What reading level should a 6th grader be at


What is the Lexile Level for 6th Grade Students?

As students progress towards the start of their high school journey, their Lexile growth will begin to slow and reading habits will have been formed. It is important to ensure that each individual child is on track to achieve their highest potential Lexile scores in a bid to guarantee that they will be ready for college-level reading at the end of their high school career.

In the 6th grade, higher performers should be looking to achieve Lexile scores of around 1000L by the end of the year, with the average scores being over 665L. Yearly growth in the 6th grade falls under 100L typically, with expected growth at 1.7L per week. However, there are a number of things that can be done to provide students with the correct reading assistance in an effort to increase these scores further.

Use the Cloze Assessments for Guidance

Cloze assessments are of high importance, and educators must ensure that students do not dismiss these tests. By answering questions accurately, you will be more likely to determine an accurate Lexile level, which in turn allows for the correct books to be selected for each individual student.

Instill Research-Based Reading Strategies

Regular reading is another important factor to consider, and although some reading habits will have already been formed by this grade, educators can encourage daily student reading for at least 30 minutes to help boost literacy skills. Using the correct reading platform will motivate the students to want to read additional time each and every day.

Why LightSail Is Perfect for All Students

LightSail Education is a comprehensive LexileⓇ and standards-aligned literacy platform with an immense digital e-book library consisting of thousands of books.  Including multimodal learning functionality and featuring books from leading publishers, LightSail holistically assesses and nurtures each student on their literacy journey throughout elementary, middle, and high school.

When making use of the e-book library, readers can find thousands of Lexile leveled books that would be appropriate for their development. Along with the option to purchase or rent books from renowned publishers, readers will also have a wide selection of free books to choose from.

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6th grade reading Reading | GreatSchools.org

Sixth grade reading entails understanding plot structures, narrative voices, character developments, and the use of language. Students also compare and contrast themes in articles and stories. In the process, your child’s vocabulary should grow by leaps and bounds.

Author says that here, here, and here

Sixth graders need to cite evidence from what they read to support their analysis of the fiction and nonfiction they study. To answer questions, students learn the key difference between evidence and inference. Evidence refers to the examples, quotes, and facts from a text that supports an idea. Inference refers to the conclusions and interpretations you reach based on that evidence.

Sample evidence question: In The Great Fire by Jim Murphy, do the poor neighborhoods of Chicago burn up faster than the wealthy sections? Show evidence in the text to support your answer.

Sample inference question: In Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson, is the boy Jim seeking a father figure to help him grow up? Where is this indicated?

If you want to strengthen these skills, keep asking those two magic questions: What do you think? and How do you know?

So much to remember, my brain hurts!

Young children easily remember what happens in the books parents read to them, but in sixth grade, the demands on their memory rise sharply. Suddenly, kids are expected to decipher philosophical themes of fiction, identify central ideas in nonfiction, and support their views with specific details. To collect evidence, students need to carefully read, re-read, understand, and remember the text using strategy tools like highlighting, taking notes, using post-its to mark key scenes or passages, using a technique called intellectual graffiti, and outlining chapters.

One crazy scene after another

Sixth graders learn that a novel’s plot unfolds in a sequence of episodes. Dramatic episodes have consequences that lead to future situations with repercussions; these situations crescendo to a climax and resolve in a conclusion. To help them understand, kids learn to make plot diagrams.

When reading nonfiction, kids learn to analyze how key events, individuals, or ideas are introduced, portrayed, and developed. In both cases this analysis of how texts are structured involves identifying how parts of a story or argument build to make a whole.

Sample fiction question: In Lions of Little Rock, two girls form a dangerous and clandestine friendship, forbidden due to racial segregation. Name, in chronological order, the multiple episodes of racist threats and violence that increase the tension.

Sample nonfiction question: In Shipwreck at the Bottom of the World: The Extraordinary True Story of Shackleton and The Endurance by Jennifer Armstrong, the survival of the crew depends on leadership. Describe the sequence of decisions Ernest Shackelton makes that earn him the crew’s trust.

The real-world purpose of all of this highfalutin analysis? Helping kids develop the strategic thinking skills to help them break down and tackle complex problems.

Character development

Characters in a successful novel are deeply impacted by life-changing events in the plot. Personalities are psychologically challenged and often transformed by the situational demands. Like little armchair psychologists, sixth graders learn to recognize and explain these shifts in attitude and disposition.

Sample character-development question: In The Black Stallion by Walter Farley, the teenage protagonist is introduced as a timid boy. Does his personality change in the course of events? Why?

A great way to reinforce this skill is to indulge in some serious gossip about characters in your child’s favorite book or movie. Why did he act that way? Didn’t he know he would get in trouble?

Looking at sixth graders’ reading language

Throughout the year, kids are expected to expand their vocabularies by learning academic vocabulary words and technical words, both of which are prevalent in nonfiction. Academic vocabulary words include nuanced words such as exasperation and unruly, as well as technical words used in specific fields such as nucleus (science) and artery (medical). When kids encounter a new word, they should try to figure out the meaning from context as they have in years past, but they also learn to recognize Greek and Latin roots, prefixes, and suffixes, such as auto, bio, and chron and ambi, aqua, and sent. Kids are also expected to look up words — without prodding — in the glossary, dictionary, or thesaurus to understand exactly how a word is being used.

In addition to acquiring new words, sixth graders start to understand the precise intention of words and phrases used in fiction and nonfiction. Sixth graders need to identify many of the English language’s 250 common figures of speech (similes, metaphors, hyperbole, personification, synecdoche) and interpret their meaning within various contexts. Kids also learn to identify connotative language (the positive and negative associations words carry with them) and how to distinguish connotative words by understanding each word’s precise meaning. Finally, students learn that nuance is small degrees of change in a word or the text’s message or mood.

Using these language skills, kids are asked to analyze the meaning and tone of specific word choices:

Figurative language example: In Because of Winn-Dixie, what does the hyperbolic metaphor “she could stick a tire in the ground and grow a car” mean?

Connotation and nuance example: Compare and contrast the words stingy, cheap, miserly, thrifty, and economical.

Word choice example: In The Golden Compass: His Dark Materials, the character Iorek Byrnison is a panserbjørn who wears armor made of “sky iron.” Why did the author select the words “sky iron”?

Understanding text elements

In sixth grade, students are expected to understand and explain how text elements in fiction and nonfiction — sentences, stanzas, paragraphs, chapters, sections, or graphics — are indispensably intertwined with other elements and how they contribute to the plot, theme, structure, and development of the text’s ideas and themes.

Who’s telling this tale?

Sixth graders learn the many narrative options in novels — and how to identify and characterize the narrator in what they read. Narrator options include:

  1. First-person narrator: The story is told by the author or one of the characters, and that narrator uses “I”.
  2. Third-person narrator: The story is told by an uninvolved entity that isn’t a character. All characters are referred to as “he,” “she,” “it,” or “they.”
  3. Second-person narrator: This technique, which is rarely used, expresses narration using “you.”
  4. Multiple narrators: The narrator changes; it may be one character in one chapter, another character the next, or there may be more than one narrator.
  5. Narration that isn’t chronological: The story can go backward and forward in time.
  6. Omniscient vs. limited-knowledge narrator: The story might be told by an all-knowing entity with knowledge of all character’s feelings, actions, and thoughts or by an entity that only knows some characters’ motivations and thoughts
  7. Neutral vs. biased narrator: Narrators can be neutral in their opinions or biased and unreliable.

Sample narrator question: Who is the narrator at the beginning of The Borrowers? When does the narrator change? Do you think the narrator at the end is the same as in the beginning? Describe how the story is affected by each shift in the narrative voice.

In nonfiction, sixth graders learn how to determine the author’s point of view and intention by providing evidence in the text.

Sample question about an author’s intention: In Oh Rats! The Story of Rats and People by Albert Marrin, does the author believe the rodents are always dangerous?

The movie vs. the book and other comparisons

Sixth graders learn to compare the experience of reading a book or poem to that of watching (or listening to) a film, play, or audio adaptation. Did the student imagine the same images and sounds in their reading as the multimedia version displayed?

Kids are also asked to compare and contrast how two different texts treat the same topic — for example, a poem and a historical novel about the same event or two different authors’ perspectives on the same topic.

Sample book vs. movie question: Do the sisters in the 1994 film Little Women resemble the characters you imagined when you read Louisa May Alcott’s novel? (Related: Check out our list of great 6th grade books that were made into movies.)

Sample question about comparing two texts: The topic of Christianity is examined in both Avi’s historical novel, Crispin, and C.S. Lewis’ novel The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Compare and contrast the two approaches.

Sample question about comparing two authors’ accounts: Compare and contrast the internal motivations driving the 26th President as depicted in Albert Marrin’s biography, The Great Adventure: Theodore Roosevelt and the Rise of Modern America, and the former president’s autobiography, Adventures of Theodore Roosevelt.

Tackling complex texts

There’s a push at all reading levels to have kids challenge themselves by reading poems, stories, and nonfiction above their grade level. For sixth graders, that means diving into the sixth- to eighth-grade complexity band. (See our list of complex books for sixth graders.) Grasping texts aimed at big eighth graders, like Gulliver’s Travels, can be daunting for sixth graders. To scale this challenge, kids should get something called “scaffolding” to help them climb to new reading heights. What does this mean? Lots of support in all sorts of ways. For instance, you might read a passage aloud to your child. Or if your child is struggling with a particular book, have them reread just the first paragraph then discuss it before moving on to the second paragraph. Sometimes all it takes is having a conversation about what they don’t understand to help your child get past their confusion. The important thing to remember is that it’s all in an effort to help readers with Lilliputian skills expand their reading ability to Brobdingnag proportions.

“Reading” more than words

In sixth grade, reading includes more than just words. Kids need to integrate information from a wide variety of visual, oral, quantitative, and multimedia formats, including graphs, charts, maps, tables, slide shows, speeches, interviews, and videos. This is different than years past, when academics only included the written form and non-written assignments were the fun stuff. The upshot for you? Your child’s multimedia assignments may be just as challenging as their textual reading and writing assignments, so they’ll likely need to allocate just as much time and energy to them.

Talking it all out

So, how can you see these skills in action? Obviously in your child’s writing projects, but also in discussions about what your child has read. Sixth graders should read to prepare for discussions and reference evidence when they speak — whether they’re doing a formal presentation, participating in a conversation, responding to a classmate’s question, or rebutting an opposing viewpoint. And at home, these ideas can liven up your dinner conversations and rush hour commutes.

90,000 how much does it take to read and why it is important

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Maria Spiridonova,

Neurobiologist, a defectologist, candidate of biological sciences,

Head of the "Center for Correction and Developing Technologies"

🧠 Why reading is good for the brain

Forms neural connections

Neuroscientists have long identified several types of intelligence and even fix the differences with the help of an electroencephalogram: a person is put on sensors and offered to perform different types of tasks. The program shows which areas of the brain are primarily responsive to certain types of tasks. So according to the map of the brain, the leading types of intelligence of the subject are determined. nine0003

You may have difficulty understanding math but be very empathetic if you have developed emotional intelligence. In everyday life, a smart person is not someone who knows how to write an equation for a redox reaction, but someone who knows when to be silent, what to say to whom. There are no people with one type of intelligence, each type of intelligence is developed to some extent.

Reading and intelligence are not directly related, but if we consider the brain as a neurosystem, then the benefits of reading are noticeable. When I learn to dance salsa or weave baskets, new neural connections form in my brain. nine0003

The same happens when reading. Mastering something new gives an increase in the intellectual sphere at the cellular level, but reading for the sake of the amount of reading does not make sense.

It is best to comprehend, discuss what you read and try to apply it on your own experience - then the greatest number of connections will be formed in the brain.

Some people find it difficult to read printed text. We diagnose scotopic sensitivity syndrome or dyslexia in them. If the process of reading is flour for you, you should listen to audio books, and when reading the text, choose short stories, not novels. nine0003

People who don't like to read still read, for example, social media posts. In the spectrum of my interests are funny short stories on the topic of the day and everything related to defectology and neurobiology, as well as articles about viruses. I read materials on the Internet and paper books. Moreover, if after a few pages the book did not hook, I will not read it.

Encourages imagination

University of Michigan Literary Specialist Natalie Phillips initiated an MRI experiment. The subjects were asked to read an excerpt from a work of art in the chamber of a magnetic resonance imaging machine. It turned out that reading for pleasure stimulates different parts of the brain. The subjects had increased blood supply to areas that are not used when watching videos or during computer games. nine0003

Stimulates brain activity

Psychophysiologists note that unexpected endings of phrases or non-existent words when reading increase the activity of various brain areas. Poems often abound with such examples: V. V. Mayakovsky’s “ hammered, sickle Soviet passport” or A. A. Akhmatova’s “Everything in Moscow is saturated with poems, pierced through and through with rhymes.” That is why poetry has a stronger and more lasting effect than prose. nine0003

📚 How many books to read per year

Successful entrepreneurs: Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Warren Buffett read books and periodicals several hours a day - up to 100 books a year. A VTsIOM survey in 2019 showed that reading Russians “swallow” about 12 books a year, and if they don’t surf the Internet, twice as much – half a book a week.

📅 How much time you need to read per day

The average reading speed of an adult is about 50 pages per hour. A book of 250 pages can be mastered in a week if you devote a little less than an hour a day to this lesson. How much time to devote to reading, everyone decides for himself. If you devote an hour to books every day, you will approach the indicators of famous rich people. nine0003


IVAN KARPENKO,

Lecturer at Foxford, Ph.D. I knew people who practically didn’t read anything, didn’t watch or listen, nevertheless, in communication they could show themselves to be interesting interlocutors (but not in terms of talking about culture) and subtle psychologists - connoisseurs of human souls.

But there is one caveat. It is better not to discuss literature, cinema and music with such people - they demonstrate such strange tastes that further communication may become impossible. And this is not surprising - taste, the ability to understand something, for example, in art, develops precisely in the process of consuming this art. nine0003

And one more small point: if you yourself are very fond of something, for example, astrophysics and are eager to talk about it, then, of course, you will be more pleasant with the interlocutor with whom you can discuss it.

However, if you are an introvert, it doesn't matter if your interlocutor has read anything. Most likely, you will not gravitate towards communication anyway.

Reading and other cultural consumption, of course, develops, forms the intellect and taste, in this sense, yes, if we understand rationality as a body of knowledge. However, as Heraclitus said, “much knowledge does not teach the mind, otherwise it would have taught Hesiod and Pythagoras, as well as Xenophanes and Hecateus,” hinting that the best erudite of that time were fools. nine0003

In general, reading provides a basis and an incentive for development, but if there is no mind, then it will not exist.

🏆 How to make reading effective

  • What matters is not the amount of reading, but the quality of understanding the material.
  • If you discuss, think about and put into practice the information you read, new connections are formed in the brain.
  • The more active the mental activity, the lower the probability of age-related disorders of the brain.
  • If the text is hard to read visually, listen to audiobooks.
  • Unlike watching video content, reading activates the imagination.
  • Reading poetry causes increased activity in different areas of the brain due to the unusual structure of phrases and fictitious words.
  • Famous personalities - businessmen, inventors - read at least one book a week.
  • Reading is a tool for self-development. If you have a goal, reading will help you achieve it. nine0116

The proverb says: "He who reads a lot knows a lot." Why is it so? Together with experts, we figure out whether reading really makes us smarter, how many pages a day you need to read and how to make reading as effective as possible for both children and adults. By the way, we have now launched a free email course for those who are not yet very good at reading (or not at all). Five creative and simple activities to teach your child to read consciously and with interest. Subscribe!

The child reads slowly: what to do?

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Natalya Kolesnikovich

Reading time: 5 minutes

The end of the school year is approaching: control, cuts, final marks ... Many parents are worried about the question "What to do if the child reads slowly?". I would like to be sarcastic and answer: “It’s too late to drink Borjomi ...”, but let’s look into the situation and let’s not escalate panic, torment the unfortunate (already exhausted by beriberi) schoolchildren, forcing them to sit behind a book with a stopwatch and shake over the diary. nine0010


www.topglobus.ru

Reading speed in elementary grades

Grade 1: 25-30 words per minute - 900 1 half year; 30-40 wpm - 2nd half . In specialized classes and high-level schools (for example, gymnasiums), a higher reading rate is possible - from 60 words per minute.

Grade 2: 40-50 words per minute - 1 semester ; nine0009 50-60 words per minute - 2nd half. In specialized classes and advanced schools - 85-90 words per minute in the 1st half of the year and 90-95 words in the second.

Grade 3: 60-70 words per minute - 1 semester; 70-80 words per minute - 2nd half; 95-105 words per minute for advanced requirements. Silently, a third grader should read 20 or more words faster than aloud.

Grade 4: 80-90 words per minute - 1st half; 100-120 words per minute - 2 semester. Silent reading speed is 50 or more words faster than reading aloud.

Let's make a reservation right away, at school it is customary to “measure” the speed and technique of reading with average indicators. But, dear caring and worried mothers, do not forget that these norms are EXAMPLE. How many words a child reads per minute is by no means the most important indicator of his intellectual development, so it’s not at all worth focusing on the neighbor Vanya, who flies ahead of the rest and gives out 120 by the end of the first class. I'll explain why...

What are the reasons for a child's slow reading?

Reading speed depends on the way of reading (by syllables; syllable + word, whole words). However, it often happens that the child reads in whole words, but still slowly. Why is this happening?


shkolazhizni.ru

If a child reads slowly, then there are some reasons for this. Let's understand and look for them together:

  • A small vocabulary of a child. nine0010 In this case, many of the words that come across will be unfamiliar to him, which will slow down the reading process. Try to enrich the baby's vocabulary, talk more with him, communicate. Read a variety of literature.
  • Lack of attention. If a child reads inattentively, if something constantly distracts him from reading, he will not be able to concentrate on pronouncing the text and will not be able to understand its meaning. Try to concentrate his attention on reading - the child should understand the essence of what he read. nine0116
  • Develop your child's operational field of vision - so he will be able to read not 2-3 letters, but cover the word with his eyes. To do this, just sit down to read as often as possible.
  • Poorly developed articulatory apparatus is another reason for slow reading. Develop it, do special exercises with your child. Often those children who have had problems with the development of speech, who started talking late and did not pronounce some sounds, often read slowly.
  • Poorly developed memory level. Quite often, after reading three words, children already forget what was discussed. This is bad for memorization and reading comprehension.
  • Regressions. While reading, the child constantly runs his eyes over the word he has just read. The eyes move backward and the child reads the text twice. This is the most common deficiency. You can determine the presence of regressions by observing how the child reads an unfamiliar text. If you notice that the eyes are running around, the child first reads the word to himself, then says it out loud, then says a few words again to understand the meaning of what he read, then there is a regression. The reason may be habit, lack of attention, or the child simply finds the text difficult. nine0116
  • Complicated literature. Select literature appropriate for your child's developmental level and age. Don't be in a hurry to make things more difficult.


umm4.com

And now ATTENTION!

The child will not read faster than he speaks.

If in life a child is slow, melancholy, then one should not expect a choleric reaction from him. This applies to everything, reading in this case is no exception. A balanced and “impenetrable” phlegmat is also unlikely to rush and, eating the endings, “swallow” page after page. If in ordinary life a child thinks for a long time before answering a question, draws out words, then he will read more slowly than usual. And there is nothing bad and terrible in this. nine0003

The main thing is not the number of words read, but awareness. What is the use of the fact that Vanya flew in a minute, but could not answer questions about what he had read? What is the point of mixing words together, not seeing any dots or commas, and then making big eyes, surprised at misunderstood phrases.

What should you never do?

  • Laugh at mistakes, reproach for misread words.
  • To stand over the soul "with a belt".
  • "Punish" by reading. Like “You won’t go out for a walk if you don’t read from and to ...”, “You won’t get a toy if you don’t read 40 words per minute”, etc. nine0116

How can I help my child improve his reading skills?


www.ikirov.ru

  • Read your favorite fairy tales before going to bed. Mom or dad can read part of the text, and then the child himself. The main thing is to do it regularly, but not to force it, but to motivate it with a “carrot”. Praise, even if it was “so-so”, say that “I can’t fall asleep without your fairy tale” and come up with all sorts of little tricks so that the child loves the process of reading and voluntarily picks up a book. Good advice is in an interview with Olga Davletbaeva: Why do children read little? Interview with the editor-in-chief of the children's educational magazine "Kvazhdy Kva".
  • If there are younger children in the family, attract "free ears" , let them listen to the elder read to them. There is communication and learning at the same time!

  • Practice reading passages of text at different paces : slow, medium-fast, as fast as possible.
  • Let the child try to read when something bothers him. nine0010 For example, clock ticking, tongue clicking, or counting (mother says numbers in an undertone, claps her hands, etc.).
  • Reading through the bars.


image.slidesharecdn.com

  • Encourage reading of any printed material: children's magazines, comics, horoscopes, etc. Let children read whatever interests them! Children's literature should always be available in the house. A book with bright pictures accidentally forgotten on the table, a magazine opened to the page with the announcement of a new children's cartoon - anything, if only there was a desire to pick it up, look through it, read it. nine0116
  • Buy an encyclopedia where the text is presented in an accessible way and broken into small blocks. Examine each other on various topics such as why it rains, why there is a rainbow, etc.
  • If the child is interested in a cartoon or TV show, pick up a book on this topic and offer to find out if the author's version is different from the television one.

The topic of children's reading is very relevant today, fewer and fewer children read books with enthusiasm. What can we adults do when there are so many “temptations” around in the form of electronic gadgets and television novelties? The simplest thing to pay attention to is to show by your own example that you CAN enjoy the very process of reading books. And no matter how popular e-books, audio recordings of literary works are, nothing can replace the rustling of paper pages. Read for yourself and let your children see you more often with a book in your hands! nine0003

Dear readers! Is the topic of increasing the reading speed of children relevant to you? How many words per minute does your child read and how often do you pay attention to this issue at home? Perhaps you have your own recipes for improving reading technique and they will be useful to someone else.


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