The International Reading Association
Home |  Contact Us | Help | Site Map

Abstract of

Becoming a Fluent and Automatic Reader in the Early Elementary School Years

 

full text - HTML   full text - PDF

 

The goals of this study were to (a) develop an empirically based model regarding the development of fluent and automatic reading in the early elementary school years and (b) determine whether fluent text-reading skills provided benefits for reading comprehension beyond those accounted for by fluent word decoding. First-, second-, and third-grade children completed a series of reading tasks targeting word and nonword processing, text reading, spelling knowledge, autonomous reading, and reading comprehension. Structural equation modeling was carried out to evaluate how these skills operated together to produce fluent text reading and good comprehension. Evidence supported a simple reading fluency model for the early elementary school years suggesting that fluent word and text reading operate together with autonomous reading to produce good comprehension.

Abstract from Schwanenflugel, P.J., Meisinger, E.B., Wisenbaker, J.M., Kuhn, M.R., Strauss, G.P., & Morris, R.D. (2006, October/November/December). Becoming a Fluent and Automatic Reader in the Early Elementary School Years. Reading Research Quarterly, 41(4), 496–522. doi: 10.1598/RRQ.41.4.4

 

arrowMore About RRQ

arrowArchives

arrowSelected Articles

arrowSubscription/Access Information

design image design image


arrowEnglish

arrowFrançais

arrowDeutsch

arrowEspañol


menu arrowJournals

The Reading Teacher

Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy

Reading Research Quarterly

Lectura y Vida

Reading Online

menu arrowBooks, Brochures, Videos

menu arrowReading Today

menu arrowRights and Permissions

menu arrowFor Authors

menu arrowFor Reviewers

menu arrowFor Advertisers