Fluency Research PDF
Fluency Research PDF
Research Brief
Marcie Penner-Wilger
Cognitive Scientist
AutoSkill International Inc.
February 2008
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to: Marcie Penner-Wilger at AutoSkill International Inc.,
Suite 600B, 555 Leggett Drive, Ottawa, ON, Canada, K2K 2X3.
E-mail: [email protected]
Reading Fluency: A Bridge from Decoding to Comprehension
Abstract
Reading fluency forms a bridge from decoding to comprehension (Rasinski, 2004). The purpose of this
paper is to provide a practical review of research, theory, and instructional practice related to reading fluency.
In this review paper, reading fluency is defined, along with a discussion of the necessary component
skills. Research on the importance of fluency to reading outcomes, including performance on state tests,
is summarized. Practical information on fluency assessment, instructional approaches shown to improve
fluency, and interventions for students with poor reading fluency, is included in this review.
Accuracy of decoding refers to the ability to correctly generate a phonological representation of each word,
either because it is part of the reader’s sight-word vocabulary or by use of a more effortful decoding strategy
such as sounding out the word. Skills required for accuracy of decoding include: alphabetic principles, the
ability to blend sounds, the ability to use cues to identify words in text, and a large sight-word vocabulary
of high-frequency words (Torgesen & Hudson, 2006). Accurate decoding is a requirement for building the
next component of reading fluency – automaticity.
Automaticity of word recognition refers to the ability to quickly recognize words automatically, with little
cognitive effort or attention. Automaticity is gained through practice to the point where previously effortful
tasks, such word decoding, become fast and effortless – freeing up cognitive resources for other tasks, such
as text comprehension. Automaticity requires quick and accurate identification of individual words as well
as speed and fluidity in reading connected text (Torgesen & Hudson, 2006). Automaticity is a requirement
for building the next component of reading fluency – prosody – as the automatic decoding of words frees
up attentional resources required for prosody.
Prosody of oral text reading refers to naturalness of reading, or the ability to read with proper phrasing
and expression, imbuing text with suitable volume, stress, pitch and intonation. Prosody is an indicator
that the reader is actively constructing the meaning of a passage as they read (Torgesen & Hudson, 2006).
Indeed, prosody may both serve as an indicator that a student is comprehending as they read and also aid
comprehension (Rasinski, 2004).
Reading fluency is situational (Samuels, 2006; Topping, 2006). For example, though your reading of this
article is fluent, the reading of some academic articles is likely to be fluent only for those with specific
subject-matter expertise. Sources of variability in fluency within an individual include: readability level of
the text (proportion of words that can be recognized automatically, by sight), the student’s familiarity with
the topic (sight-word vocabulary and ability to use context to aid word identification), and the priority the
student gives to speed versus accuracy in the specific situation (Topping, 2006).
Sources of variability in fluency across students include: the size of a student’s sight-word vocabulary,
individual variations in processing speed of word recognition, speed of decoding processes for unknown
words, ability to use context to aid word identification, ability and speed with which word meanings are
retrieved, ability and speed with which overall meaning is constructed, and a student’s relative priority of
speed versus accuracy (Topping, 2006). Of the sources of variability across students, sight-word reading
efficiency, a measure of both the size of readers’ sight-word vocabulary and the speed with which individual
words could be recognized, has the strongest relation with reading fluency for children in Grades 2 – 7
(rs .71-.89; Torgesen, Rashotte, & Alexander, 2001).
LaBerge and Samuels (1974) applied the concept of automaticity to the reading process. Fluent readers are
able to simultaneously decode and comprehend text. Given that both decoding and comprehension are
difficult tasks, at least one task must be automatic in fluent readers. In beginning and struggling readers, the
task of decoding uses most if not all attentional resources, allowing few resources for comprehension. Through
extensive practice, readers become automatic decoders, able to quickly recognize a large lexicon of words.
When decoding is automatic, attentional resources are available for comprehension, and metacognition
(active monitoring and regulation of one’s own reading). Decoding has a reciprocal relation with
comprehension; when reading in an area of expertise, comprehension can aid decoding.
To become automatic decoders, able to automatically generate a phonological representation of each word,
readers must learn the distinctive features of letters and then of words. With practice, letters and then
words become unitized -- seen as a holistic unit rather than a collection of features. Fluent readers have
unitized high frequency words. Thus, to develop fluency readers require letter familiarity, phonemic awareness,
and phonics, along with a vocabulary of high frequency words, knowledge of word parts and spelling
patterns (rimes and phonographs), decoding strategies, and oral language skills (Ehri, 1995, 1998).
A key reason that fluency is viewed as a critical component of reading programs is that fluency is associated
with reading outcomes, including comprehension. Pinnell et al. (1995) found that fluency was significantly
associated with reading proficiency; more fluent readers scored higher on the NAEP reading assessment.
Fuchs, Fuchs, and Maxwell (1998) also found a strong relation between fluency and comprehension
(r = .91). Allington (1983) increased awareness of the importance of fluency in proficient reading, concluding
that fluency instruction shows great promise for improving the performance of struggling readers.
Reading fluency is correlated with reading outcomes on state tests. Stage and Jacobsen (2001) found that
fluency scores were correlated with fourth-grade reading scores on the Washington Assessment of Student
Learning (WASL). McGlinchey and Hixon (2004) found that fluency scores were correlated with fourth-
grade reading scores on the Michigan Educational Assessment Program (MEAP). In a large longitudinal
study of students in Grades 3, 5 ,7 and 8, Silberglitt et al. (2006) found that fluency scores significantly
predicted performance on the Minnesota Comprehensive Assessments – Reading (MCA-R; rs .50-.68).
Fluency was the dominant factor accounting for individual differences in reading comprehension on the
FCAT, accounting for 56 % of variance in third-grade reading scores and remaining dominant in seventh
grade. Thus, reading fluency robustly predicts performance on state reading tests across grades and states.
• Accuracy, or percentage of words read correctly, is calculated as words correct divided by the total
number of words read (WCPM/total).
• Rate is simply the number of words read correctly in one minute (WCPM).
• Prosody is assessed using a qualitative rubric, two of which are provided: the NAEP four-point rubric
and the Zutell and Rasinski (1991) multidimensional fluency rubric.
Given the ease of administration and interpretation, these assessments can be repeated throughout the
school year using different grade-level passages, meeting the recommendation for regular fluency assessment.
Alternative fluency assessment tools are available, including the Gray Oral Reading Test (Wiederholt &
Bryant, 2003), a standardized test that assesses accuracy, rate, and comprehension. The Dynamic Indicators
of Basic Early Literacy Skills (DIBELS; Good & Kaminsky, 2002) is a widely used test of fluency, yet is criti-
cized for measuring only the speed component of fluency, providing a potentially misleading and invalid
measure (Allington, 2006; Pressley, et al., 2005; Samuels, 2006).
Repeated Oral Reading. There is a wealth of evidence that repeated reading, in various forms, increases
reading fluency. A meta-analysis (NICHD, 2000) showed that repeated oral reading practice has a significant
positive effect on accuracy (d = .55), fluency (d = .44), and comprehension (d = .35). Samuels (1979) found
that repeated reading, performed to a criterion of 95 wpm, produced a significant increase in accuracy,
automaticity, and prosody. Importantly, the practice generalized to new passages, with students requiring
fewer readings to reach criterion. O’Shea, Sindelar, and O’Shea (1985) determined that students show
the same fluency improvements after four repeated readings, rather than using a speed (wpm) criterion.
Chomsky (1978) found that repeated reading, while simultaneously listening to an audiotape of the same
text read by a fluent reader, increased students’ fluency both on the practiced text and on new passages.
Schreiber (1980, 1991) found that practice increased awareness of prosody, in addition to increasing students’
fluency and comprehension. Downhower (1989, 1994) reviewed the available research on the efficacy of
repeated reading in the primary and middle grades; repeated reading led to increased accuracy, automaticity,
and comprehension of literal and higher-level meanings. Importantly, these improvements extended to
unpracticed text. The National Reading Panel concluded that repeated reading had a significant positive
impact on fluency and other reading outcomes in elementary school for both struggling and non-struggling
readers. For struggling readers, repeated reading had a significant positive impact into high school
(NICHD, 2000).
Independent Reading. The National Reading Panel (NICHD, 2000) stated that there was not sufficient
evidence to conclude that independent reading increases fluency. In a response to the NRP, Samuels and
Wu (2003) evaluated the effect of independent reading with third- and fifth-grade students over a period of
six months. The experimental group read independently for 40 minutes per day, whereas the control group
read independently for 15 minutes per day. There was an interaction between reading ability and time
spent reading. Children with below-level reading ability did not show improvements with more time spent
reading, whereas children with above-level reading did show improvement on the Standardized Test of
Assessment of Reading (STAR), Metropolitan Achievement Test (MAT) vocabulary, and fluency (CBM) with
more time spent reading, but not on the Woodcock-Johnson word recognition test. Thus, there is evidence
that independent reading improves some components of fluency and level of reading achievement for
higher-skilled students, but not for lower-skilled students.
Students can fail to develop accuracy, due to decoding problems. Students with dyslexia are especially at
risk of failure at the accuracy stage. These struggling readers need interventions that build decoding skills,
including letter familiarity, phonemic awareness, and phonics instruction, that will allow them to unitize
their representations of letters and words (Ehri, 1995, 1998; Palumbo & Willcutt, 2006).
Students who fall behind can fail to develop automaticity even once accuracy has been achieved.
Struggling readers have difficulty developing automaticity because there is a large gap between the sight-
word vocabularies that they have developed and those of their normally-achieving peers. These struggling
readers need interventions that increase the number of words that they are repeatedly exposed to, allowing
them to expand their sight-word vocabularies and “close the gap” (Palumbo & Willcutt, 2006). English
Language Learners (ELL) often struggle to build fluency due to lagging vocabularies. Interventions that
increase word exposure as well as build word comprehension are helpful for ELL students and other
students that have yet to build automaticity (Palumbo & Willcutt, 2006).
Students who have achieved automaticity may still struggle with prosody. Prosody is dependent on oral
language skills that may be underdeveloped in some readers, especially ELL students who take 6-8 years
to achieve the oral-skill level of their peers (Collier, 1987). Interventions that include the modeling of
fluent reading along with practice and feedback are helpful for these students (Palumbo & Willcutt, 2006;
Rasinski, 2004).
In summary, students may fail to achieve reading fluency for a variety of reasons. Early assessment and
intervention is crucial given that the component skills of fluency build upon one another. Fluency
assessments that provide specific information about accuracy, automaticity, and prosody levels can allow
educators to identify where failures occur and to guide intervention strategies.
Conclusion
Reading fluency is the ability to decode and comprehend text simultaneously. Thus, reading fluency forms
a bridge from decoding skills to comprehension (Rasinski, 2004). Fluency is comprised of three component
skills or indicators: accuracy of decoding, automaticity of decoding, and prosody of oral text. Reading
fluency is a crucial component of instructional reading programs and should be assessed regularly in the
classroom. Quick and easy assessment of all components of reading fluency can be performed using a
one-minute oral reading passage. Instructional and intervention approaches for improving reading fluency
exist which have been scientifically evaluated for efficacy.
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