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Perhaps the most pressing challenge that schools face is that of ensuring that
all children become competent readers. Young children who experience problems in reading quickly fall behind their
more skilled
classmates in their ability to decode and comprehend text. This gap in reading skills can emerge as early as first
grade-and, once present, tends to be quite stable over time (Stanovich, 1986). First-grade teachers can predict
with some confidence, for example, that those children in their classrooms with significant reading deficits by
the end of the school year will very likely have continuing difficulties in reading in the fourth grade.
Kids
as Reading Helpers: A Peer Tutor Training Manual. The complete manual is designed as an outof-the-box
peer-tutoring start-up program. It includes instructions to prepare for and launch a school-based peer tutoring
program in reading. The manual also contains a scripted 4-lesson tutor training curriculum. [58 Pages/File Type:PDF/File Size:1.5MB]
Chapter
1: Peer Tutor Training Kit: An Introduction. The first chapter gives a rationale for peer tutoring. [3 Pages/File Type:PDF/File Size:132KB]
Chapter
2: Peer Tutoring: Assembling the Pieces. School-wide peer tutoring depends on thoughtful advance
preparation. This chapter provides a clear sequence for setting up a peer tutoring program. It includes helpful
forms and sample teacher & parent letters. [16 Pages/File Type:PDF/File Size:220KB]
Chapter
3: Launching & Monitoring the Peer Tutoring Program. This section highlights the tasks necessary
to 'kick off' peer tutoring. It discusses how to train peer tutors, match tutors to tutees, monitor the quality
of peer tutoring, and monitor student progress over time. The chapter includes forms to match tutors to tutees
and to conduct observations of tutoring sessions. [7 Pages/File Type:PDF/File
Size:183KB]
Lesson
1: Peer Tutoring & Appropriate Behaviors. Students are taught the behavioral expectations for
serving as a peer tutor, including how to pass quietly through hallways, enter classrooms to pick up students,
and address tutee misbehavior. [9 Pages/File Type:PDF/File Size:335KB]
Lesson
2: How to Give Praise to Tutees. Giving praise does not come naturally to most elementary students!
In this lesson, tutors-in-training get lots of practice in recognzing when and how to praise their tutees. [8 Pages/File Type:PDF/File Size:209KB]
Lesson
3: How to Do Paired Reading or 'Listening While Reading'. The academic strategies at the heart of
this peer tutoring program are paired reading and 'listening while reading'. This lesson teaches peer tutors to
be reliable and consistent in carrying out these fluency building techniques. [4 Pages/File Type:PDF/File
Size:170KB]
Lesson
4: Peer Tutoring: Graduation Day! In this training session, tutors get to feel good about 'graduating'
from their training while the trainer conducts a final evaluation of their skills. [7 Pages/File
Type:PDF/File Size:301KB]
Sample
Teacher & Parent Tutor Letters/MS Word File. Download the sample teacher and parent letters
included in Chapter 2 of the manual as a single Microsoft Word file . Customize the letters in minutes for your
school and send them out! [8 Pages/File Type:MS Word/File Size:78KB]
While the long-term negative impact of poor readers can be enormous, the good news is that schools can train their
own students to deliver effective tutoring in reading to younger peers. Kids
as Reading Helpers: A Peer Tutor Training Manual is a complete package
for training peer reading tutors. Peer tutoring answers the nagging problem of delivering effective reading support
to the many struggling young readers in our schools. Furthermore, peer tutoring programs can improve the reading
skills of tutors as well as tutees (Ehly, 1986) and - in some studies-have been shown to build tutor's social skills
as well (Garcia-Vazquez & Ehly, 1995). Young children tend to find the opportunity to read aloud to an older
peer tutor to be quite reinforcing, adding a motivational component to this intervention.
Elements of an Effective Peer Tutoring Program
While schools can exercise considerable creative freedom as they put together a peer
tutoring program in reading, they should also take care to adhere to a core set of tutoring guidelines to ensure
success (Garcia-Vazquez & Ehly, 1995). These guidelines include:
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Ehly, S. (1986). Peer
Tutoring: A guide for school psychologists. Washington, DC: National
Association of School Psychologists.
Garcia-Vazquez, E., & Ehly, S. (1995). Best practices in facilitating peer tutoring programs. In A. Thomas
& J.Grimes (Eds.), Best Practices in School Psychology-III (pp.403-411). Washington, DC: National Association of School Psychologists.
Stanovich, K.E. (1986). Matthew effects in reading: Some consequences of individual differences in the acquisition
of literacy. Reading Research Quarterly, 21,
360-407.
Topping, K. (1987). Paired reading: A powerful technique for parent use. Reading
Teacher, 40, 608-614.
Wright, J. (1992). Curriculum-based measurement: A manual for
teachers. Available online at: http://www.jimwrightonline.com/pdfdocs/cbmManual.pdf
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