Purposes of the Reading Recovery Lesson
Components
I. Rereading of Familiar Text
- promotes fluency which aids in comprehension
- provides practice in bringing reading behaviors together
(orchestration)
- encourages confidence and promotes independence
- allows attention to features of print or story not
previously attended to
II. Running Record of New Book from Previous
Lesson
- gives child opportunity to organize and control his own
reading behavior independently
- allows teacher to observe child's strategies and check
for any processing problems
- following reading, teacher has opportunity to reinforce
learning and to prompt for new learning on 1-2 points
- shows accuracy and self-correction rate
- helps teacher gauge child's progress
- helps teacher plan instruction
III. Letter Identification/Making and
Breaking
- establishes some letters to begin to work with
- learning about print and how words work
- learning how to get to new words from known words
- understanding the process of word construction
IV. Sentence Writing/Cut-up Story
- emphasizes the relationship between reading and writing
- helps child build sound/letter relationships; helps to
sort out letter/word confusions
- helps child learn to read using own natural language and
experiences
- promotes word analysis and fluency practice
- reinforces concepts of: directionality, sequencing, one
to one match, punctuation, monitoring behaviors
- assists in breaking oral language into segments
V. Orientation to New Text and First Reading
- supports the child so that there is a minimum of new
things to learn
- encourages use of reading strategies on novel text... an
opportunity to problem solve...to do reading work
- promotes independence
- allows teacher to reinforce, shape up and improve
processing strategies