Route 66 offers literacy materials to adolescents and young adults
who have a variety of physical, cognitive, communicative,
linguistic,
and sensory impairments. In addition, Route 66 Literacy
offers
instructional strategies for teachers. Currently, the
site is intended
for adolescents and young adults who are reading and
writing at
beginning levels. Because it is based on an instructional
approach that
includes a range of activities and experiences that are
required to
teach any student to learn to read with comprehension
and to write
meaningful texts, Route 66 has broader applications and
can support
students of any age who read like beginners.

What is included in the Reading section?
When you click on the Reading button (RED button), it will take you
to the Reading Home Page. Here, the student will be asked to choose
a theme. All of the themes within Route 66 Literacy have been chosen
because of their respective popularity with adolescent and young adult
readers. Within each theme, there are 4 units. Once the student chooses
a unit, there are 4 reading options:
- Let's read this new book together,
- Let's reread this book,
- Let me read by myself, and
- I want to read other books about
this choice.
What reading strategies should I be encouraging?
When asked this question, most people will respond that the first and
best strategy for reading an unfamiliar word is to sound it out. It's
definitely a good start and a good strategy, particularly if your student
has a strong sense of phonemic awareness (which means the ability to
recognize that words are made up of discrete sets of sounds). But there
are other strategies that are just as important and just as helpful,
yet are often overlooked. Like Reading Recovery teachers, we encourage
learners to employ meaning, sound, and sight cues as they endeavor to
understand printed language. As you navigate each guided reading activity,
you will find yourself asking, "Can we say it that way?" and, "Does
it sound right?" and, 'Does it look right?' You'll find that you
will be asking these three questions often, and in a variety of ways.
These questions are important and by asking them, you will be modeling
the kind of internal dialogue that needs to take place if the student
(or anyone, for that matter) is going to read independently.
Notice that the prompts are different on different pages. Some prompts
encourage students to take important clues from syntax, which means
how a given sentence is structured. Other prompts encourage learners
to employ knowledge of symbols and to look to the words themselves,
and whether or not they look right. Still others ask learners to employ
their knowledge of meaning, often from the context that the picture
or the illustration provides. You'll notice that when a student has
to choose from one of three choices and picks the wrong one, we don't
make her pick until she gets the right one. We provide instructional
feedback and go on.
Are there other things I can do to support my student as s/he
learns to read and write?
Yes, consider the following three principles as major supports to your
student's emerging reading and writing abilities:
1. Know your student:
The first thing to do, if this hasn't happened already, would be to
get to know your student as best you can. Reading, by its very nature,
is a social act. As we read, we engage with others, both practically
(here we are sharing this together), and theoretically, (I feel just
like Harry Potter did when I started at a new school...) Consider the
student's learning style and method(s) of communication. You will also
want to become familiar with the student's work pace. Before you begin
working with Route 66 Literacy, establish a signal between you and your
student that will signify when you need to slow down, speed up, or clarify.
Be responsive to the student's signals, both verbally and nonverbally.
Note changes in posture or interest. It's definitely okay to go back
over a tricky part or to bail out of an activity that seems ineffective
or uninteresting to your student. Bear in mind that the purpose in designing
these lessons is not to trick students or to continuously check their
knowledge. Instead, we want to offer students the most informative context
that we can, to all of their responses, even the ones that may seem
obviously wrong. The best (and truly only) motivation for learning to
read is to want to learn to read, so using your knowledge of this person
as a learner will help guide you from activity to activity.
2. Model good reading
This may seem obvious, but another good strategy is
to model good reading behavior. Reading should sound like talking so
when you read aloud, do it with fluency, normal articulation, and with
appropriate phrasing and emphasis. Your student's exposure to your best
reading voice is critical to her ability to develop her own inner voice,
whether or not she uses speech to communicate.
3. Support the role of inner speech
Additionally, the concept of inner speech is important to all readers,
however, it is critical to readers who do not use speech as their primary
means of communication. Have you ever noticed that when you read text
that's too hard for you, you usually go back and read it again more
slowly? Then, if it's still too hard, you'll read it aloud? What you're
doing here is employing your inner voice. Most often, you probably don't
even notice that you have one. But as text gets more difficult, your
comprehension is adversely impacted and that's when you fall back on
this voice, most literally. As you read, your inner voice is running
a constant check against those three important questions that were mentioned
above (Does it make sense? Can we say it that way? Does it look right?).
When one doesn't check, that's when you slow down, and then ultimately,
read it aloud. You can't read silently without an inner voice so it's
important to know that it's there. As a reading and writing teacher,
it's also important to know that the inner voice exists and that our
job is to help students to develop and gain familiarity with their own
inner voice.
Where should we begin reading?
While this is not a basal activity and there is no specific
order in which to proceed, we do suggest that reading a new book together
is a good place to start. Why? By reading aloud and supporting your
student's engagement with the text, you offer her an opportunity to
make a connection with a written work that she probably could not make
on her own. Your primary purpose as you sit beside this student is to
be "the more
knowing other," who can model the relationship between reading
and meaning making. In addition, reading a book together
offers you, the teacher, the opportunity to determine which reading
strategies your student can employ, and which he or she is still in
the process of developing.
On each page, your first job is to read the large, black text to the
left of the picture (and we recommend using your finger to point to
each word as you read it). The purpose of scripting the words onto the
blackboard is to help you to provide instructional feedback to your
student. Initially, it may feel awkward to read the words on the blackboard
verbatim. That's understandable, and yet, in the beginning (and this
will depend on your background knowledge and skill level in reading
instruction), it may be more important that you follow these directions
closely since they are designed to support your learning in teaching
within the context of balanced literacy instruction. We also recognize
that many of you will choose to ignore the teacher tutor and her blackboards.
That is completely acceptable, particularly if you have experience in
practical literacy instruction. We encourage you, however, to use the
questions and other built-in opportunities for the student to respond
to questions you pose.
Who is the lady in the blue skirt?
We call her the teacher. Whenever you see her image on the screen,
this is a cue that we want to offer you some guidance and support in
teaching this lesson. A blackboard will give you directions about what
you can say and do to fill the intention of each activity. The sentences
that appear in white are for you to read aloud. In the beginning, we
suggest that you follow the teacher directions as closely as is comfortable
for you. As you become familiar with the site, you may find that you
come to rely on the teacher less and less. That's fine (and actually,
that's the idea!). Remember that in addition to helping your student
read and write, we want to support you as you endeavor to become a more
confident and proficient teacher within the context of balanced literacy
instruction.
Why do I need to read the blackboards aloud?
Many of the directions that appear on the teacher's blackboard are
what we call, "instructional feedback." By providing context
and clarification your student's errors in a supportive and constructive
manner, you help make mistakes as informative as correct responses.
You'll note that the teacher directions don't ever tell the student
that s/he is wrong. By responding along the lines of, "Well, it
could be that..." you are valuing all of your student's responses.
Your role as the teacher is not to test knowledge and correct mistakes,
but to clarify misunderstandings and encourage risk-taking. If your
student has no communication difficulties, you would want to ask, '"Why
do you think that is the answer?" Our intention in creating Route
66 Literacy was to provide alternative means through which we can help
the student think about her response and why it is or is not accurate.
Using the language provided in this context can feel uncomfortable at
first, but we think you will find its benefits are measurable.
What do I say when I see a letter between two hash marks (i.e.
/j/) on the blackboard?
Throughout your experience reading together on the site,
you will see this notation frequently. When a letter
appears between two hash marks, this is your cue to read
this letter's sound, rather than its name. In our efforts to support
a student's ability to read with comprehension, we ask them to attend
to three kinds of cues: sight, meaning, and in this case, sound cues.
It's important for your student to have exposure to and practice all
three cueing systems if s/he is to problem-solve effectively around
unknown letters, sounds, and words.
We just read this book, why do we need to read it again?
Reading, like any skill, requires lots and lots of successful practice.
With practice, comes a sense of mastery. This sense of mastery is integral
to your student's developing sense of himself as a reader. Rereading
a book offers learners the opportunity to become more strategic in their
reading by allowing them to think less about the forms of print and
more about its function. By increasing the exposure to the same text
and adding variety to the reading of it, students can then make new
and different connections with the material. Repetition increases the
opportunity for learners to make personal connections to their reading.
It allows learners to begin to hear that they, too, can sound (in their
heads) like good readers as they become more and more familiar with
a given text.
Additionally, rereading a text is something that all good readers do,
in order to increase comprehension, fluency with words, or simply for
the pleasure of doing so. How many times have you reread a favorite
book, poem, or story? In each rereading lesson, you'll notice that the
teacher appears on the first and last pages. The aim here is to reread
the story with fluency while increasing comprehension. As stated in
the teacher directions, this is an important time to pay attention to
the non-verbal and/or the verbal cues of your student. At the end of
the story, the teacher will reappear so that together, you and your
student can reflect on the reading when the story is complete.
Why should we let the student read by her/himself? Isn't the
whole point that we work together?
Yes, working with a more knowing other (meaning you!) is a large part
of this process. But so too, is self-directed reading. Both established
and developing readers need to spend time interacting with books in
a variety of ways. This includes time alone. Self-directed reading poses
important challenges to your student, among them the chance to pick
materials that are appropriate to her reading level, the chance to practice
skill application, and the chance to understand why a person would want
to read after she learns how to do so. Simply put, readers need to read
for individual purposes. This time spent alone reading will not only
increase his fluency and familiarity with reading, it will help your
student to consider how reading can support her, not just as a student,
but as a whole person.
What is the significance of this stack of other books?
Behind the stack of books icon
I
want to read other books about …
On the Reading A Books webpage, you'll see 3-4 books
that serve as support stories to the new book. The majority
of these books are written at reading levels lower than the level found
in the first reading of the new book. The purpose is so that students
can have success in reading independently. Often you'll find just one
word on a page that matches the adjacent picture. In other books you'll
find that the text is written in verse and offers your student the opportunity
to use her knowledge of sound and rhythm to read and
predict text. Though it is an activity that is ultimately designed for
independent use, it's ok to offer support or help until your student
gains the confidence and/or the skills s/he'll need to read on his/her
own.
Isn't this a reading activity? Why would my student write a
review of the book?
Yes, it is a reading activity and yes, the purpose is for your student
to spend time and develop mastery with high-interest and readable text.
But, one way your students will develop a deeper understanding of the
books they read is by evaluating them, comparing them with other books
they’ve read, and relating them to their own experiences and knowledge
about the topic. The book reviews provide a structured means to do this.
After reading a book, students can choose to write a review about the
book. When writing a book review the student can begin by rereading
the book, reading what others have written in their reviews, or moving
directly into writing their own review. The site supports students in
clarifying their evaluation, by offering a choice of positive, negative,
and neutral responses. Furthermore, it supports students by offering
a word bank and supporting letter-by-letter input using a standard or
alternative keyboard input. The overall purpose of this activity is
to provide students with a natural bridge between their reading and
writing behaviors and to demonstrate that reading promotes thoughts,
feelings, and opinions that can be expressed through writing.
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What is included in the Word Study section?
When you click on the yellow Word Study button,

it will take you to the Word Study Home Page. Here, the student will
be asked to choose a theme. We have chosen specific theme areas based
on research on what adolescents are most interested in. Within each
theme, there are 4 units. Once you have selected a unit, you can choose
from a variety of word study activities, including Making Words, Compare/Contrast,
and Other Word Activities.
Why study words?
We've called it Word Study but really, it's as much about the opportunity
to work with words as it is to study them. By working with words, learners
can become more strategic in their abilities to read and write as they
begin to see similarities, differences, and anomalies in the forms and
functions of print. We have established our contention that practice
is critical to literacy learning and development. The purpose of Word
Study is to engage in this practice. But there's something else to it,
too. Word Study offers learners the chance to play with words and begin
to learn their internal structures. With the opportunity to play, learners
make emotional connections between themselves and the material. This
is when lasting learning takes place.
Where should we start?
There isn't any best place to start. Think about which activities s/he
needs the most support in, which she'll exhibit the most mastery in,
and which she'll enjoy the most. Don't forget that you can always bail
out if an activity feels too hard, too time-consuming, or just plain
inappropriate. And, as ever, self-direction might positively influence
your student's ability to stick with an activity and make it meaningful.
So use your knowledge of your student and what she needs most to support
her reading and writing as a guiding principle to determine the order
in which you do each activity.
What's the point of making words?
When you click on the crane icon for making words, you'll receive directions
about how to support your student in making words. The purpose of this
activity is twofold:
- To help the student to see how to build or
spell words by systematically adding, changing, or deleting letters
and,
- To see the relationships between the spelling patterns
in different words.
As your student navigates the activity, you'll find that the student
is asked to make longer and longer words. As you explore this activity,
feel free to encourage and support any observations your student might
make about the relationships between words or his new understandings
about how to construct them. ("Yes, pan and man are similar to
each other, except for the first letter," or, "You're right,
off and on both start with o.")
Why is the text on the blackboards written in a script font?
In this activity, we need to show you the words that the students need
to spell, but we don’t want the students to copy the words. Using
a script font solves the problem because you can read script, but the
beginning reader you’re working with cannot. We know that the
script is more difficult for you to read than the print we use on other
blackboards on Route 66. Don’t worry about slowing down a little.
The payoff will come when the student you’re teaching begins to
understand how our spelling system works – something that will
never happen from copying words.
What's the purpose of Word Sort?
At the end of each making words lesson, you will guide the student
through a word sort activity using the words that were just made. The
teacher prompts provided on the blackboards will direct you to ask the
student to look to beginning, end, and spelling patterns of words and
group them according to their similarities. Sorting the words in this
way will motivate students to look once again at each of the letters
in the words that were made. This will help them develop a memory for
the individual letters and spelling patterns that appear.
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WRITE A BOOK REVIEW
One way your students will develop a deeper understanding
of the books they read is by evaluating them, comparing
them with other books they’ve read, and relating them to their
own experiences and knowledge about the topic. The book reviews provide
a structured means to do this. After reading a book, students can choose
to write a review about the book. When writing a book review the student
can begin by rereading the book, reading what others have written in
their reviews, or moving directly into writing their own review. The
site supports students in clarifying their evaluation, by offering a
choice of positive, negative, and neutral responses. Furthermore, it
supports students by offering a word bank and supporting letter-by-letter
input using a standard or alternative keyboard input.
The overall purpose of this activity is to provide students with a natural
bridge between their reading and writing behaviors and to demonstrate
that reading promotes thoughts, feelings, and opinions that can be expressed
through writing.
- Back to Top -