Rewards
Rewards
Michelle Terry
REWARDS
Reading
Excellence Word
Attack and
Rate Development Strategies
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REWARDS (Intermediate)
REWARDS (Original/Secondary) REWARDS Plus: Reading Strategies Applied to Social Studies Passages REWARDS Plus: Reading Strategies Applied to Science Passages
What is REWARDS?
Anita Archer
launched in 2000
in 4-12th grade
Have
mastered basic reading skills form 1st and 2nd grade but: have difficulty reading multisyllabic words read slowly
Special
Education Teachers
Paraeducators
Well-trained
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Tutors
When When
Whole group Small group Individually General Education Classrooms Special Education Classrooms
word recognition skills are one of the most pervasive of reading challenges. Its also necessary for comprehension On average, from fifth grade on, students encounter more than 10,000 new words (Nagy & Anderson, 1984) mostly multisyllabic content words decoding instruction stops in 2nd grade, but multisyllabic words increase.
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The ability to decode long words is the major difference between good and poor readers. Poor readers will read less Matthew Effect Rich get richer, poor get poorer Training can be completed for this program in one day. several opportunities to train
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Reviewed by Florida Center for Reading Research The programs are explicit, systematic, and offer repeated practice opportunities for decoding and fluency. The flexible decoding strategy teaches students to examine letters and patterns in words, rather than guessing from context. Both programs are easy to implement, teacher-friendly and can be used by a wide variety of professionals, paraprofessionals, and volunteers. Student progress is easily monitored, charted, and rewarded, thus increasing motivation. Florida uses the REWARDS program in 37/67 school districts
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Seventh, eighth, and ninth graders who were taught a decoding strategy for reading long words had fewer oral reading errors and increased reading comprehension (Lenz & Hughes, 1990) Significant increases in word reading accuracy and fluency were observed in sixth, seventh, and eighth graders using REWARDS program. (Vachon & Gleason, 2000)
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Reading deficient fourth and fifth graders who were taught the REWARDS strategies made significant gains over students receiving monosyllabic word instruction. (Archer, Gleason, Vachon, & Hollenbeck, 2000)
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