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GUIDED READING LEVEL
Used in many schools today, our guided reading levels are determined by the Fountas & Pinnell Benchmark Assessment System. Linked to classroom instruction, the system matches students’ instructional and independent reading abilities to an A to Z text gradient. Book features considered are vocabulary, length, layout patterns, controlled text, sentence structure, punctuation, illustration support for text, complexity of content, and more. The end result is an organized approach to reading instruction and assessment to help teachers guide students in reading appropriate materials. There are nuances in every level from A to Z, but you can use the basic structure of the Fountas & Pinnell scale to assess a student’s reading level.
- Emergent readers, levels A–B, are beginning to make sense of print and picture cues.
- Early readers, levels C–G, are reading picture books and have a basic sight word vocabulary.
- Transitional readers, levels H–M, are children who can silently and fluently read early chapter books and longer picture books without relying on picture cues.
- Self-extending readers, levels N–R, apply reading strategies as they encounter different kinds of text and a variety of new words, making excellent attempts at reading multisyllabic words.
- Advanced readers, levels S–Z, are students who have passed the learning-to-read phase and can sustain their interest and understanding of longer texts over extended periods of time.
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