📘 Progress Documentation System
Purpose: To give parents a clear, simple way to track and share meaningful reading growth.
1. What to Track
| Category | What to Note | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Fluency | Speed, smoothness, and expression during oral reading | Shows confidence and automaticity |
| Accuracy | Words read correctly vs. hesitations/miscues | Helps identify patterns in decoding |
| Comprehension | Ability to retell, answer questions, or connect ideas | Reflects true understanding |
| Interest/Engagement | Which topics or book types excite your child | Guides book selection |
| Self-Talk & Confidence | Phrases like “I can’t” vs. “I’ll try again” | Indicates mindset growth |
| Teacher Feedback | Notes from meetings or messages | Keeps record of ongoing collaboration |
Progress Documentation System: A Simple Home Log
Tracking progress isn’t about giving grades; it’s about spotting patterns. This helps you share specific, helpful information with the teacher. Use a simple notebook or a notes app on your phone.
What to Track (Keep it brief!):
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Date & Book Title: Just so you have a reference.
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“The Win” (A specific success):
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Examples: “Sounded out ‘stump’ all by himself.” “Read a full page with no complaints.” “Used a new word (‘enormous’) in conversation today.” “Asked a question about the story’s character.”
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“The Stumble” (A specific observation):
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Examples: “Got stuck on words ending in ‘-ed’.” “Read the same sentence three times (repeated).” “Said ‘I hate reading’ today.” “Guessed at most words instead of sounding them out.”
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Their Vibe (Emotion):
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Examples: “Excited, picked the book himself.” “Tired, but willing.” “Frustrated, ended in tears.” “Silly and unfocused.”
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How to Use It: Don’t do this every single day. Aim for 2-3 times per week. Before a teacher meeting, you can scan this log and say, “I looked back at my notes, and I’ve noticed a pattern. He’s really confident with his starting sounds, but he consistently struggles when he sees a ‘sh’ or ‘th’ combination.” This is far more effective than just saying, “He’s struggling.”