If the student’s average percent correct on the quiz is between 60% and 79% consider doing one or more of the following:
If vocabulary knowledge is impeding comprehension, have the student click on each vocabulary word (the blue words) before the student reads along during the Read Along step. This introduces the student to pertinent vocabulary before beginning to read the story.
Usually, continue level and support comprehension, but consider a lower level if the student needs extensive vocabulary growth and the student is new to Read Naturally Live.
If the student does not have vocabulary problems or is not an English language learner, consult the Comprehension Graphs when reviewing work with the student (on the tab behind the Story Details page). Analyze the student data to see what types of questions the student is struggling with: e.g., main idea, vocabulary, inferential. Provide some guidelines for the student to improve his or her performance on one type of question. Once the student has become more consistent at correctly answering that type of question, select another question type whose scores on the most current graph data are lower than 80% correct and provide instruction on that type of question.
A helpful document for showing students how to answer specific question types is the Strategy for Teaching Comprehension Questions. The Knowledgebase and FAQs on the Read Naturally website have additional information on supporting comprehension.
It is often worthwhile to give the whole group a quick lesson in HOW to answer the questions. See the Strategy for Teaching Comprehension Questions to understand the question types—they are the same types for each story.
For students who struggle with comprehension, consider changing the timing during practices and pass timings from one minute to whole-story timing if student motivation is not an issue. A one-minute timing is very motivating—the student is able to see significant growth in rate after only practicing a few times. A student who is reading the whole story for each practice needs to be willing to stick with long practices. However, a student who has whole-story timing enabled usually does much better on the comprehension questions because the student repeatedly reads all of the story, not just the beginning of the story.
The Working with Students on Comprehension Q&A section under Read Naturally Strategy Programs includes a detailed response to this question, including suggested instruction strategies.
Yes, changing the duration of the practice timing from one-minute to whole-story timing often helps a student understand the story more deeply, especially the longer stories. Since the student must read the whole story during the Practice and Pass steps (rather than reading just a portion of the story for each one-minute timing), this option is more appropriate as a student becomes more fluent and/or is reading in the higher levels.
Note: One-minute timings allow a student to quickly see improvement and are very motivating to beginning and struggling readers. Selecting whole-story timing may not be the best option for intervening with comprehension issues if the student is a beginning or unmotivated reader: implementing other comprehension interventions may be a better solution for readers who need immediate feedback.
See also: Read Live User Guide: Customizing the Program for Students
Read Live provides several ways for you to monitor a student’s progress in comprehension.
As you work through the Pass step with a student, you will review the student’s answer(s) to written response questions(s)—which provides you with an opportunity to informally evaluate whether a student might need intervention on written response questions.
As you review a student’s work on the Pass/Review Work page, you can review the student’s current story results with the student—to see if the student met the requirements for passing the Quiz. You can also review the Comprehension Graph that displays the student’s scores for all completed stories in the level. The Comprehension Graph shows the type(s) of questions the student answered correctly and the type(s) the student answered incorrectly.
Read Naturally Live reports include important information about a specific student's progress or the progress of a group of students. You can use the data from the reports to monitor a student’s progress in comprehension. Use the Students At-a-Glance Report to quickly identify students who may not be making adequate progress in comprehension and therefore may require adjustments in their programs or additional instruction. The Student Level reports and the Story Details report provide additional information.
See also: Read Live User Guide: Creating Read Naturally Live Reports
First, you should make sure that the student understands how to answer the questions. If each question type was not taught when the student was introduced to the Read Naturally program, do that now. Students often find the mechanics of answering questions #6 and #7 to be more difficult because the student needs to select multiple answers for these questions.
If a student is scoring at least 60% but below 80% and has completed only a few stories, comprehension scores will most likely increase (with minimal teacher guidance) to 80% or higher as the student better understands the program. However, if the student's scores remain in the 60 to 79% range on the most recent three stories on the Students At-a-Glance report, it is important to intervene. The intervention should include explicit instruction for the specific type(s) of questions that the student is struggling to answer correctly. Look at the student's Comprehension Graph to discover which types of questions the student struggles to answer.
Whenever a student's license is removed, her or his Lead Teacher is informed using the email address saved in the Read Live Staff Member Module. The email includes a list of all students whose licenses were removed at the same time.
That can happen when a student's Lead Teacher removes the license. It can also occur, though, for other reasons:
Teachers who have questions about removed student licenses should consult with School Coordinators or Account Administrators in their account.
No. Benchmark assessments can be good tools for identifying whether a student should work in Read Naturally Live, but they are not appropriate for placement.
The only way to correctly identify the level of material and goal for a student who is entering Read Naturally Live is to follow the defined placement process. Using the placement process, you place each student in an instructional level and reading-rate goal that are challenging enough to accelerate reading improvement but not so difficult that the student becomes discouraged.
Read Naturally Live includes a built-in placement test. The test can be administered relatively quickly. Correct placement is vital to the student’s success in Read Naturally Live.
When a student completes a story in Read Naturally Live, a Congratulations page appears with award badges for various aspects of the student’s work on the story. Badges can appear as a gold medallion, or as a medallion with blue ribbons. A gold medallion means the student met the basic requirement; ribbons mean the student went above and beyond the basic requirements.
Basic Requirement | Above & Beyond | |
---|---|---|
Accuracy | Student had 3 or fewer errors on the hot timing | Student had no errors on the hot timing |
Goal | Student met the goal on the hot timing | Student met the goal on the first try at the hot timing |
Expression | Student got an expression score of 2 or 3 on the hot timing | Student got an expression score of 4 on the hot timing |
Quiz | Student got all the quiz questions correct | Student got all the quiz questions correct on the first try |
Retell (non-Phonics stories only) | Student’s retelling of the story met teacher expectations | Student’s retelling of the story met teacher expectations on the first try |
Word List (Phonics stories only) | Student passed the word list | The student passed the word list on the first try |
Before the student completes the first Read Along, require the student to listen to the definition of each vocabulary word by clicking on each of the blue words in the story. It is not necessary for the student to read along, but merely to listen to the definition of each word. Understanding the meaning of the selected words is critical to understanding the meaning of the story.
The purpose of the Word List step is to reinforce the phonics patterns featured in the stories in the Phonics series. This step helps the student build automaticity in reading words with the featured phonics patterns.
Encourage students who struggle with decoding to pay careful attention to the information provided during the Key Words step. That step introduces the phonics elements with a short lesson on several words. The words used in the Key Words step are the first word in each Word List column.
If a student is unable to decode the words accurately, consider having that student click on each word in the Word List during the first word list practice. That way, the student can hear the words read before trying to read them independently.
By default in Read Naturally Live, the student must read the Phonics word list in 60 seconds during the Pass step. However, the student's lead teacher can change the timing duration to 75 seconds in Story Options (with the student logged in, click the Teacher link, log in, and click Change Story Options).
In Read Naturally Live, a student working in the Phonics levels is required to practice reading lists of words until the student can read the list in 60 seconds. Some students cannot meet this requirement even after practicing many times. After 10 practices, Read Naturally Live lets a student move on to the next step, even if he or she has not met the requirement.
If a student becomes extremely frustrated and, in your judgement, will not benefit from practicing ten times, consider setting a different expectation for the student. Examples include, but are not limited to, the following:
The student may also need some counseling about the importance of practice. Remind the student that reading words and passages multiple times will help the student become a better reader.
Candyce Ihnot has dealt with the same situation at a Minneapolis school. She consulted with the student’s speech therapist and decided to do the following:
Our goal, of course, is for students to spend as much time as possible actually reading text. If the task of typing in predictions and retells takes a large portion of the time allotted for Read Naturally fluency practice, you may want to consider making some modifications.
Please let us know what questions you have so we can assist. For Technical Support, please call us or submit a software support request.