Helping
Your Child Learn To Read
Edmonds
School District Reading Improvement Goals
How You Can Help
Your Child: Grades K-3
~ Read with your child every day.
~ Get the whole family involved in reading books
(or favorite parts of books) and read aloud
to each other.
~ Encourage your child to tell the story from the
pictures in a book.
~ Talk about the books your child reads or the
books you read aloud.
~ Ask questions.
Have your child make guesses about what will happen next.
~ Encourage your child to act out stories.
~ Play word games with your child.
~ Take your child to the library often. It is free, and has a wide selection of
books.
Helping Your
Child: Grades 4-6
~ Be a reading role model – make sure children see
you reading. Have lots of reading
materials around (newspapers, maps, magazines, books, catalogs).
~ Set a regular time for silent reading.
~ Get the whole family involved in reading books
(or favorite parts of books) and read aloud
to each
other.
~ Ask your child to talk about reading. Help your child look up answers to
questions.
~ Encourage your child to write about
reading. Write stories, letters, and
poems. Make
cards
and lists.
~ Take your child to the library on a regular
basis.
Here Are Some Good Ideas for Books:
Grades K-2
*Frog
and Toad Together by Arnold Lobel
*Little
Bear by E. H. Minarik
*Monarch
Butterfly by Gail Gibbons
*Nate
the Great Series by M. Weinman Sharmat
Grades 3-4
*Animal
Facts/Animal Fable by Seymour Simon
*Charlotte’s
Web by E.B. White
*Knots on a
Counting Rope by Bill Martin Jr. and John Archambault
*Mufaro’s
Beautiful Daughters by John Steptoe
Grades 5-6
*Journey to
Topaz by Yoshiko Uchida
*Roll of
Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred Taylor
*Where the
Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls
What the State
Requires:
Every school must set goals to increase the number
of fourth, seventh, and tenth grade students who are proficient readers. Fall 2004 is the next checkpoint to report
whether districts have met the reading goals.
A state test at grades 4, 7, and 10, the
Washington Assessment of Student Learning (WASL), is used to measure whether
students are meeting standards set for reading. This chart shows the reading improvement goals for Edmonds. The first state checkpoint was in 2001. The next checkpoint will be in 2004.
The
Percentage of Edmonds Students Who Met/Must Meet Reading WASL Standards
|
Grade |
2001 |
2004 |
|
4th |
71% |
78% |
|
7th |
37% |
53% |
|
10th |
69% |
77% |
Our Plan for
Meeting State Requirements:
To ensure that all students are successful in
learning to read, we have defined essential learnings at each grade level. We encourage schools to develop effective
strategies such as:
~ Clear reading expectations are communicated to students.
~ Students read a wide
Variety of materials including both reading for pleasure
and information
~ Students are given
time to read on a regular basis at school.
~ Reading time includes
teaching reading skills. It also
includes talking and writing
about what is read.
We have identified the following indicators of student reading
success to be important:
~ Students are able to read accurately and
smoothly at the expected level.
~ Students are able to understand what they
read at the expected level.
~ Students show a positive attitude toward
reading.