During Reading Strategies
Cueing and Self Monitoring Systems
Successful independent reading involves
integrating three sets of cues. Efficient readers use all three to predict,
confirm and self correct as they read.
"Does this word make sense as I read
it?" "Does this sentence make sense as I read it: 'The girl was a dog
running'?"
Does the sentence sound like real language?
("She went into she house") Does this word
fit grammatically in this sentence?

Volunteers can help young readers use
these cues by modeling and encouraging them to ask themselves questions as they
read.
For example, if a child reads out loud:
"She rode the house into the barn."
you can say:
"Hmm, does that make sense? Did she really
ride a house? What else could she ride? What word begins with an "H"
that you can ride? The word 'horse' looks a lot like the word
"house"--that was a very good try at reading that word, but it also
needs to make sense, doesn't it?"
Gradually, after you have provided a lot of this kind
of model questioning, you can encourage students to ask these kinds of
questions of themselves as they read.
Beginning readers often substitute their own words
for those in print. While we want readers to eventually become accurate readers, that should not be the primary goal. Making sense
and getting meaning from the text is more important.
Even
expert readers sometimes make errors or substitutions in the text without
realizing it. Unless those substitutions change the meaning, you don't have to
worry about them. Instead of calling them mistakes or errors, we call them
Miscues. A miscue is any deviation from the text.
Some things for you to keep in mind:
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Try not to jump in too quickly; wait and give the
reader a chance to self-correct or problem solve.
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Show confidence in the child's ability and be
available to help.
Some things readers can be encouraged to do when they are trying to
figure out a word or get stuck:

PICTURE PROMPT: Direct reader to look at the picture, or to close
eyes and imagine what is happening.
RERUN:
Suggest rereading the sentence or phrase to clarify the meaning so far. This
can help in predicting the upcoming word, giving the reader more time to access
it.
CONTEXT PROMPT: Ask the reader if what he or she just read made sense; use
this information to help the reader predict what words would "make
sense" or "sound right" in a sentence. Then help the reader
check the print to confirm the prediction.
READ-ON: Beginning
readers can be encouraged to skip over the unknown word and read to the end of
the phrase or sentence, substituting a grunt in place of the mystery word.
"I never ['mmm'] what to give my mother for her
birthday. " This helps readers use the meaning
(context) of the surrounding words, and sometimes the initial letter(s) to figure
out the problem word.
COMPARING:
Ask if reader has seen a word that looks like the troubling one; or write a
similar word, i.e. if the hard word is "fright", point out or write
down "night. " (Be sure to use a word that
you are sure the child will recognize.) Helping the child see that a word part
is similar to another known word can help too. A fluent reader can think
"If I know 'her' and 'taps,' I can figure out 'perhaps'" (assuming
she or he has heard and understands the word).
STRUCTURAL PROMPT: Tell or ask the child to notice the word's parts: play-ing; out-side. Help the reader cover the appropriate part
of the word.
LOOK BACK TO PREVIOUS CONTEXT: Sometimes beginning readers recognize that they've
seen a word somewhere else. Looking back or identifying the former context can
help the reader recall the word.

After
the student figures out a difficult word, or after he or she self corrects, be
sure to encourage him or her to ask: "Does this make sense? Does this
sound right? Does this look right?" Once the child is satisfied that the
sentence does make sense, give specific praise for using good strategies to
figure out words. Encouraging students to constantly ask themselves "Does
this make sense?" when reading reinforces the purpose of reading: we read
to understand the meaning of the text, not simply to translate the printed
letters into spoken words.