DIBELS –The Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills are a set of standardized, individually administered measures of early literacy development. They are designed to be short (one minute) fluency measures used to regularly monitor the development of pre-reading and early reading skills. The measures were developed to assess student development of phonological awareness, alphabetic understanding, and automaticity and fluency with the code. When used as recommended, the results can be used to evaluate individual student development as well as provide grade level feedback toward validated instructional objectives.
First Sound Fluency (FSF) assesses a student’s fluency in identifying the initial sounds within spoken words. It is an indicator of early phonemic awareness skills. (Kindergarten)
Phoneme Segmentation Fluency (PSF) is a brief, direct measure of phonemic awareness. PSF assesses the student’s fluency in segmenting a spoken word into its component parts or sound segments. (Kindergarten and 1st grade)
Letter Naming Fluency (LNF) is a brief, direct measure of a student’s fluency with naming letters. LNF assesses a student’s ability to recognize individual letters and say their letter names. (Kindergarten and 1st grade)
Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF) is a brief, direct measure of the alphabetic principle and basic phonics. It assesses knowledge of basic letter-sound correspondences and the ability to blend letter sounds into consonant-vowel-consonant and vowel-consonant words. (Kindergarten – 2nd grade)
DIBELS Oral Reading Fluency (DORF) is a measure that assesses fluency with text, the ability to translate letters-to-sounds-to-words fluently, effortlessly. The fluent reader is one whose decoding processes are automatic, requiring no conscious attention. Such capacity then enables readers to allocate their attention to the comprehension and meaning of the text.
Retell Fluency (RTF) is a measure that assesses comprehension, the ability to extract meaning from text.
2. Teachers frequently are concerned about children who read fluently and do not comprehend. This pattern is infrequent - but may apply to some children. This procedure may identify those children without unduly increasing the amount of time spent in the assessment.
3. The National Reading Panel (2000) report is clear on the core components of early reading, and DIBELS maps explicitly onto the first three. Retell Fluency is included to provide a brief measure with an explicit score that corresponds directly to the comprehension core component.
4. A primary concern teachers have about oral reading fluency is the face validity of the measure. Incorporation of an explicit comprehension check may help teachers feel increasingly comfortable with oral reading fluency.
First Sound Fluency (FSF) assesses a student’s fluency in identifying the initial sounds within spoken words. It is an indicator of early phonemic awareness skills. (Kindergarten)
Phoneme Segmentation Fluency (PSF) is a brief, direct measure of phonemic awareness. PSF assesses the student’s fluency in segmenting a spoken word into its component parts or sound segments. (Kindergarten and 1st grade)
Letter Naming Fluency (LNF) is a brief, direct measure of a student’s fluency with naming letters. LNF assesses a student’s ability to recognize individual letters and say their letter names. (Kindergarten and 1st grade)
Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF) is a brief, direct measure of the alphabetic principle and basic phonics. It assesses knowledge of basic letter-sound correspondences and the ability to blend letter sounds into consonant-vowel-consonant and vowel-consonant words. (Kindergarten – 2nd grade)
DIBELS Oral Reading Fluency (DORF) is a measure that assesses fluency with text, the ability to translate letters-to-sounds-to-words fluently, effortlessly. The fluent reader is one whose decoding processes are automatic, requiring no conscious attention. Such capacity then enables readers to allocate their attention to the comprehension and meaning of the text.
Retell Fluency (RTF) is a measure that assesses comprehension, the ability to extract meaning from text.
- DIBELS Oral Reading Fluency (DORF) is a standardized, individually administered test of accuracy and fluency with connected text. The DORF passages and procedures are based on the program of research and development of Curriculum-Based Measurement of Reading by Stan Deno and colleagues at the University of Minnesota and using the procedures described in Shinn (1989). A version of CBM reading also has been published as The Test of Reading Fluency (TORF) (Children's Educational Services, 1987). DORF is a standardized set of passages and administration procedures designed to (a) identify children who may need additional instructional support, and (b) monitor progress toward instructional goals. The passages are calibrated for the goal level of reading for each grade level. Student performance is measured by having students read a passage aloud for one minute. Words omitted, substituted, and hesitations of more than three seconds are scored as errors. Words self-corrected within three seconds are scored as accurate. The number of correct words per minute from the passage is the oral reading fluency rate.
- Retell Fluency (RTF) is intended to provide a comprehension check for the DORF assessment. In general, oral reading fluency provides one of the best measures of reading competence, including comprehension, for children in first through third grades. The purpose of the RTF measure is to (a) prevent inadvertently learning or practicing a misrule, (b) identify children whose comprehension is not consistent with their fluency, (c) provide an explicit linkage to the core components in the NRP report, and (d) increase the face validity of the DORF.
2. Teachers frequently are concerned about children who read fluently and do not comprehend. This pattern is infrequent - but may apply to some children. This procedure may identify those children without unduly increasing the amount of time spent in the assessment.
3. The National Reading Panel (2000) report is clear on the core components of early reading, and DIBELS maps explicitly onto the first three. Retell Fluency is included to provide a brief measure with an explicit score that corresponds directly to the comprehension core component.
4. A primary concern teachers have about oral reading fluency is the face validity of the measure. Incorporation of an explicit comprehension check may help teachers feel increasingly comfortable with oral reading fluency.