The following is the proposed core curriculum for teacher candidates presented in Teaching Reading is Rocket Science: What Expert Teachers of Reading Should Know and Be Able to Do, published by the American Federation of Teachers. This curriculum can also serve as a roadmap for practicing teachers’ professional development experiences.
The curriculum is divided into four parts.
- The psychology of reading and reading development
- Knowledge of language structure and its application
- Practical skills of instruction in a comprehensive reading program
- Assessment of classroom reading and writing skills
Part I. The psychology of reading and reading development
- Cognitive characteristics of proficient reading
- Language proficiencies of good readers
- Eye movements and text scanning
- Active construction of meaning
- Flexibility and self-monitoring
- Cognitive characteristics of poor reading
- Variable language difficulties of poor readers
- Phonological processing, reading speed, and comprehension their manifestations and interrelationships
- Non-linguistic factors in reading difficulty
- Alternative hypotheses about reading difficulty, supported and unsupported
- Environmental and physiological factors in reading development
- Socioeconomic and environmental factors in reading
- Neurological studies of good and poor reading
- Familial factors in dyslexia
- The development of reading, writing, and spelling
- Emergent literacy
- Early alphabetic reading and writing
- Later alphabetic reading and writing
- Orthographic knowledge at the within-word level
- Orthographic knowledge at the syllable juncture level
- Orthographic knowledge at the morphemic, derivational level
- The role of fluency in reading development
- The relationships between phonology, decoding, fluency, and comprehension
Part II. Knowledge of language structure and its application
- Phonetics
- Classes of consonant and vowel speech sounds (phonemes) and the inventory of the phonemes in English
- Similarities and differences among groups of phonemes, by place and manner of articulation
- Differences between the inventory of speech sounds (40-44) and the inventory of letters (26); how letters are used to represent speech sounds
- The basis for speech sound confusions that affect reading and spelling
- Phonology
- Components of phonological processing (articulation, pronunciation, phoneme awareness, word memory, and word retrieval)
- Phoneme awareness
- Why it is difficult
- How it supports learning an alphabetic writing system
- How it develops
- Dialect and other language differences
- Morphology
- Definition and identification of morphemes (the smallest units of meaning)
- Grammatical endings (inflections) and prefixes, suffixes, and roots (derivational morphemes)
- How English spelling represents morphemes
- The network of word relationships
- Orthography
- Predictability and pattern in English spelling
- Historical roots and layers of orthographic representation
- Major spellings for each of the consonant and vowel phonemes of English
- Spelling conventions for syllable types
- Sequence of orthographic knowledge development
- Semantics
- Depth, breadth, and specificity in knowledge of meaning
- Definition, connotation, denotation, semantic overlap
- Idiomatic and figurative language
- How new words are created
- Ways of knowing a word: antonyms, synonyms, analogies, associative linkages, classes, properties, and examples of concepts
- Syntax and text structure
- Basic phrase structure
- Four types of sentences
- Sentence manipulations: expansion, rearrangement, paraphrase, negation, formation of interrogative and imperative
- Visual and diagrammatic ways to represent sentence structure
- Genres and their distinguishing features
- Reference and cohesive devices in text
- Graphic and three-dimensional representation of paragraph and text structure
Part III. Practical skills of instruction in a comprehensive reading program
- Consensus findings of research
- Recognize and implement components of successful, valid early intervention programs
- Cite and support components of validated remedial and tutorial programs
- Refer to validated components of middle school reading programs in designing instruction
- Employ proven principles of teaching reading in the content areas
- Concepts of print, letter recognition, phoneme awareness
- Select programs and lessons appropriate for students’ instructional levels
- Give corrective feedback and design lessons based on students’ needs, including their phonological and orthographic development
- Teach phonological and letter identification skills explicitly, sequentially, and systematically
- Link phonological skill development to reading, writing, and meaningful use of language
- Decoding, word attack
- Use active, constructive approaches to teach word concepts
- Select programs and lessons appropriate for students’ instructional levels
- Give corrective feedback and design lessons based on students’ needs, including their phonological and orthographic development
- Teach decoding skills explicitly, sequentially, and systematically: sound-symbol association; sound-by-sound blending; reading onsets, rimes, syllables, morphemes; sight word recognition
- Select and use decodable text for reading practice in the early stages
- Link practice in word attack to reading, writing, and meaningful use of language
- Spelling
- Match spelling instruction to students’ developmental levels of word knowledge
- Follow a scope and sequence based on language organization and how students learn it
- Use multisensory techniques for sight word learning
- Teach active discovery of generalizations, rules, and patterns
- Practice spelling in writing and proofreading
- Fluency
- Use repeated readings, alternate and choral reading, and self-timing strategies to provide practice
- Identify reading materials for students’ independent reading levels
- Promote daily reading of varied text, in school and outside of school
- Vocabulary development
- Teach words together that are related in structure and/or meaning
- Select and/or design word study for intermediate and high school students organized around common morphological roots and derived word forms
- Teach word meanings before, during, and after reading
- Use context clues, semantic mapping and comparison, analogies, synonyms, antonyms, visual imagery, and other associations to teach meaning
- Reading comprehension
- Model “think aloud” strategies during reading
- Vary questions and ask open-ended questions that promote discussion
- Emphasize key strategies including questioning, predicting, summarizing, clarifying, and associating the unknown with what is known
- Use graphic or three-dimensional modeling of text structure
- Model and encourage flexible use of strategies, including self-monitoring
- Composition
- Create a community of authors in the classroom
- Create frequent opportunities for writing meaningful assignments beyond journal writing
- Directly teach handwriting, spelling, punctuation and grammar in systematic increments to promote automatic transcription skills
- Directly teach composition strategies through modeling and shared authorship
- Guide children through the stages of the writing process; publish and display children’s completed work
Part IV. Assessment of classroom reading and writing skills
- Understand validity, reliability, and normative comparisons in test design and selection
- Identify varied purposes and forms of assessment (e.g., group comparison, measurement of progress, program evaluation, informing classroom instruction, individual diagnostic assessment)
- Interpret grade equivalents, percentile ranks, normal curve equivalents, and standard scores
- Administer several kinds of valid instruments
- graded word lists for word recognition
- phoneme awareness and phonic word attack inventories
- a qualitative spelling inventory
- measures of fluency and accuracy of oral and silent reading
- a structured writing sample
- inventories of graded paragraphs for comprehension
- Interpret student responses in comparison to benchmark cognitive and linguistic skills appropriate for age and grade
- Use information for instructional planning and classroom grouping. Use several kinds of assessment to measure change over time
Citation
Excerpted from: Moats, L. C. (June, 1999). Knowledge and Skills for Teaching Reading: A Core Curriculum for Teacher Candidates. Teaching Reading is Rocket Science: What Expert Teachers of Reading Should Know and Be Able to Do, Appendix A. American Federation of Teachers.