What is DIBELS?
Dynamic
Indicators of
Basic
Early
Literacy
Skills
It was developed by Dr. Roland Good, University
of Oregon. It is a standardized, individually administered
measure of early literacy development.
5 Big Ideas of Literacy
PHONEMIC AWARENESS
Identification and manipulation of parts of spoken language
PHONICS
Correlating sounds with letters or groups of letters
VOCABULARY
FLUENCY
COMPREHENSION
Relation to Big Ideas of Literacy
Big Idea of Literacy - DIBELS assessment
Phonological / Phonemic Awareness - Initial Sound
Fluency & Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
Phonics - Nonsense Word Fluency
Vocabulary - Word Use Fluency
Fluency - Oral Reading Fluency
Comprehension - Oral Reading Fluency & Retell
Fluency
Fluency Leads to Comprehension
Word recognition fluency, while not the goal of reading instruction,
is necessary for good comprehension.
Only once words are known automatically does reading become
easy and then enjoyable.
Why DIBELS?
1 out of 8 children not reading at grade level by the end
of first grade will ever read on grade level (Juel, 1994,
p.24).
Knowing at what level a student reads is good; knowing WHY
is better.
DIBELS assessments offer a look at the WHY.
Letter Naming Fluency
Provides a measure of risk
No benchmark goal - no corresponding “big idea”
But, it’s one of three major predictors of reading success.
Letter Recognition
Print Awareness
Phonemic Awareness
Intended for most children from fall of kindergarten to fall
of first grade
Practice LNF…
Initial Sound Fluency
Intended for children from last year of preschool to middle
of kindergarten
May be appropriate for monitoring progress of older children
with low skills in phonological awareness
Benchmark goal: 25-35 sounds by mid kindergarten
Takes about 3 minutes
Only DIBELS assessment taking longer than 1 minute to administer
Practice ISF Assessment
Show example pictures.
Follow directions for examples.
Begin assessment.
Start timer after you finish asking each question.
Stop timer as soon as child responds.
Repeat until assessment is complete.
Record number of correct initial sounds and number of seconds
to administer assessment.
ISF Scoring Tips
Child says / Does: Score:
Names correct picture Correct
Renames picture with correct sound Correct
Renames correct picture with incorrect sound Incorrect
Gives initial sounds Correct
Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
Intended for children from end of kindergarten through spring
of first grade
May be appropriate for monitoring progress of older children
with low skills in phonemic awareness
Benchmark goal: 35-45 correct phonemes per minute by end of
kindergarten and beginning of first grade
Score each DIFFERENT, CORRECT sound segment produced
Practice PSF…
Nonsense Word Fluency
Intended for children from mid to end of kindergarten to beginning
of second grade
May be appropriate for monitoring progress of older children
with low skills in phonics (letter-sound correspondence)
Benchmark goal: 50 correct letter sounds per minute by mid
first grade
Practice NWF…
Oral Reading Fluency (Reading Connected
Text)
Intended for most children from mid first grade through…
End of Year Benchmark goals for LOW RISK:
1st grade: > 40
2nd grade: > 90
3rd grade: > 110
4th grade: > 118
5th grade: > 124
Practice ORF…
Retell Fluency
Prevents emphasis on speed-reading without attention to meaning
Identifies children whose comprehension is not consistent
with their fluency
Corresponds directly to “big idea” of comprehension
Increases face validity of ORF
OPTIONAL…
Word Use Fluency
Ties to “big idea” of vocabulary
Additional research necessary to establish linkage to phonological
awareness, phonics, and fluency
May be helpful for teacher’s own knowledge about a student’s
vocabulary
OPTIONAL…
So now what?
DIBELS assessments will be used routinely next year by all
teachers for all students.
EVERY STUDENT will be assessed during Benchmark periods (three
times per year).
Data used during grade level discussions to plan interventions.
Progress Monitoring
Depending on intensity of intervention need, most students
will be progress monitored every two OR four weeks using appropriate
measures.
Data collection expectations
Further Instructional Support
Questions for Analyzing Student Errors
Use each assessment to determine student error patterns
Use knowledge of error patterns to further differentiate instruction
DIBELS offers more data to support instructional decisions.
Questions, Comments, Suggestions?
http://dibels.uoregon.edu/
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