Have you heard about the “decoding threshold?” I hadn’t. Basically, some kids in grades 3-12 never developed strong decoding skills and thus are going to struggle to make progress in literacy without targeted intervention. And if you picture a typical middle school English teacher trying to teach the theme of The Outsiders, it’s not too hard to imagine that they don’t have a lot of confidence in how to help the kids below the decoding threshold develop those skills.
Here’s where the ROAR comes in. Stanford’s Rapid Online Assessment of Reading is free. It takes 5 minutes. It tells teachers which kids are below the decoding threshold so that they know which kids are going to need some intervention. A good question is what exactly should that intervention be, but I am confident we can not figure that out if we don’t even know which kids need help.
I took the ROAR Word, and I thought it was really fun. Don’t judge. Try it yourself here: https://lnkd.in/gzgtmdfA
Principal Psychometric Associate at Law School Admission Council
2 days ago
This was really fun! And just as I was wondering....what was the research process behind this, I reached the end of the assessment and the link to the ROAR research page. Well done! 😉
Disability Rights Advocate, Teacher, Future Civil Rights Lawyer
4 days ago
Yesssss 🙌
I actually caused a big stink at the high school I was at over this very same problem.
Over half the kids were below a 6th grade reading level and the teacher was teaching at a 10th grade level with no scaffolding.
None.
I was the ed specialist in the classroom and I was disgusted.
At first I tried to kindly suggest improvement.
But she was passive aggressive and my cptsd does not deal with that s***.
Don't try to manipulate me. I know what you're doing.
San Diego Unified School District