Fluency Instruction: Building Bridges from Decoding to Comprehension
When this happens our tendency is to double down on decoding instruction, giving kids extra doses of phonics work and engaging them in all sorts of multi-sensory activities in the hopes of strengthening decoding abilities (tapping, scooping, spelling in sand). Often these efforts are frustratingly slow and ineffective. Kids may improve in decoding, but still fail to achieve the kind of automaticity they need to get their reading reward.
How to get the kids across the divide between decoding and comprehension? Research would indicate that fluency instruction can provide the bridge (Pikulski & Chard, 2005).
According to Tim Rasinski, the leading scholar on fluency instruction in the country, fluency instruction has the advantage of focusing instruction on Russ on Reading: Fluency Instruction: Building Bridges from Decoding to Comprehension: