREAT website for progress
monitoring if any of you are looking for one and it's FREE!!)
T was able to read 66 correct words per minute (cwpm) with
93% accuracy. After analyzing his
miscues I realized that the majority of his mistakes were visually similar (by initial
letter), but the words he used did not make sense in the text. The errors in syntax he made were due to an
incorrect subject and verb agreement (was/were), which is common not only for
his grade level, but also for an English language learner. There were two words he got stuck on and were
provided for him (TT = teacher told) and only one word he self-corrected
(SC). His reading rate was close to the
grade level benchmark of 72 cwpm.
Using this information, I saw two major areas to focus
instruction. 1) teach how to SC for errors – using CAFE strategies
(from The CAFE Book by Gail Boushey and Joan Moser) – check your
understanding and cross checking (does
it look right, does it sound right, and does it make sense) 2) teach
word attach strategies to use with unfamiliar words – chunking letters and
sounds, flipping the vowel sound, stretch and blend, identify familiar word
parts, and using the beginning and ending sound.
My other student, S, was able to read 102 cwpm with 98%
accuracy. While on paper, this looks
really good, I know that this student can read just about anything you put in
front of him, but he has absolutely no comprehension. The words just go in one ear and out the
other. He did make a couple of visual
miscues while reading, but he knew how to back up and reread because the word
didn’t sound right (he corrects for correct sounds not for meaning).
For this student, my focus for instruction would include
teaching how to check for understanding (using lots of story retells and
questioning about story elements). I
would model and teach how to stop while reading to check for understanding and
summarize what was just read. I would
also focus on metacognition strategies (becoming aware of your own thinking
while reading). This student needs to
see that reading is for meaning, not just decoding and saying words. I also know this student needs help building
his vocabulary (both in his native language as well as English). I realize many of these teaching points are
not coming from his running record, but of an understanding of the student and
looking at other assessments.