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Re: Dibels reading assess.
Posted by Parent1115 on 9/10/06

    I guess I am new to this because my other two children did not have to take
    this test. I have several issues with the Dibels test as well as how it is
    being administered.

    First, my 6 1/2 yr old son reads well. This is not only from me his impartial
    mother, but also from his kindergarden teacher and a family friend who is a
    first grade teacher. His first grade teacher has pigeon holed his ability
    because of a portion of the test that has him sounding out words that arent
    words. And he is kinda stubborn and tried to explain to the teacher that they
    were not real words. So she assumed he could not do it. So, she classified him
    in the Needs IMprovemnet portion of her class, which is boring him.

    Second, because I am not an educator I am concerned about approaching her
    about this problem because she may get defensive. Also, because 90% if her
    class is classified as Profient this leaves my son distant from the rest of
    the class. Moving to a new school was hard for him, he had went to preschool
    and kindergarden with the same kids and now that he is in a new school. He is
    having a hard time making friends, because the other children notice that he
    is not allowed to do the same things and they call him stupid. By noones
    standards is he stupid and I have seen the work that the other children are
    doing and he can do it.

    How do I approach his teacher in a way that will not offend her? If anyone
    could help that would be great!!

    Very concerned parent.


    On 9/03/06, Ginny wrote:
    > We have been trained to believe that DIBELS is an effective way to assess
    > student reading skills. I have been reading "The Truth About DIBELS" by
    > Kenneth S. Goodman and am concerned that I have been only told one side of
    > the story by my state leaders and U of O. I don't want to implement DIBELS
    > without being very sure that the time, money to be spent equals valid
    > information. I am also concerned about the affects Dr. Goodman state about
    > how the timed testing is not valid in 5-7 year olds and the stress it places
    > on the children.
    >
    > I would appreciate anyone who has information that will help me make a
    > determination. Is this a "Whole Language" vs. "Phonics" war where we are
    > talking about personal opinons or is it a real.
    >
    > Thank your for your thoughts.
    >
    >
    > On 4/04/06, Margaret Turner wrote:
    >> On 3/04/06, Kathy wrote:
    >>> I am an administrator looking at better ways to diagnose reading
    >>> difficulties for our special education children in the elementary
    >>> grades. We currently use observation survy in the early grades and
    >>> frankly, it is hit and miss for children thereafter relative to specific
    >>> skills. This leaves the inclusion class teachers struggling to teach
    >>> without a clear understanding of what needs to be supported, etc.
    >>> Anything you can tell me would help inform our team - thanks!
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> On 1/11/06, Kim wrote:
    >>>> Maureen, We are also considering DIBELS as an assessment tool. I
    >>>> would be very interested in reading your paper. Please e-mail it to
    >>>> me.
    >>>> Thanks,
    >>>> Kim
    >>>>
    >>>> On 12/08/05, Maureen wrote:
    >>>>> On 7/14/05, Cheryle wrote:
    >>>>>> On 7/14/05, A wrote:
    >>>>>>> I am looking at DIBELS as a potential tool to use in my first
    >>>>>>> grade classroom after attending a fluency PD this summer. The
    >>>>>>> teacher leading the session, and several of the teachers in the
    >>>>>>> session really liked this assessment, which is required for the
    >>>>>>> Kentucky Reading First schools. (My school is not a Reading
    >>>>>>> First school.) We are required to administer the DRA, and I
    >>>>>>> think I will try DIBELS this year too. It is available free of
    >>>>>>> charge from the DIBELS website.
    >>>>>>>
    >>>>>>> I am interested in any feedback from folks who have used this
    >>>>>>> assessment - pro and con. Please don't spare me your real
    >>>>>>> opinion just because I am thinking of using it. I really want to
    >>>>>>> know.
    >>>>>>>
    >>>>>>> Thanks!
    >>>>>>
    >>>>>> This past year was the first that we used DIBELS in our district.
    >>>>>> It has been mandated by the state. It can be time consuming,
    >>>>>> especially in the grades K-2. Third grade only has the oral reading
    >>>>>> fluency test. I used it to help me pinpoint areas where particular
    >>>>>> children needed help. However, my co=workers and I found faults
    >>>>>> with it as well. I would recommend going to the University of
    >>>>>> Oregon website (Official DIBELS Homepage.
    >>>>>> http://dibels.uoregon.edu/) and read the technical papers listed
    >>>>>> there, especially Technical Report #10 by Good and Kaminsky.
    >>>>>>
    >>>>>> My curiosity was aroused when we found that students followed a
    >>>>>> pattern of pass-fail-pass-fail and so on. TR #10 explains how the
    >>>>>> creators of DIBELS leveled the passages. It makes no sense to me.
    >>>>>>
    >>>>>> For one of my Master's classes I wrote a paper on my findings in my
    >>>>>> classroom. I would be glad to email it to you if you are interested
    >>>>>> in reading it.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> I am studying for the National Boards. I would love to read the
    >>>> paper
    >>>>> you wrote on it. Thanks,
    >>>>> Maureen
    >>
    >> Hi, I am Margaret Turner. I'm a reading coach in Florida. We've been
    >> using the DIBELS Assessment for about 5 years now. We find it to be
    >> invaluable in predicting success and failure in reading. What we had to
    >> learn was that the dibels is assessing the reading process itself. The
    >> reading process develops the way the dibels assesses; phonemic and
    >> phonological awareness,the alphabetic principle, phonics, and finally oral
    >> reading fluency. If we can help the children develop the skills in each
    >> one of those categories, the goal of reading fluency will happen. From
    >> there, our real goal, comprehension will occur. It's a process. The
    >> children can't skip any or the processes and be successful readers. The
    >> DIBELS allows us to see where they are in the process and address that
    >> area of weakness. Usually, it works very well.
    >> Sometimes we have students that can't seem to get it no matter what you do.
    >> I'm looking for an assessment for those students.

     
     

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