When I asked Efraín “What do good readers do?” he responded “they understand the stories they read; they know what the words mean.” “What about when you come to words you don't understand—what do you do?” He responded “I look at the pictures and try to stretch the word out.” He stated he enjoys reading about animals and sports, especially soccer and baseball. I observed him reading alone and he tends to be less of a careful reading than when he is in a guided reading group with me. At home his mother will occasionally read to him in Spanish but he himself does not like to do so.
I use about a 3:1 ratio of nonfiction to fiction text with Efraín in his small reading group in order to assist him with his comprehension skills and build his vocabulary. Nonetheless he still struggles with the former. He can usually answer simple, one-word answers (e.g., “Where do birds build their nests? What animal on the farm gives milk?”) but stumbles and often guesses when asked to summarize what he has read (“tell me what happened first, then in the middle, and what happened last”). Like many early readers his is just beginning to develop his ability to infer meaning from the text. He waits for my prompts to comment on his reading and he does not make spontaneous comments while he goes through the text. Due to his less developed Spanish vocabulary and lack of formal instruction in Spanish Efraín's reading comprehension skills in this language are much less developed than those in English.
Efraín's reading is somewhat monotone. He is working on recognizing different end punctuation marks (? and !) and how the reading of these sentences differ from those that end in a period. He is also learning how to interpret bold print. His last reading assessment rated him instructional at level 10 with 92% accuracy. For his expressive reading in English I would rate Efraín a 2/3—he reads primarily in three and four word phrase groups but occasionally changes the author's syntax (“have” for “had,” “three girl” for “three girls,”). He generally reads at the appropriate rate but slows or stops to decode unfamiliar text. In Spanish I rated him a 3 at the instructional level but his expressive reading scores drops to a 1 because he primarily reads word-by-word, he reads with little or no expression, and reads very slowly. This gap between the two scores is not surprising since Efraín has received all of his formal schooling in English (beginning in pre-K).