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Using repeated reading

 

Introduction
 

Repeated reading is a group or individual activity where learners

 
  • read a text with a fluent reader, and then
  • re-read the text alone until they can read it as fast as the fluent reader did.
 

Repeating a passage until they can read it quickly helps readers develop

 
Guidelines
 

Here are some guidelines to follow when you use repeated reading:

 
  • Choose, or let the learners choose, stories that are

    • about 50-200 words long, and
    • relatively easy for the learner at first, then
  • Choose progressively more difficult materials as the learners advance.
  • Read the passage with the learner the first time for comprehension. Once they understand what they are reading, learners can then concentrate on reading quickly.
  • Emphasize the learners' reading speed rather than their accuracy.
Steps
  Here are the steps to follow to use repeated reading:
 
  1. Have the learners read along with
    • a fluent reader, or
    • a cassette tape of a fluent reader.
  2. Give the learners a time goal which is the same length of time it would take a fluent reader to read the passage at a moderate pace.
  3. Have the learners read the same passage alone until they are able to read the passage in the specified time.
  4. When the time goal is reached, repeat the process with a new passage.
See also
 
Sources
 

Context for this page:

Go to SIL home page This page is an extract from the LinguaLinks Library, Version 4.0, published on CD-ROM by SIL International, 1999. [Ordering information.]

Page content last modified: 16 March 1999

© 1999 SIL International