Getting Started with Guided Reading

Ready to get started? Here are the first steps you can take to build, change, or enhance this instructional practice in your classroom.

Form groups based on assessment data.

When children are placed in groups based on their instructional reading level using multiple sources of data, they are ensured access to instruction that meets their needs in the most efficient and effective ways. Group discussion and collaboration are most effective when instruction occurs in the company of peers who share strengths and needs. Re-grouping often is necessary to ensure that children are continually matched with the right peers, objectives, and texts.

Choose an instructional level text to match the objective of the lesson and the readers’ interest.

A hallmark of Guided Reading is working with an instructional level text, i.e., a text that the children can read with 90-94% accuracy. The use of an instructional level text allows for optimal teaching and learning. The children will be able to read most of the text, but there are still opportunities for instruction. Guided Reading lessons are focused on an objective informed by child data and in line with realistic text level expectations. Lessons driven by an objective are purposeful and productive. The teacher keeps track of the children’s progress toward the objective using anecdotal notes of the children’s reading behaviors to inform future lessons. A book in an area of the children’s interest increases their level of engagement and motivates them to work harder.

Use a lesson planning template to guide the thoughtful planning and pacing of the lesson and rehearse language

The lesson planning template is a tool for supporting your thinking through this important phase of a Guided Reading lesson. Successful lessons only happen with careful planning. The prompts ensure that your lesson addresses all of the critical components of the lesson’s objective. On the lesson planning template, you will record the actual language that you’ll use when teaching the lesson. This will help to conserve time and ensure a high quality lesson. Guided Reading lessons are 15-20 minutes long, and the lesson planning template will support you in being mindful of how much time you must allocate to each segment.

Guided Reading Lesson Plan Template Use this lesson plan template to guide your own planning.

Guided Reading Lesson Plan Template (Spanish) Use this lesson plan template to guide your own planning.

Develop routines and procedures to promote responsibility within the Guided Reading group.

Children who are comfortable and confident with the routines and procedures of Guided Reading will experience a higher degree of success in applying them to their independent reading. The “before reading” segment of the lesson is where sufficient time and instruction should be devoted to learning the routines and procedures of Guided Reading. The emphasis on procedures and routines will decrease over time to simply a brief reminder. Practicing procedures and routines will result in more productive and smoother lessons, increased reading progress, and independence in reading.

Develop routines and procedures to promote responsibility for children working independently (who are not in the Guided Reading group.)

Guided Reading takes place in an environment of immersed readers and writers. You can’t successfully move forward with a Guided Reading lesson until the children who are not at the Guided Reading table are meaningfully engaged in independent reading and writing tasks. You must be able to exclusively devote your attention to the children at the Guided Reading table. Through a series of carefully planned, taught, and practiced procedural lessons, the children working independently learn what to do, where to do it, how to access materials, and how to solve the problems that are likely to emerge. They become increasingly more self-directed, self-regulated, and independent. This serves them well not only during Guided Reading, but also throughout the literacy block and the rest of the school day.

Create a joyful climate around learning to read.

When we teach children to read, one of the most important lessons we convey is that reading is fun! If they don’t believe that reading is fun, they won’t put in the time, effort, and persistence necessary to become fluent readers. Make it worth their while. The climate that we create in our classrooms greatly contributes to children’s motivation to read. Share memorable characters, gorgeous illustrations, and clever story lines. Then put the books in their hands, support them in their reading, and let them have fun.

Introduce and preview the text, varying the length and type of book introduction by reading stage.

A successful book introduction equips readers with the tools and information that they will need to read a text. The book introduction occurs in the “before reading” segment of the lesson. Book introductions consider the children’s background knowledge, the structure of the text, the lesson focus, and words and phrases that are critical to successfully reading the book. The length of a book introduction varies based on the children’s reading stage, their familiarity with the text type, and their experience with reading books at that particular text level.