Reading Fluency

  • Fluency and Accuracy

    Reasonably accurate reading at an appropriate rate with suitable prosody leads to accurate and deep comprehension. 
    (Jan Hasbrouck Ph.D., 2010)

    Fluency should “sound like speech”
    (Stahl & Kuhn, 2002)

    Accuracy

    If a student reads a sentence without a reasonable number of mistakes, but it sounds choppy without appropriate phrasing, a teacher may ask that student to, “Please read that again, the way that we talk.”  This can be reinforced by parents at home also, but the accuracy component shouldn’t be a lower priority than the reading rate component for students learning how to read fluently. Even a highly proficient reader wouldn’t be expected to read without any errors all of the time. But, having too many errors would begin to affect comprehension in a negative way.

    Rate

    Reading rate alone is not a decent measure of reading fluency.  That view can turn reading fluency into a reading race which can be harmful to accuracy and comprehension.  A student who had a high reading rate but did not understand what they read, would not be considered a fluent reader. This rate can fluctuate depending on the type of text being read. Fluent reading is not merely fast reading.

    Prosody

    This might be explained best as students having “good expression” when reading.  For example, a reader would use different rate and prosody while reading a nonfiction text aloud versus reading a poem aloud.

    Comprehension

    If the information comes into the brain and it isn’t accurate, that certainly can impact the reader’s understanding of the text.  Furthermore, if the information comes into the brain too slowly (or too quickly), the understanding or comprehension of what is being read also suffers. A good way to think about fluent readers is: Fluent readers are reading accurately and smoothly enough to support their comprehension of the text.

    Goals/ Benchmarks

    We want students to "read how they talk".  A fluent speaker speaks about 150 words per minute.  This is a good ultimate goal for students to aim for.  On the other hand, auctioneers speak at about 220 words per minute.  This is a speed that we would consider to be TOO fast to be intelligible and to maintain comprehension.  We have different goals for reading fluency throughout elementary school. When a student is reading below this goal (benchmark), it indicates that the student may need intervention to help them read more fluently.  Here are the end of year benchmark goals for correct words read in one minute by grade level:

    1st Grade: 47
    2nd Grade: 87
    3rd Grade: 100
    4th Grade: 115
    5th Grade: 130

    Helping Your Child Build Fluency

    *Have your child read aloud to you for 5-10 minutes each day (as part of their 20 minutes of daily at-home reading)

    *Read with your child alternating sentences or paragraphs.  Model what good readers do to sound fluent.

    *Have your child re-read parts or passages they have struggled with to improve fluency.  "Let's try that part again reading how you talk."

    *Try repeated readings of passages with cold and hot timings.  See your child's teacher or your school's literacy facilitator if you would like to get some passages to help your child increase his/her fluency.  You can also see Chula Vista district Mrs. Hultenius's class website for some downloadable fluency passages.

    *Help your child master/memorize the most common words in the English language.  See our Sight Word page for more information.

    *Jan Hasbrouck, Ph.D., presents an overview of reading fluency, including a definition of fluency and current research on the importance of fluency, how to assess fluency, and how to teach fluency. Jan Hasbrouck Webcast (Read Naturally)

    Fluency Links and Documents

    It's Fun to Read! (Starfall): Short easy readers to read online and click to hear it read fluently.  For early learners (1st-2nd grade).

    Fluency- Power Up What Works: Great suggestions and strategies for helping students build fluency skills.

    Wacky Web Tales: Give your child some interactive stories to practice reading fluently.  They fill in the blanks with the correct part of speech, and a story is created just like Mad Libs. 

    Comic Strip Capers: An interactive comic strip where the students choose the words and change the story.  A fun way to motivate reluctant readers to practice prosody and fluency.

    Story Place Topsy Turvy Tales: Choose characters and read an animated story you helped create.