There are a lot of resource books out there for fluency practice. A lot of them 
are from Scholastic. My reading specialist recommends reading Rosinski 
(spelling?) since he is the current "guru".
 
I have just started having my kids practice doing fluency practice with each 
other during their independent reading time. The reading specialist taught the 
kids she recieved for pullouts and it worked really well. I have a chart she 
made that has a coloring scale for 4 seperate times and at the bottom are some 
questions they have to answer after timing their partner. Stuff like did I read 
too fast, could the listener understand me, could I retell the book and a few 
more. There are three smiley faces they can color in depending on their answer.
 
HTH,
Tina Tx/3rd


----- Original Message ----
From: Celeste <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Mosaic <mosaic@literacyworkshop.org>
Sent: Sunday, October 1, 2006 10:21:18 AM
Subject: [MOSAIC] Fluency practice


I teach 2nd grade and am looking for activities for parents/ 
volunteers to do with students to build and improve fluency both in  
the classroom and at home.

What are some things you do with your students?

Celeste
Ü

Yesterday is history.
Tomorrow is a mystery.
Today is a gift,
That's why it's called the present


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