Reading Fluency: More Than Automaticity? More Than a Concern for the Primary Grades?

Reading fluency has traditionally been viewed as a goal of reading that is taught and mastered in the elementary grades. In this article we challenge that notion by exploring the role of reading fluency as a contributor to reading proficiency and difficulty among intermediate and middle grade students. We assessed reading fluency development among a large number of third-, fifth-, and seventh-grade students, using prosody (expressiveness in oral reading) rather than reading rate (word recognition automaticity) as a measure of reading fluency. We found moderately strong correlations between fluency and silent reading comprehension as measured by a standardized achievement test at all three grade levels. Our findings suggest that reading fluency appears to be a significant variable in upper elementary and middle grade students' reading. Moreover, the findings add to mounting evidence that prosody is an important component in the full manifestation of reading fluency. Both components of fluency, automaticity and prosody, should be considered in measures of reading fluency and in instructional methodologies for improving reading fluency. We suggest that more research is called for into the role of reading fluency among adolescent students, especially those students experiencing difficulty in achieving high levels of literacy. We also call for continued research into the role of prosody in students' reading achievement.

[1]  J. Chall Stages of reading development , 1983 .

[2]  Paula J Schwanenflugel,et al.  Prosody of Syntactically Complex Sentences in the Oral Reading of Young Children. , 2006, Journal of educational psychology.

[3]  C. Skinner,et al.  The effects of listening while reading and repeated reading on the reading fluency of adult learners , 2006 .

[4]  Melanie R. Kuhn Helping Students Become Accurate, Expressive Readers: Fluency Instruction for Small Groups , 2004 .

[5]  S. Deno,et al.  Curriculum-Based Measurement: The Emerging Alternative , 1985, Exceptional children.

[6]  Susan P. Homan,et al.  Using an Interactive Singing Software Program: A Comparative Study of Struggling Middle School Readers , 2008 .

[7]  Timothy V. Rasinski,et al.  Oral reading in the school literacy curriculum , 2003 .

[8]  T. Rasinski A study of factors involved in reader-text interactions that contribute to fluency in reading / , 1985 .

[9]  Peter A. Schreiber,et al.  Understanding Prosody's Role in Reading Acquisition , 1991 .

[10]  Peter A. Schreiber,et al.  On the Acquisition of Reading Fluency , 1980 .

[11]  D. Marston,et al.  A curriculum-based measurement approach to assessing academic performance: What it is and why do it. , 1989 .

[12]  Timothy V. Rasinski,et al.  A Focus on Fluency: How One Teacher Incorporated Fluency With Her Reading Curriculum , 2004 .

[13]  Steven A. Stahl,et al.  Teaching Children to Become Fluent and Automatic Readers , 2006, Journal of literacy research : JLR.

[14]  Peter A. Schreiber,et al.  Children’s use of phonetic cues in spelling, parsing, and — Maybe — Reading , 1980 .

[15]  Timothy V. Rasinski,et al.  Training teachers to attend to their students’ oral reading fluency , 1991 .

[16]  Steven A. Stahl,et al.  Making It Sound Like Language: Developing Fluency. , 2002 .

[17]  Paula J Schwanenflugel,et al.  Becoming a fluent and automatic reader in the early elementary school years. , 2006, Reading research quarterly.

[18]  Nancy Padak,et al.  Is Reading Fluency a Key for Successful High School Reading , 2005 .

[19]  Karen M. Whalley,et al.  The role of prosodic sensitivity in children’s reading development , 2006 .

[20]  Sarah L. Dowhower Speaking of prosody: Fluency's unattended bedfellow , 1991 .

[21]  Dc Washington National Reading Panel. , 2000 .

[22]  Timothy V. Rasinski,et al.  Assessing Reading Fluency. , 2004 .

[23]  Nancy D. Padak,et al.  How Elementary Students Referred for Compensatory Reading Instruction Perform on School-Based Measures of Word Recognition, Fluency, and Comprehension. , 1998 .

[24]  Steven A. Stahl,et al.  Fluency: A review of developmental and remedial practices. , 2003 .

[25]  Andreas Oranje,et al.  Fourth-Grade Students Reading Aloud: NAEP 2002 Special Study of Oral Reading. The Nation's Report Card. NCES 2006-469. , 2005 .

[26]  S. Jay Samuels,et al.  Toward a theory of automatic information processing in reading , 1974 .

[27]  Phyllis K. Mirkin,et al.  Identifying Valid Measures of Reading , 1982, Exceptional children.

[28]  T. Rasinski Reading fluency instruction: Moving beyond accuracy, automaticity, and prosody , 2006 .

[29]  Sarah L. Dowhower REPEATED READING REVISITED: RESEARCH INTO PRACTICE , 1994 .