Strategies
for Working with Low Level Adult Readers
This page is from the Curriculum for the Adult Beginning
Reader - Level 0-3.0
The following strategies are very important when teaching
reading to low level adult learners:
- Establish
Positive Expectations
Adults learn best when they feel that the teacher
is caring and that the teacher believes they will
succeed. One of the teacher's most important tasks
is to reassure learners that they will indeed become
readers.
- Expect
Success
The
classroom environment is extremely important. Adults
do not want to be treated like children, and the teacher
should keep in mind that the learner is an adult.
The adult may not have learned to read, but he/she
can be extremely successful in other areas of life
and deserves respect.
- Collaborate
Efforts
The learner should be treated as a responsible, intelligent
person who is in charge of his/her learning. Reading
should be a collaborative effort, with the learner
gradually assuming more and more responsibility for
self-direction.
- Clarify
Goals
The teacher can help the student clarify goals and
together discuss ways of accomplishing them. Long-term
goals, such as becoming a proficient reader or obtaining
a GED, may seem over-whelming at first. Goals should
be broken down into smaller objectives, and the teacher
should be careful not to make the instruction too
fast-paced. For example, at the beginning of each
lesson the teacher should discuss what will be done
that day to establish with the learner the daily objectives
- Relate
Reading to Meaning
From the beginning, the teacher should guide the learner
into the realization that speaking, listening, reading,
and writing are related. Adult beginning readers often
perceive reading as a decoding process. To them reading
is a process of sounding out words or identifying
their individual meanings rather than a meaning-making
process.
In
summary, all adults can learn, and some strategies enhance
learning. The adult is capable of self-direction and full
participation in the learning process. The teacher can
facilitate this by his confidence in the learner; by estab-lishing
goals, methods of instruction and assessment mutually
with the adult; by relating goals to learner needs; and
by creating a comfortable, positive environment for learning.
Teaching
Sight Words
Decide
on 4-5 words to be covered.
-
Print these words in lower case letters on index cards,
one word for each card.
-
Ask the learner to dictate a sentence to you using
each of these words. You write the sentence on the
back of the card. Underline the word to be taught.
-
Show each word to the learner. Say the word as he/she
looks at it. Ask the student to look at the word and
repeat it. Read the sentence on the back of the card
aloud. Ask the student to read the sentence.
-
At the next lesson, review the words and sort into
two piles: words the student remembers and words not
recognized immediately. Put the cards the learner
knows on a notebook ring.
-
Review the unknown words, one at a time. Tell the
learner the word. Have the learner look closely at
it, noticing the shape and number of letters. Ask
him/her to trace the word in the air or on the table.
-
Have the learner say the word and ask how he/she could
use it in a sentence.
-
Mix new and old sight words and review often.
-
Add words learned to a notebook ring so that the learner
can see his/her own progress.
Teaching
Nouns and Verbs
-
Name that Picture: The
teacher will need the following materials: pictures
of people, places, things, action pictures, and paper.
Ask the learner to verbally identify each picture
as a person, place, or thing. On a sheet of paper
draw three columns. In one put the word "people",
another "places", and the last "things."
Have the learner write down the name of the object
in the correct column.
Example: if the picture is a man, the learner
writes "man" in the "people" column.Ask
the learner to verbally identify the action in a picture.
-
Write down a noun (example, dog); have the learner
think of a noun that starts with the last letter of
that word (example, girl). Continue with as many words
as possible.
-
Ask the learner to identify nouns and verbs in language
experience stories.
Homework
Assignments
Each day the learner can bring in something he/she would
like to read-label, ad, mail, recipes, manuals, letters,
comics, children's books, poems. Have the student copy
the material and then read it aloud with you reading
aloud also. A word bank card can be kept of any difficult
words.
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