Early readers who have significant or multiple disabilities should receive 20-30 minutes of intensive, individualized guided reading instruction every day, alone or in small groups (i.e., 2-3 students who have similar abilities and needs in reading). To maximize learning, teachers make careful decisions about texts for each lesson (e.g., appropriate level of challenge, engaging topics, print or digital format). Teachers also shape lessons carefully to model, teach and support student's growing understanding of the reading process (e.g., how readers solve unknown words, how readers think about what they read before, during and after reading to construct meaning, how to read fluently, how to read silently). Guided Reading Routine for Early Readers (elementary or secondary age)

Book introduction (5 minutes) Teacher helps students to preview text together to support success when reading on their own. The book introduction may include one or more of the following: a brief oral summary of the story, a picture walk to look at and discuss some or most pictures, previewing key words or difficult text (e.g., character names, 1-2 unfamiliar vocabulary words for meaning or sight reading; pointing out and practicing a repeating pattern in the text, activating or building background knowledge related to the content of the text, partially completing a graphic organizer together).

During reading (10-15 minutes) Students all read the book AT THE SAME TIME in a quiet voice. Each student reads at his or her own pace. (This is not choral reading in one voice.) The teacher listens in to one student at a time (others keep reading to themselves quietly. When needed, the teacher "coaches" the student to use strategies to support the reading process. For example, if a student says a word that does not make sense, the teacher may wait until the end of the sentence or page to see if he will notice and attempt to self-correct. If not, the teacher then may prompt the student to re-read the sentence. (Can you read that page again? [Student re-reads with same miscue.] Teacher: A dog can WENT? Hmmm Does that make sense? A dog can w____... Let's look at the picture. The dog is on a leash. What is the dog doing? (Student: walk). Maybe-walk starts with /w/--Do you want to try WALK in this sentence and see if that makes sense?... Student re-reads sentence with "walk." A dog can walk. Teacher: Does that make sense? Yes-and this word (points) looks like "walk"-It begins with /w/ and ends with /k/ "w-al-k" Does it match the picture? Yes the dog in the picture is walking. That's what good readers do. If it doesn't make sense, read it again and fix it up. Reading has to make sense. The student continues to read. (The teacher need not listen to every student read the whole book.) When other students finish reading, they continue to re-read the book if the teacher is still listening to another student.

Discussion (5-10 minutes) After reading, the teacher models and supports discussion about the book. This is to invite connections and responses to reading (not to quiz students for comprehension). For a narrative text, the teacher may lead discussion of some story elements. (E.g., Who were some of the characters in the book? Who was your favorite character? Why?) Or the teacher could lead the students in sequencing events in a narrative story (written on sentence strips, read, discussed and rearranged. "Let's read these two. What happened first? Or the teacher could ask students to retell the story in their own words (with support). For expository texts, the teacher could ask students to tell something they learned-or engage the students in completing a graphic organizer together (teacher writes) as they talk about what they learned. Students might use "look backs" in the text to recall ideas.

                                                      FROGS

LOOK LIKE,  WHERE THEY LIVE,  WHAT THEY EAT

green pond flies

shiny swamp bugs

wet lake

Writing Connection - Students construct a brief message related to the reading. This could be a reader response (e.g.,  something she liked, learned or was reminded of); or a summary or fact.