Week 3 Assignment 3


Qualitative Reading Inventory-5

1. What is QRI-5 - Qualitative Reading Inventory-5?
The QRI-5 is an informal reading inventory that is administered individually and is not a norm-referenced or standardized instrument. It provides information about "conditions under which students can identify words and comprehend text successfully and conditions that appear to result in unsuccessful word identification or comprehension". Like other informal reading inventories, the QRI-5 provides graded word lists and numerous passages designed to assess the oral and silent reading and listening ability of students from the pre-primer 1 through the high school levels. 

2. What is the purpose of using QRI-5? 
the assessment is used to identify a student's reading level, which texts they can read independently, which is their instructional level, and which texts are on the level of frustration. Teachers use this inventory as a valuable diagnostic tool, that provides accurate information as to where to begin or change intervention instruction. The results of the assessment can be used to group students for guided reading sessions, to choose appropriate books for literacy circles, reading workshops, and independent reading. 
3. Have you seen similar assessment activities like QRI5? What are they?
The phonics Inventory is also an assessment that provides information as to which phonemes the students can decode successfully. 

4. What is my impression of QRI-5?
This seems to be a great indicator of where a student's reading is holding. It is individual for the student and allows teachers to develop appropriate instruction based on the results.

Comments

  1. Great job, Chavi! You summed up QRI-5 very well!

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  2. Hi Chavi, I found the way you explained QRI5 very clear!

    ReplyDelete
  3. What do you mean hold? Should we always have a progression on our reading?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The QRI Assessment is a great indicator of the level of text the students are able to read at the independent level, instructional level, and frustration level. Yes, children should always be progressing their reading skills and this assessment can determine where to begin intervention or change the current intervention plan.

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