Sage Advice: Reading and Writing Proficiency

What works to ensure that middle school and high school students are proficient in reading and writing?

published 4/11/2007
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What works to ensure that middle school and high school students are proficient in reading and writing?
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Keep it simple at first. Find them material that interests them. Give them time to read. Forget about tests until they gain confidence in their ability!

Bobbi Anderson

Sixth-grade Teacher, Sevier Middle School
Greenville, South Carolina

Reading is a skill. Skills improve with practice. Miserable, bored people practice less. Here's what works: public libraries, school libraries, librarians, a wide array of reading material -- comic books, books about weird or disgusting animals, skateboarding magazines, Guinness Book of World Records. Great literature? No, but look who's practicing their reading.

Doe Myers

Library Aide
La Entrada Middle School
Menlo Park, California

The three Rs (from the International Center for Leadership in Education): relevance (lots of practice with interesting reading materials on their reading level), rigor (exposure to grade-level content with comprehension supports and alternate ways to demonstrate their knowledge), and relationships (a caring teacher who makes it possible for them to take risks and learn to do something difficult).

Molly Wilson

Instructional Supervisor
Warren County Schools
Bowling Green, Kentucky

Parents of poor readers do not foster a reading environment at home. They don't set aside time for children to read, instead letting them watch television and play on their Game Boys. Until parents insist on quality reading time at home, any progress made at school will fizzle.

Denise Eldon

English Teacher
William S. Hart Union High School District
Santa Clarita, California

The answer is simply an entire staff that believes it is collectively responsible for teaching children to read and write better. We need to move away from the mentality that it is only the English department's job to work with students on reading and writing. We must all take a more active and involved role in helping our students achieve.

Mary Anne Steinberg

Human Resources Development
FDLRS/Springs
Reddick, Florida

Create a system for small classes and individualized instruction to ensure that every child is learning.

Kirsten McCawley Shore

Early-Elementary Teacher
Morgantown Learning Academy
Morgantown, West Virginia

I must read, read, read, just so I can talk books with the kids. If I can suggest even one book students like, they will usually continue to accept recommendations with the added stipulation that if something doesn't grab them, they should put it down and try something else. I try to stock books by prize-winning authors and gently push my best readers toward them. Even in high school, we offer DEAR (Drop Everything and Read) periods with our low-level and reluctant readers. It works.

Woody Plaut

Librarian
Konawaena High School
Kealakekua, Hawaii

It's important to give students opportunities to shine at whatever their proficiency level happens to be, while encouraging them to improve. Audiobooks and texts -- used in conjunction so that students can read the text while it is being read aloud -- can be a tremendous aid for those who are slow to read.

April Lufkin Miller

History Department Chair
Alabama School of Fine Arts
Birmingham, Alabama

Require them to read and write! There is so much emphasis on standardized tests with multiple-choice answers. It is difficult to get students to read and reflect on their reading. If we have to do it as an in-class activity, maybe that's what it takes.

Pamlea Stover

Fine Arts Director
Cathedral High School
El Paso, Texas

See the Library Research Service's School Library Impact Studies page (www.lrs.org/impact.asp). It is all there.

Richard Moore

Retired High School and County Librarian
Huntingotn, Beach, California

Struggling readers of any age need phonemic awareness, letter-sound knowledge, and the ability to blend sounds. If a student is lacking in any of these areas, we solidify these concepts first. We use a multisensory, structured, sequential language curriculum, such as the Wilson Reading System, to teach reading, writing, and comprehension skills.These students begin the program at their instructional-reading level and progress slowly, moving onto subsequent levels only after achieving fluency in reading and spelling. Applying phonics rules fluently and automatically is key for understanding text.

Kathy Campbell, Barbara Fuller, and Nora Schlesinger

Reading Specialists
New Way Learning Academy
Scottsdale, Arizona

Students need well-funded school-library programs. Fund it and they will read! Reading improves writing; see Stephen D. Krashen's book, The Power of Reading. Thirty years of research proves that good library programs improve student achievement (visit www.lrs.org). The National Council of Teachers of English recently wrote a resolution about school libraries at www.ncte.org/about/over/positions/category/libr/123157.htm.

Irene Kwidzinski

Library Media Specialist
Northville School
New Milford, Connecticut

The key to getting students at any level to read and write is simply giving them something worth writing and reading about.The students who struggle with these activities get the most boring and uninspiring assignments. Take a very hard look at what is being asked and see whether the assignments inspire.

Phillip Harris

Executive Director
Association for Educational
Communications and Technology
Bloomington, Indiana
extra search terms: 
reading proficiency, tools for reading proficiency, literacy, writing, writing proficiency

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