- To meet the varying instructional needs of all the students in the classroom, enabling them to greatly expand their reading powers
- To teach students to read increasingly difficult texts with understanding and fluency
- To construct meaning while using problem solving strategies to figure out unfamiliar words that deal with complex sentence structures, and understand concepts or ideas not previously encountered.
In one example of guided reading instruction, small dynamic groups of students that are performing around the same level are formed, where they: (1) hear a story read aloud, (2) read it quietly to themselves, (3) read the story aloud, (4) sometimes reread the story aloud again. The teacher is meant to prompt the students to use different reading strategies with difficult text and to monitor each group to make sure each child's different needs are being met. When implemented correctly, these practices can improve a child's accuracy, speed, AND fluency!
Article:
http://faculty.swosu.edu/ruth.boyd/share/Reading%20I/Guided%20Reading/Guided%20Reading.Article.pdf