1st Edition

The Role of Fluency in Reading Competence, Assessment, and instruction Fluency at the intersection of Accuracy and Speed: A Special Issue of scientific Studies of Reading

Edited By Edward J. Kame'enui, Deborah C. Simmons Copyright 2001
    88 Pages
    by Routledge

    88 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 2001. This is a special issue Volume 5, Number 3, from 2001 of Scientific Studies of Reading that looks at the DNA of reading fluency in scientific inquiry accounts. The contributors offer a selection of essays seeks to establish that that fluent reading is plainly developmental and represents an outcome of well-specified sub lexical and lexical processes and skills developed for most children over a bounded period of pedagogical time, rather than in just the school setting.

    Volume 5, Number 3, 2001
    Contents: E.J. Kame'enui, D.C. Simmons,
    Introduction to This Special Issue: The DNA of Reading Fluency. M. Wolf, T. Katzir-Cohen, Reading Fluency and Its Intervention. L.S. Fuchs, D. Fuchs, M.K. Hosp, J.R. Jenkins, Oral Reading Fluency as an Indicator of Reading Competence: A Theoretical, Empirical, and Historical Analysis. R.H. Good, III, D.C. Simmons, E.J. Kame'enui, The Importance and Decision-Making Utility of a Continuum of Fluency-Based Indicators of Foundational Reading Skills for Third-Grade High-Stakes Outcomes.

    Biography

    Edward J. Kame'enui, Deborah C. Simmons, both of the University of Oregon