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My fluency checklist4/11/2024 Plus, it keeps the cards together! If you don’t wish to use key rings, you can also organize the task cards with envelopes, baskets, or index card organizers. I hang the task cards around my classroom for students to have easy access. I like to use key rings to organize my different sets. You can include ALL the cards or just pick and choose the task cards you want your students to complete. Or you can sort them by target area (i.e., Pace, Phrasing, Expression, Punctuation). You can sort the cards by set (i.e., A, B, C, D), one task card per activity in each set. The prep for these task cards is simple! If you are choosing to use the printable resource, all you have to do is print, laminate, cut, and sort. You can even print four to a page (using “Print Preferences”) to create a one-page student reference! ( Beginner & Upper levels available!) The Daily Fluency Task Cards resource include fluency posters that can be used to review the components. Display the posters in your classroom or print them out for student fluency folders. For younger students, a unit on fluency (i.e, Fluency Boot Camp) may be necessary to introduce fluency and the different components, but for older students who have been exposed to fluency instruction previously, you can use my FREE “What is Fluency?” reference sheet to do a quick review. It’s important for students to be able to identify the different parts of fluency before completing these task cards. Introducing Fluencyīefore using my Daily Fluency Activity Packs or these Daily Fluency Task Cards, I would highly recommend teaching what fluency is. Differentiate your sets of tasks cards to fit your students needs. The Daily Fluency Task Card activities are quick, and you can customize which tasks the students complete. The categories are the same, but the content is new!Įach task card allows students to “dig deeper” into fluency and focuses on specific fluency skills. (Not familiar? Read more about this product series here!) The big difference is that the task cards feature one task per card, as opposed to five tasks per page. If you love my Daily Fluency Activity Packs, these fluency task cards are a modified version of the resource. You can even use them as an informal assessment of fluency skills. Use the cards as part of your literacy centers, interventions, small group instruction, guided reading, independent practice. Maybe you don’t have an entire week to do a Fluency Boot Camp, but perhaps you can carve out a few minutes a day? or even a week? Why Use Daily Fluency Task Cards?ĭaily Fluency Task Cards are the perfect supplement to any classroom reading program and are perfect for reviewing each of the components of fluency. ![]() It’s the bridge between decoding and comprehension and the glue that holds it all together. Yet, it’s one of the most important skills in reading. ![]() ![]() Most classroom teachers feel there just isn’t enough time in a school day to get through the curriculum they need to, let alone the “fun stuff.” Schedules are jam-packed and you have to get through new content and skills, not to mention helping your struggling readers to close the gap and master the skills they are missing to be successful readers.įluency is often one of the literacy skills that gets pushed aside or bumped when there just isn’t enough time.
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