Using the Five Components of Reading as a Guide to Planning
Do you base your instruction on the five components of reading? We all teach reading, but do we intentionally design our instruction around each component to ensure we are offering a “complete package”? Reading instruction, according to brain science, needs to be intentional, systematic, and comprehensive. My classroom changed when I changed my view of instruction. Previously, my reading instruction was a medley of phonics, comprehension, phonemic awareness, vocabulary, and fluency. I thought I covered everything, but I realized it was by chance. Teach the letter sounds, some blending, some decoding, integrate some writing, do some repeated readings, ask a few comprehension questions. I was sure I was offering a total package. UNTIL I started identifying which component was my focus. It was then that I realized that I was offering experiences, but not really instructing the skills of reading. I was using some great strategies, but everything was “jumbled” together. My instruction, and student learning, blossomed when I developed lessons that focused on the the components of reading instead of the activity. I still was able to do all the fun things I did previously, however, now by giving those activities focus and purpose those same activities had a substantial increase in effectiveness.
Determining instructional focus doesn’t mean the abandonment of reading series, resources, unit plans, or current routines. On the contrary, intentional instruction augments those opportunities currently offered to students. Most times, instructional focus can come directly from the resources themselves. The change in our practice comes with recognizing when resources provides that focus for us. Research based curriculum addresses each of the five components of reading, but, often doesn’t come out and tell us what they are addressing. The teacher’s guide will tell us the standard being targeted, but like the standards, doesn’t tell us which of the five components are receiving the attention. Most series are overwritten, requiring teachers to pick and choose what components they will relay to students. Identifying intentional instruction helps guide us in making those decisions.
Knowing the five components is critical to intentional reading instruction. 1. Phonemic Awareness 2. Phonics 3. Comprehension 4. Vocabulary 5. Fluency. Each component plays a crucial role in successful reading. However, without intentional instruction, it becomes easy to overlook a particular aspect of reading. Intentional design does not mean we only teach one component during the day. However, it allows us to plan for what should be new instruction, what should be remedial, and what should be practice. For instance, if I determine that phonics is the essential component of the day’s instruction and am introducing new skills, I would plan for reviewing the recently taught comprehension strategy rather than try to introduce a completely new one. Focus determined the newly presented information and the bulk of the instructional time.
Presented are some examples of how I modified activities and lessons after planning within an intentional instruction framework. Again, as in any elementary classroom, many things were happening during the reading block; but, intentional instruction ensured that I knew exactly what precise skills I would introduce and practice.
Phonemic Awareness: I determined that the intentional instruction would focus on rhyme. We practiced identifying rhyming words, played rhyming games, and sang some songs. However, identifying the focus drove my phonics lesson to be a review of the at word family and used initial letter replacement skills as phonemic awareness review skill to make rhyming words. Our selected text for the day included a mix of rhyme and non-rhyme stanzas that we used to identify rhyming words. These were texts they were familiar with, thus promoting fluency through repeated readings. Our independent reading consisted of predictable text that included rhyming and non-rhyme text to foster rhyme discrimination. Without intentional instruction, each activity would have been disconnected and would not have been a proper mix between new and reviewed information.
Phonics: A systematic approach to phonics determined that a new skill would be introduced. After introducing the skill, students were given phonetic readers for their independent reading that had a mix of review and practice. We spent a majority of our time on phonics activities like making words and developing a word bank that followed the newly introduced skill. Our comprehension strategy was reviewed during our read aloud.
Fluency: We did not introduce any new information or skills, but instead reviewed our phonics skills. Students were given repeated readings, familiar text, and leveled readers for practice. Comprehension strategies were reviewed during our read aloud with the teacher reading.
Comprehension: The teacher’s guide called for introducing one of the seven comprehension strategies. We used the Basal reader to introduce the comprehension strategy. A basal was the preferred text as it provided a complex text that could be started, analysed, and finished all in one sitting. Because the focus was on comprehension and not decoding, the text was read aloud by the teacher to the entire class. We later practiced the comprehension strategy in our read aloud. Independent reading was student selected, at level text. A majority of our time was spent in independent reading with student/teacher conferencing revolving around the application of the introduced comprehension strategy of inferring. Phonics work was review and practice for a single rotation during workshop.
Vocabulary: Vocabulary would be tied to a comprehension focus days. We would ensure that students are having above level text as a read aloud to identify words to add to their vocabulary. On this particular day, we reviewed two of the seven comprehension strategies but taught a new vocabulary strategy while connecting root words to our text. During workshop, students did short rotation of phonics review and a writing prompt focusing on vocabulary skill building.
Intentional instruction in my classroom took place during a 90 minute block. I would use the first 30 minutes for routines and then provide my direct instruction. The remaining 60 minutes used a Daily 5 model with four rotations: Reading, writing, word work, and differentiated reading. Determining which of the five components were serve as a focus helped drive the direct instruction and subsequent practice activities. While is may seem overly simplistic and obvious to some, Intentional Instruction in each of the five components of reading dramatically changed my classroom for the better.