Sound Reading Solutions is an educational
publishing company that taps the expertise of
over 20 speech pathologists, reading, ESL and
special education teachers, and programmers who
create highly effective, easy to use materials
that have a measurable impact on the reading
abilities of students. We provide advanced
activity books, games, software and reading
practice for literacy development, improvement
and intervention meeting the needs of our
diverse, multilingual population. We also offer
Math Makes Sense! a series of six workbooks that
provide foundational math instruction to
students who struggle with math. The current
suite of SRS products includes:
-
Concepts of Language, Literature, Articulation,
Phonemic
Awareness (C.L.A.P.)
-
Hop, Skip and Jump into Reading for
Beginning Readers System
-
Sound
Reading for Primary Grades
System
-
Sound
Reading Improvement and Intervention System
for Upper Elementary and Secondary Students
-
Sound
Reading System for ESL/ELL directed to
second language learners
-
Math Makes
Sense!
These materials are
developed with the understanding that learning
difficulties arise largely due to neurological
difficulties in the processing of spoken words.
Sound Reading programs provide targeted
instruction that address specific weaknesses,
from speech sound awareness to auditory thinking
and reasoning, offering powerful ways of
developing literacy and numeracy. Sound Reading
and Math Makes Sense! products are used in
schools across the United States and Canada.
1. The Fluency and Comprehension
Connection (first grade through high
school)
Lack of fluency is a major cause of
comprehension problems. Many students reading at
grade-level or above may not be reading deeply
due to fluency issues. Extensive reading
practice may not produce fluent readers. New
methods, including word retrieval and rapid
naming practice, timed-repeated reading, “too
easy” reading and quick reads provide
easy-to-teach methods. Don’t leave fluency
practice to chance. Participants will see a
demonstration of these methods and practice the
methods using handouts.
Benefits:
-
Understand
the relationship between fluency and
comprehension
-
Learn
practical methods for improving fluency
-
Learn how
lack of fluency is a major factor in reading
motivation
-
Discover
that reading comprehension is dependent on
listening comprehension
-
Learn why
listening skills are critical to
higher-level comprehension strategies
Solutions:
-
Improve
reading scores on local and state
assessments
-
Update staff
on latest fluency and comprehension research
-
Provide
easy-to-implement methods which
systematically improve fluency
-
Improve
outcomes for students who read at grade
level, yet under perform on standardized
tests
-
Substantially decrease the number of
students who require remediation for reading
difficulties
2.
Teaching
the Whole Code (first grade through
high school).
Almost all students with reading difficulties
struggle with decoding. Phonics is essential but
current research places it as a secondary line
of defense in reading interventions. The first
code to teach is the speech (phonological) code,
using age-appropriate phonemic awareness and
phonological processing techniques. The
phonological code gives us access to meaningful
spoken words, the end produce of reading. The
relationship between spoken and printed words
goes beyond knowing letters and sounds. Many
students learn to read quickly using a
print-to-speech method often called recoding.
Recoding even helps students with limited
phonics and because they learn the letter, sound
and semantic relationships naturally. New,
research-based methods quickly teach phonics,
decoding and recoding while focusing on the
problematic issues with English of similar
sounding words and complex vowels. Learn to
dramatically improve decoding instruction using
easy-to-teach games and activity books. The
workshop will include demonstrations of the
methods and ready-to-use materials.
Benefits:
-
Learn how to rapidly teach phonics, even to students who struggle with this basic skill after months
of instruction
-
Understand why learning the speech code is fundamental to learning the print code
-
Develop
age-appropriate phonemic awareness
instruction that benefits upper elementary
and secondary students
-
Learn why it
is easier to learn to read in first grade
and why the more complex English read by
older students requires specialized
instruction
-
Leave with a
fresh perspective on reading difficulties
and new methods to significantly improve
reading skills
Solutions:
-
Improve
reading scores on local and state
assessments
-
Update staff
on latest research regarding phonemic
awareness, phonics and word reading
-
Provide
easy-to-implement methods to systematically
improve fluency
-
Improve
outcomes of students who read at grade
level, yet under perform on standardized
tests
-
Substantially decrease the number of
students requiring remediation for reading
difficulties
Closing The Oral Language Gap in Older
Struggling Readers
(upper elementary and secondary)
Reading is a special type of listening, or
receptive, language task. We understand written
language to the degree that we comprehend spoken
language. Older students who struggle with
reading need specific oral language instruction.
Students who struggle while listening to oral
reading (due to weak phonemic awareness or
auditory discrimination, attention and memory
difficulties) most often struggle to read. The
brain’s language areas go through explosive
growth from birth to age seven. Students who do
not acquire receptive language skills in that
time frame must learn them later on through
explicit instruction. Receptive vocabulary, word
retrieval and naming skills are essential for
fluent reading. Reading comprehension is also
largely based on receptive language
comprehension. Students with weak listening
skills often have difficulties applying
higher-level comprehension skills and
strategies. This presentation will show simple
methods that strengthening listening and reading
skills. Participants will see a demonstration of
these methods and practice the methods using
handouts.
Benefits:
-
Learn why
reading difficulties are rooted in oral
language
-
Understand
the key processes that link written and
spoken language
-
Learn why
phoneme discrimination, rapid naming and
listening comprehension are so critical to
reading
-
Learn why it
is easier to learn to read in first grade
and why the more complex English older
students must read requires specialized
instruction
-
Leave with a
fresh perspective on reading difficulties
and new methods to significantly improve
reading skills
Solutions:
-
Improve
reading scores on local and state
assessments
-
Update staff
on latest research regarding
-
Provide
easy-to-implement methods to systematically
improve decoding, fluency and comprehension
-
Improve
outcomes of students that read at grade
level, yet under perform on standardized
tests
-
Substantially decrease the number of
students who require remediation for reading
difficulties
Overcoming the Roadblocks to Early Literacy (k and first grade)
Research has pointed to a wide range of methods
that develop early literacy without resorting to
drill and skill. Young children naturally
develop oral language abilities at a rapid rate
during their first few years of school. These
are the exact capabilities that they need for
learning how to read. Students who learn to read
easily at this age have developed a set of oral
language skills, including phonemic awareness
and discrimination, auditory attention and
memory and pattern recognition. These skill
allow them to make the connections between
spoken and written words naturally. Learn how to
develop oral language skills through the use of
activity books and games.
Benefits:
-
Learn why
kindergarten and first grade students are at
a critical age for learning to read
-
Learn the
newest and easiest methods for developing
phonemic awareness, phonics, word-level
reading and fluency
-
Develop new
methods that strengthen language skills in
students at risk for reading difficulties
-
Learn the
developmental sequence of activities that
are critical for learning to read
-
Learn why
fluency is critical even in the primary
grades and why students who aren’t fluent
often avoid reading
Solutions:
-
Provides an
early literacy intervention plan that will
decrease the number of students requiring
remediation and special education support
-
Update staff
on latest research regarding phonemic
awareness, phonics and word reading
-
Provide
easy-to-implement methods for teaching all
students literacy
Reading Assessment and Progress Monitoring
While states have pushed high-stakes reading
assessment researchers have devised new ways of
quickly determining a student’s reading
abilities. Now it is easy to find out if a
student is responding to your instruction
(responsiveness to intervention) and to target
specific areas of weaknesses. This presentation
will demonstrate three-minute assessments for
phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency and
comprehension. Participants will learn how to
easily monitor progress, as well as methods for
quickly correcting reading difficulties. A
handout including three-minute assessments of
phonemic awareness, rapid naming, comprehension
and fluency will be shown.
Benefits:
-
Learn new
ways of assessing phonemic awareness,
comprehension and fluency
-
Learn how,
in five minutes a week, you can monitor your
students’ progress and improve their reading
-
Develop
methods that limit basic skill instruction
while increasing time in literature groups
-
Learn why
timed measures of comprehension are better
indicators of reading progress
-
Learn why
rapid naming, an easy-to-measure test of
reading speed, is an essential measure of
fluency and reading motivation
-
Learn how to
significantly improve reading scores by
tying assessment and instruction
Solutions:
-
Develop
methods for the early identification of
students with reading problems, before they
need extensive remediation
-
Learn how to
use quick assessments for developing brief,
targeted instruction focused on specific
reading difficulties
-
Understand
why progress monitoring is a key component
in accountability
-
Learn how to
identify areas of weakness before students
take standardized and high-stakes exams
Balancing Memory Math and Number Sense - The Key
to Teaching Struggling Students
To solve math problems, struggling students need
both a deep understanding of the magic of
numbers (number sense) and a good memory for
facts and procedures. By tying together
instruction in the meaningful aspects of math,
concepts and strategies, with memory math, facts
and procedures, students become solid problem
solvers. Practice should be meaningful,
emphasizing number sense and meaningful
memorization over fact practice. Students must
learn that each math operation incorporates many
small skills and strategies. They need to have
both verbal and visual instruction and practice
at their independent instructional level.
Participants will see a demonstration of these
methods and receive hand-outs showing how
addition and multiplication can be taught in a
unified manner.
Benefits:
-
Learn about
new, research-based methods for tying the
memory aspects of math (facts and
procedures) to the meaningful aspects of
math (concepts and strategies)
-
Learn why
math problem solving skills are dependent on
both memory math and meaning math
-
Identify the
major roadblocks to learning math, including
memory issues, math anxiety and avoidance
behavior. Learn how to structure instruction
to maximize student success
-
See how
visual representations are important for
students who struggle with math
-
Learn why
meaningful practice at a student’s
independent instructional level is critical
for long-term success
-
See
demonstrations of powerful new methods that
dramatically help struggling math students
Solutions:
-
Improve math
scores on local and state assessments
-
Update staff
on latest research regarding math
instruction
-
Provide
easy-to-implement methods that every teacher
should use
-
Substantially decrease the number of
students who require remediation for math
difficulties