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Consists of three steps: identificaiton, apprasial, and diagnosis |
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Part of the diagnostic pattern; the act of determining the student's present level of performance in word recognition and comprehensionfor screening purposes |
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Part of the diagnostic pattern; a student's present reading performance in relation to his or her potential |
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English language learners |
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Children whose home language is not English |
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use of evaluations other than standardized test to acheive direct assessment of student performace on important learning tasks. |
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Helps teachers to measure students' important abilities using procedures that stimulate the application of these abilities to real-life situations. |
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involves actual demonstrations by students of their knowledge or skils in a particular area; a synonym for authentic assessment. |
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A storage system that represents samples of student reading and writing over a period of time. |
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Material in a portfolio is evaluated in some way. |
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A technique that helps teachers collect data about students' behavior. |
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a record of obseved bahavior over a period of time. |
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A meansfor systematically and qickly recording a studet's behavior; it is usually a list that the observer records as a present or absent. |
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An evaluative instrument used to record estimates of particular aspects of a student's behavior. |
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Teachers converse with students to learn about their interests and feelings |
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A statement or questionnairemethod that helps teachers learn about likes and dislikes. |
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A method in which the individual tends to put himself or herself into the situation and reveal how he or she feels. |
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Students write or tell about their feelings and attempt to analyze their reading problems. |
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The development of the association of print with meaning that beigns early in a child's life and continues until the child reaches the stage of conventional reading and writing. |
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Children demonstrate behavior that show that they are ready for reading instruction |
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Precursor to reading; before formal reading begins. |
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A group of stimuli with common characteristics |
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refers to development in thinking |
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these structured designs are the cognitive arrangements by which the mind is able to categorize incoming stimuli. |
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A continuous process which helps the individual to integrate new incoming stimuli to existing concepts |
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The developing of new categories by a child rather than integrating them into existing ones. |
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According to Piage, a balance between assimilation and accomodation in cognitive development. |
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Nonconventional writing tat includes scribbling and nonphonetic letterings. |
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learning to spell isongoing and based on the cognitive development of the child. |
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The understanding thatthere is a structure used to tell stores and that stories and the stories are written to be understood. |
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Directed listening/thinking approach |
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Requires teachers to ask questions before during and after a talk. |
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informal reading inventory |
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A valuable aid in helping teachers determine a student's reading leavles and his or her strengths and weeknesses. It usually consists of oral and silent reading passages seected from basal readers from the preprimer to the eighth-grade levels. |
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Independent reading level |
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Level at which a child reads successfully without any assistance |
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The child reads with many word recognition and comprehension errors. |
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The highest level at which a learner can understand material when it is read aloud to him or her. |
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The area that falls between the instructional and the frustration levels. |
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Given to determine a childs comprehension through listening. |
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a process that helps teachers lean how readers get meaning from language |
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an unexpected response to print. |
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Documentation of a child's reading. |
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