Product Description
Over their influential careers, Gay Su Pinnell and Irene Fountas have closely examined the literacy learning of thousands of students in the primary grades. In The Continuum of Literacy Learning, Grades K – 2, and its companion volume for grades 3 – 8, they combine everything they have learned about the development of readers, writers, and language users to create a comprehensive curriculum document for use as an assessment tool and as a guide for teaching. Now, with the flip of a page, you can quickly identify the literacy goals appropriate to each grade level, K – 2, and each text level, A – N, and determine the specific competencies any child has achieved along his or her literacy journey.
Grade by Grade Goals
The Continuum of Literacy Learning, Grades K – 2 names and categorizes the behaviors and understandings students can be expected to demonstrate in kindergarten and first and second grades. Grounded in research and classroom experience, these helpful visual representations of goals for literacy in the primary grades allow you to analyze children’s strengths and identify where they need teaching support in different instructional contexts. They describe specific behaviors to notice, teach, and support at each grade level.
Pinnell and Fountas present continua related to performance in critical instructional contexts:
- interactive read-aloud and literature discussion
- shared and performance reading
- writing about reading
- writing
- oral, visual, and technological communication
- phonics, spelling, and word study.
Level by Level Goals
The guided reading continuum conveys specific literacy goals related to the Fountas and Pinnell text levels A – N for use in guided reading lessons or other small-group instruction. These goal descriptions will inform your lesson planning, your grouping decisions, and your selection of texts for differentiated instruction.
In a convenient, easy-to-read format, these interdependent continua show the grade levels at which students typically demonstrate specific abilities related to the use of oral and written language. They can be useful in numerous aspects of classroom instruction, including:
- planning instruction for individuals, small groups, or a whole class
- assessing children’s literacy development
- evaluating student progress and reporting grades
- discussing expectations with parents
- identifying specific needs for targeted intervention.
Get the curricular resource that provides a unified vision of what primary-age children need to be able to do as competent readers, writers, and language users, then discover how this guide can inform and support every aspect of your literacy teaching. Read Continuum of Literacy Learning, Grades K – 2, keep it handy in your classroom,and use it to make effective teaching decisions as you bring children forward in their literacy journeys.
Continua organized by grade for teachers grades 3 – 8 and expressed across the grades for curriculum specialists grades K – 8 are also available.
For information about The Continuum of Literacy Learning, Grades 3 – 8, click here.
The Continuum of Literacy Learning, Grades K-2: A Guide to Teaching
Related posts:
- The Continuum of Literacy Learning, Grades K-8: A Guide to Teaching
- The Continuum of Literacy Learning, Grades 3-8: A Guide toTeaching
- English Teacher’s Survival Guide: Ready-to-Use Techniques & Materials for Grades 7-12
- Teaching Language and Literacy: Preschool Through the Elementary Grades
- Literacy for the 21st Century: Teaching Reading and Writing in Grades 4 through 8
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3 Comments
Anyone that purchases this book is going to have it dog-eared and ragged from use! This book is loaded with pre-chosen titles to help you teach a variety of reading strategies and skills. After taking a running record, you know what they need work with, but what is the best book to use to teach it to them? Divided by grade levels into sections for read-aloud, shared reading, guided, and writing ideas, this series uses easy to understand, explicit wording in order to help teachers understand the reading process better and learn what to look for and what to teach to. The hard part of prepping for teaching reading is finding just the right book that will meet the needs of individual students’ needs.This resource will help teachers learn more about the reading process,the “language” that goes with it and to be more strategic kid-watchers.
Rating: 4 / 5
A great resource for teachers in grades K -2. I have taught second grade for 25 years and am returning as a K teacher in the fall. This book is chocked of great ideas promoting literacy in the early childhood classroom. Ideas can be used to fit any early childhood classroom ranging from kindergarten to grade 2.
Rating: 5 / 5
This is a wonderful book for anyone beginning to use small group guided reading in the classroom and for those who have many years experience. I wanted to get the benchmark assessment system designed by Fountas and Pinnell, but realized this book would fit well with the DRA2 assessment that our school is currently using. It is well designed to find information quickly. The second part has grade level expectations for each grade (K-2) in the areas of: Interactive Read-Aloud and Literature Discussion; Shared Performance Reading; Writing about Reading; Writing; Oral, Visual, and Technological Communication; and Phonics, Spelling and Word Study. The introduction explains each of these components of good literacy instruction. The part that I like best is that it explains the characteristics of text at F&P Levels A-N and then it gives instructional strategies for each level to help students progress to the next level. A valuable tool for those teachers who believe that children don’t progress at the same speed and want to construct curriculum based on individual student’s needs. This tool will make differentiating instruction much easier. This books fits well with Gardner’s theory of “Multiple Intelligences” and Vygotsky’s theory that children learn best when taught in their “Zone of Proximal Development.”
Rating: 5 / 5
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