HOMESCHOOL ELA LITERACY
ASSESSMENT INVENTORY
PRESCHOOL -8TH GRADE
A
Complete Criterion-Referenced Assessment System for Language Arts
Spanning Ages 3 Through Grade 8 TEST BOOKLET
Pre-Assessment
(Form A) and Post-Assessment (Form B) Included
FIVE DOMAINS ASSESSED:
Phonemic Awareness
• Phonics (44 Phonemes) •
Reading Fluency
Vocabulary (Tier 2 & Tier 3) •
Reading & Listening Comprehension
Based on the Science of Reading Research
National Reading Panel (2000) • Hasbrouck & Tindal
(2017) • Beck, McKeown & Kucan (2013)
WELCOME TO THE HOMESCHOOL LITERACY ASSESSMENT
INVENTORY (HLAI)
The HLAI is a comprehensive, criterion-referenced literacy
assessment system designed specifically for homeschool families and teachers.
It is grounded in the Science of Reading — the accumulated body of research
from cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and linguistics that describes how
children learn to read.
This inventory is modeled after the structure and spirit of
the Brigance Inventory of Basic Skills, providing clear, scripted
administration instructions so that ANY caring adult — not just a trained
evaluator — can accurately assess a child's reading skills, set meaningful
goals, and track growth over time.
What This Assessment Measures
The HLAI assesses the five domains identified by the National
Reading Panel as essential to reading development:
•
PHONEMIC AWARENESS — The ability to hear, identify, and
manipulate individual sounds (phonemes) in spoken words, before and separate
from print.
•
PHONICS — Knowledge of the relationships between the 44
phonemes of English and their written representations (graphemes), including
letter naming, sound production, decoding, and encoding.
•
READING FLUENCY — The ability to read text accurately,
quickly, and with appropriate expression (prosody). Includes oral reading rate
norms based on Hasbrouck & Tindal (2017).
•
VOCABULARY — Both Tier 2 (high-frequency academic words
used across disciplines) and Tier 3 (domain-specific academic terms), as
described by Beck, McKeown & Kucan (2013), as well as listening vocabulary.
•
READING & LISTENING COMPREHENSION — The ability to
understand, interpret, and respond to text heard or read independently,
including literal, inferential, and applied comprehension.
Two Forms: Pre-Assessment (Form A) and
Post-Assessment (Form B)
Every subtest in this inventory comes in two parallel forms:
•
FORM A (Pre-Assessment): Administer at the BEGINNING of
a learning period (start of school year, before a new unit, at initial
evaluation).
•
FORM B (Post-Assessment): Administer at the END of a
learning period (end of term, after instruction, for annual evaluation) to
measure growth.
Both forms are designed to measure the same skills at the same
difficulty level, allowing for valid pre/post comparisons.
How to Use This Inventory
1.
READ the introduction for each subtest before
administering it. Study the ADMINISTRATOR NOTES box carefully.
2.
GATHER materials listed. Most subtests require only
this manual, a pencil, and the Student Response Pages (which you may
photocopy).
3.
FIND a quiet space. Administer one-on-one. Minimize
distractions.
4.
READ the scripted directions EXACTLY AS WRITTEN. The
SAY: prompts are in bold boxes.
5.
RECORD responses on the Student Score Sheet at the end
of each subtest section.
6.
CONSULT the Scoring Guide and Mastery Criteria to
interpret results.
7.
USE the Goal-Setting Guide (Appendix A) to write
instructional goals and objectives.
8.
TRACK progress using the Learning Continuum Chart
(Appendix B).
Important Notes for Administrators
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⚠️ ADMINISTRATOR GUIDELINES
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•
You do NOT need to be a certified teacher to administer
this inventory. The scripted directions guide you through each subtest.
•
Do NOT teach during the assessment. If a child
struggles, note it and move on. The inventory is diagnostic, not instructional.
•
Discontinue a subtest if the child scores 0/5 on the
first five items. Record a score of 0 and note 'discontinued.'
•
Basal Rule: If a child answers 5 consecutive items
correctly at the beginning of a subtest, you may assume mastery of all easier
items and mark them correct.
•
Ceiling Rule: If a child answers 5 consecutive items
incorrectly, stop that subtest and record the last correct item as the ceiling.
•
Always praise effort, not correctness. Say 'Thank you!'
or 'You're working hard!' regardless of the answer.
•
Assessment sessions for young children (ages 3–5)
should not exceed 20–30 minutes total. Break across multiple sittings if
needed.
•
For children ages 6+, complete sections may be
administered in 45–60 minute sessions.
Understanding the Scoring
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Score
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Mastery Level
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Instructional Implication
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90–100%
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MASTERY
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Skill is established. Enrich and extend.
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75–89%
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INSTRUCTIONAL
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Skill is emerging. Provide guided practice with
support.
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Below 75%
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FRUSTRATIONAL
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Skill is not yet developed. Reteach with explicit
instruction.
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Age and Grade Level Guide
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Level
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Approximate Age
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Recommended Subtests
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Pre-K / Level 1
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Ages 3–4
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A1–A4 (Phonological Awareness), B1 (Letter Names)
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Kindergarten / Level 2
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Age 5
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A1–A8, B1–B6 (Phonics basics), C1 (Fluency intro)
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Grade 1 / Level 3
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Age 6
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All A, B1–B10, C1–C2, D1–D2, E1–E2
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Grade 2 / Level 4
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Age 7
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A9–A10, B7–B14, C2–C3, D1–D3, E1–E3
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Grades 3–4 / Level 5
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Ages 8–9
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B12–B18, C3–C4, D3–D5, E3–E5
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Grades 5–6 / Level 6
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Ages 10–11
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B15–B18, C4–C5, D5–D7, E4–E6
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Grades 7–8 / Level 7
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Ages 12–13
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C5, D7–D9, E6–E8
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STUDENT PROFILE & SCORE SUMMARY SHEET
Photocopy this page for each assessment administration.
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Field
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Form A (Pre-Assessment)
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Form B (Post-Assessment)
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Fields to record: Student Name, Date of Birth, Assessment
Date, Administrator Name, Grade/Level, Age, Notes
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Domain
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Form A Raw Score
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Form A %
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Form B Raw Score
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Form B %
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A. Phonemic Awareness
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__ / 60
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__ / 60
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B. Phonics & Letter
Knowledge
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__ / 100
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__ / 100
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C. Reading Fluency
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__ WCPM
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__ WCPM
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D. Vocabulary (T2 & T3)
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__ / 60
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__ / 60
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E. Comprehension
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__ / 50
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__ / 50
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TOTAL (A+B+D+E)
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__ / 270
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__ / 270
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Area of Strength
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Area for Growth
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GOALS SET (see Goal-Setting
Guide, Appendix A)
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#
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Goal/Objective
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Target Date
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Met?
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DOMAIN A: PHONEMIC AWARENESS
Phonemic awareness is the ability to hear, identify, and
manipulate individual sounds (phonemes) in spoken words. Research from the
National Reading Panel (2000) demonstrates that phonemic awareness is one of
the strongest predictors of later reading success. It is an ORAL skill — no
print is involved. Phonemic awareness encompasses a hierarchy of skills from
simpler (rhyme recognition) to more complex (phoneme manipulation).
The HLAI assesses phonemic awareness across six levels of the
hierarchy: rhyme awareness, alliteration/initial sound awareness, phoneme
isolation, phoneme blending, phoneme segmentation, and phoneme manipulation
(deletion and substitution). Assessment begins at age 3 and progresses through
grade 2.
PHONEMIC AWARENESS SKILL HIERARCHY
|
Level
|
Skill
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Typical Age/Grade
|
HLAI Subtest
|
|
1
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Rhyme Recognition
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Age 3–4 / Pre-K
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A-1
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2
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Rhyme Production
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Age 4–5 / Pre-K
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A-2
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3
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Alliteration / Initial Sound
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Age 4–5 / K
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A-3
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4
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Phoneme Isolation
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Age 5–6 / K
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A-4
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5
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Phoneme Blending
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Age 5–6 / K–Gr.1
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A-5
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6
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Phoneme Segmentation
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Age 6–7 / Gr.1
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A-6
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7
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Phoneme Deletion
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Age 6–7 / Gr.1
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A-7
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8
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Phoneme Substitution
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Age 7–8 / Gr.2
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A-8
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SUBTEST A-1: RHYME RECOGNITION
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FORM A (Pre-Assessment) and
FORM B (Post-Assessment)
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Purpose
Assesses whether the student can identify whether two words
rhyme. This is the foundational level of phonemic awareness, typically emerging
at age 3.
Materials Needed
•
This manual (administrator reads aloud)
•
Student Score Sheet A-1
Administration Time
Approximately 5 minutes
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DO: Sit across from or
beside the student at a table. Have the Score Sheet ready.
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SAY: 'We are going to
play a word game! I will say two words, and you tell me if they RHYME — if
they sound the same at the end. Listen: CAT and HAT — those rhyme! CAT and
DOG — those do NOT rhyme. Let's try some together!'
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SAY: 'Do these words
rhyme? Just say YES or NO.' (Pause 3 seconds after each pair.)
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NOTE: Do NOT repeat
items. If the child does not respond after 5 seconds, mark as incorrect and
continue.
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FORM A — Rhyme Recognition Items
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#
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Word Pair (Read Aloud)
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Correct Answer
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Student Response
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Score (1/0)
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1
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BIG — PIG
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YES (rhymes)
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2
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SUN — RUN
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YES (rhymes)
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3
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CAT — BALL
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NO (no rhyme)
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4
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TREE — BEE
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YES (rhymes)
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5
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FISH — DISH
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YES (rhymes)
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6
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BOOK — BIKE
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NO (no rhyme)
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7
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CAKE — LAKE
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YES (rhymes)
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8
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HOP — MAP
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NO (no rhyme)
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9
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RAIN — TRAIN
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YES (rhymes)
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10
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FOX — CAT
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NO (no rhyme)
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 10
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FORM B — Rhyme Recognition Items
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#
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Word Pair (Read Aloud)
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Correct Answer
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Student Response
|
Score (1/0)
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1
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NIGHT — LIGHT
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YES (rhymes)
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2
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FARM — BARN
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NO (no rhyme)
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3
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SING — RING
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YES (rhymes)
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4
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BLUE — GLUE
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YES (rhymes)
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5
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HAND — LAND
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YES (rhymes)
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6
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BEAR — MOON
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NO (no rhyme)
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7
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SNOW — FLOW
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YES (rhymes)
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8
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DOG — FROG
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YES (rhymes)
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9
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JUMP — BELL
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NO (no rhyme)
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10
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CHAIR — STAIR
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YES (rhymes)
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 10
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MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery. Below 8 = Instructional focus needed.
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SUBTEST A-2: RHYME PRODUCTION
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can GENERATE a rhyming word. This
requires more active phoneme manipulation than recognition.
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SAY: 'Now I want you to
MAKE a rhyme! I will say a word, and you say a word that rhymes with it. It
can be a silly made-up word — that's okay! What rhymes with CAT?' (Accept:
bat, hat, mat, rat, sat, pat — or any phonetically plausible response.)
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SAY: 'Tell me a word
that rhymes with...'
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NOTE: Accept nonsense
words that rhyme (e.g., 'zat' rhymes with 'cat'). Do not accept words that
don't rhyme even if the child insists.
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FORM A — Rhyme Production Items
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#
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Target Word
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Sample Correct Responses
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Student Response
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Score
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1
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HOP
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top, mop, pop, cop, zop…
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2
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CAKE
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make, lake, rake, bake, fake…
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3
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FISH
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dish, wish, swish, shish…
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4
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TRAIN
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rain, main, chain, pain, plain…
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5
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BALL
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call, fall, hall, tall, wall, mall…
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6
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NIGHT
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light, right, bright, fight, kite…
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7
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SNACK
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back, black, crack, pack, track…
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8
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QUEEN
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green, mean, clean, bean, seen…
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 8
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FORM B — Rhyme Production Items
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#
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Target Word
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Sample Correct Responses
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Student Response
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Score
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1
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JUMP
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bump, dump, hump, pump, stump…
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2
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BLUE
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clue, glue, shoe, stew, true, zoo…
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3
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SAND
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band, hand, land, stand, grand…
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4
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TREE
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bee, free, key, knee, see, three…
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5
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CLOCK
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block, dock, knock, lock, rock, sock…
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6
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SMILE
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mile, pile, style, tile, while, file…
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7
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BRIGHT
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bite, flight, might, night, right, write…
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8
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FLOWER
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power, shower, tower, bower…
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 8
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MASTERY CRITERION: 6/8 (75%)
= Mastery.
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SUBTEST A-3: INITIAL SOUND IDENTIFICATION
(ALLITERATION)
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can identify the beginning sound
of a spoken word. This is a precursor to phoneme isolation.
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SAY: 'Let's listen to
the BEGINNING of words. What sound does MOON start with? /m/! The beginning
sound in MOON is /m/. Now you try!'
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SAY: 'What sound does
_____ start with?' (Say each word clearly. Wait 5 seconds for response.)
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NOTE: Accept the phoneme
sound, not the letter name. '/b/' is correct; 'bee' is not. Model: '/m/ like
mmm...' If child says the letter name, say 'Good! What SOUND does that letter
make?' and accept the phoneme.
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FORM A — Initial Sound Identification
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#
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Word
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Initial Phoneme
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Student Response
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Score
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1
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BALL
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/b/
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2
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FISH
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/f/
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3
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MOON
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/m/
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4
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SUN
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/s/
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5
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DOG
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/d/
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6
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TREE
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/t/
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7
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JUMP
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/dʒ/ (j-sound)
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8
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RAIN
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/r/
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9
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CHIP
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/tʃ/ (ch-sound)
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10
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SHIP
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/ʃ/ (sh-sound)
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 10
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FORM B — Initial Sound Identification
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#
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Word
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Initial Phoneme
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Student Response
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Score
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1
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CAT
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/k/
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2
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LIGHT
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/l/
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3
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PENCIL
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/p/
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4
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NEST
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/n/
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5
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GRASS
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/g/
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6
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VINE
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/v/
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7
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WHALE
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/w/
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8
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THINK
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/θ/ (th-sound)
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9
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YELLOW
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/j/ (y-sound)
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10
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ZEBRA
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/z/
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 10
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MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery.
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SUBTEST A-4: PHONEME ISOLATION (INITIAL, MEDIAL,
FINAL)
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to isolate the FIRST, MIDDLE,
and LAST phoneme in a spoken word.
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SAY: 'Now we are going
to find sounds INSIDE words. I will ask you for the first sound, the middle
sound, or the last sound. Listen: What is the FIRST sound in SIT? /s/! What
is the LAST sound in SIT? /t/! What is the MIDDLE sound in SIT? /ɪ/ (ih)!
Let's try some!'
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DO: Read the position
word in CAPITALS clearly. Wait up to 5 seconds for each response.
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FORM A — Phoneme Isolation
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#
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Word + Position
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Target Phoneme
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Student Response
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Score
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1
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MAP — FIRST sound
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/m/
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2
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BED — LAST sound
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/d/
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3
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HIP — MIDDLE sound
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/ɪ/
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4
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LOG — FIRST sound
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/l/
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5
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CUP — LAST sound
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/p/
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6
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TEN — MIDDLE sound
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/ɛ/
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7
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SHOP — FIRST sound
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/ʃ/ (sh)
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8
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CHIN — LAST sound
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/n/
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9
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FROG — MIDDLE sound
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/ɒ/ (short o)
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10
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BEACH — LAST sound
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/tʃ/ (ch)
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 10
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FORM B — Phoneme Isolation
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#
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Word + Position
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Target Phoneme
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Student Response
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Score
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1
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FAN — FIRST sound
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/f/
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2
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RUG — LAST sound
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/g/
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3
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PIG — MIDDLE sound
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/ɪ/
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4
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JAM — FIRST sound
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/dʒ/ (j)
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5
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DUST — LAST sound
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/t/
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6
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NET — MIDDLE sound
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/ɛ/
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7
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WHALE — FIRST sound
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/w/
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8
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RUSH — LAST sound
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/ʃ/ (sh)
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9
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BLOCK — MIDDLE sound
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/ɒ/ (short o)
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10
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RING — LAST sound
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/ŋ/ (ng)
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 10
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MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery.
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SUBTEST A-5: PHONEME BLENDING
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can blend separately spoken
phonemes into a real word. This skill is critical for decoding.
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SAY: 'I am going to say
a word in SLOW MOTION — broken into pieces. You put the sounds together to
make a real word! Listen: /k/…/æ/…/t/ — What word is that? CAT! Let's try
some!'
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DO: Say each phoneme
separately with a 0.5-second pause between sounds. Do NOT blend them
yourself.
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FORM A — Phoneme Blending (Segmented Words)
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#
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Segmented Phonemes (say aloud)
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Target Word
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Student Response
|
Score
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1
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/m/ … /æ/ … /p/
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MAP
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2
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/s/ … /ɪ/ … /t/
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SIT
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3
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/f/ … /l/ … /æ/ … /g/
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FLAG
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4
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/tʃ/ … /ɛ/ … /s/ … /t/
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CHEST
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5
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/ʃ/ … /ɪ/ … /p/
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SHIP
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6
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/n/ … /aɪ/ … /t/
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NIGHT
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7
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/t/ … /r/ … /æ/ … /p/
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TRAP
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8
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/s/ … /t/ … /r/ … /ɛ/ … /tʃ/
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STRETCH
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TOTAL SCORE
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__ / 8
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FORM B — Phoneme Blending
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#
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Segmented Phonemes (say aloud)
|
Target Word
|
Student Response
|
Score
|
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1
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/b/ … /ɪ/ … /g/
|
BIG
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2
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/g/ … /r/ … /æ/ … /b/
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GRAB
|
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3
|
/s/ … /l/ … /ɛ/ … /d/
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SLED
|
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4
|
/θ/ … /ɪ/ … /ŋ/ … /k/
|
THINK
|
|
|
|
5
|
/k/ … /l/ … /æ/ … /p/
|
CLAP
|
|
|
|
6
|
/s/ … /p/ … /l/ … /æ/ … /ʃ/
|
SPLASH
|
|
|
|
7
|
/dʒ/ … /ʌ/ … /m/ … /p/
|
JUMP
|
|
|
|
8
|
/s/ … /k/ … /r/ … /ɪ/ … /m/
|
SCRIM
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL SCORE
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 6/8 (75%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST A-6: PHONEME SEGMENTATION
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can break a spoken word into its
individual phonemes. Segmentation is the oral counterpart of phonetic spelling
and strongly predicts reading and writing success.
|
SAY: 'Now it is your
turn to break words apart! I will say a word and you say each sound
separately, like a robot. SUN has three sounds: /s/ /ʌ/ /n/. Try tapping your
finger for each sound!'
|
|
DO: Tap on the table
once for each phoneme as a model. Then present words below. Mark 1 point for
each CORRECT phoneme in the correct position.
|
FORM A — Phoneme Segmentation (Mark phonemes correct)
|
#
|
Word
|
Segmented Phonemes
|
# Phonemes
|
Student Score
|
Max
|
|
1
|
GO
|
/g/ /oʊ/
|
2
|
|
2
|
|
2
|
FAN
|
/f/ /æ/ /n/
|
3
|
|
3
|
|
3
|
JUMP
|
/dʒ/ /ʌ/ /m/ /p/
|
4
|
|
4
|
|
4
|
BLOCK
|
/b/ /l/ /ɒ/ /k/
|
4
|
|
4
|
|
5
|
FRESH
|
/f/ /r/ /ɛ/ /ʃ/
|
4
|
|
4
|
|
6
|
STRAP
|
/s/ /t/ /r/ /æ/ /p/
|
5
|
|
5
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
|
22
|
FORM B — Phoneme Segmentation
|
#
|
Word
|
Segmented Phonemes
|
# Phonemes
|
Student Score
|
Max
|
|
1
|
IT
|
/ɪ/ /t/
|
2
|
|
2
|
|
2
|
BED
|
/b/ /ɛ/ /d/
|
3
|
|
3
|
|
3
|
FROG
|
/f/ /r/ /ɒ/ /g/
|
4
|
|
4
|
|
4
|
CHEST
|
/tʃ/ /ɛ/ /s/ /t/
|
4
|
|
4
|
|
5
|
BLEND
|
/b/ /l/ /ɛ/ /n/ /d/
|
5
|
|
5
|
|
6
|
SPRINT
|
/s/ /p/ /r/ /ɪ/ /n/ /t/
|
6
|
|
6
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
|
24
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 80% of
total phonemes correct.
|
SUBTEST A-7: PHONEME DELETION
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can mentally remove a phoneme
from a word and say the remaining word — a higher-order phonemic manipulation
skill.
|
SAY: 'Now we are going
to TAKE AWAY a sound! If I say FARM and take away /f/, what's left? ARM!
Let's try: Say STOP. Now say STOP without the /s/. What do you get? TOP! Your
turn.'
|
|
DO: Give ONE example
before beginning. Do NOT provide corrective feedback during the test.
|
FORM A — Phoneme Deletion
|
#
|
Word
|
Remove Phoneme
|
Target Response
|
Student Response
|
Score
|
|
1
|
MILK
|
Delete /m/
|
ILK
|
|
|
|
2
|
BLAST
|
Delete /l/
|
BAST
|
|
|
|
3
|
SMILE
|
Delete /s/
|
MILE
|
|
|
|
4
|
TRAIN
|
Delete /r/
|
TAIN
|
|
|
|
5
|
SPIT
|
Delete final /t/
|
SPI
|
|
|
|
6
|
CLAP
|
Delete /l/
|
CAP
|
|
|
|
7
|
GREET
|
Delete /r/
|
GEET
|
|
|
|
8
|
BLEND
|
Delete /l/
|
BEND
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL SCORE
|
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
FORM B — Phoneme Deletion
|
#
|
Word
|
Remove Phoneme
|
Target Response
|
Student Response
|
Score
|
|
1
|
SNACK
|
Delete /s/
|
NACK
|
|
|
|
2
|
PLUM
|
Delete /l/
|
PUM
|
|
|
|
3
|
BRIM
|
Delete /r/
|
BIM
|
|
|
|
4
|
FLAT
|
Delete /l/
|
FAT
|
|
|
|
5
|
CRISP
|
Delete /r/
|
CISP
|
|
|
|
6
|
STOMP
|
Delete /t/
|
SOMP
|
|
|
|
7
|
SCRAM
|
Delete /k/
|
SRAM
|
|
|
|
8
|
CLINK
|
Delete /l/
|
CINK
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL SCORE
|
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 6/8 (75%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST A-8: PHONEME SUBSTITUTION
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to replace one phoneme in a
word with another — the highest level of phonemic awareness. Mastery indicates
strong phoneme proficiency that supports both reading and spelling.
|
SAY: 'Now we are going
to SWAP sounds! Say CAT. Now change the /k/ to /b/. What new word do you get?
BAT! Let's try some more.'
|
|
NOTE: Accept any
response that correctly reflects the phoneme substitution, even if the result
is a nonsense word (e.g., changing /m/ to /z/ in 'map' correctly produces
'zap').
|
FORM A — Phoneme Substitution
|
#
|
Start Word
|
Change...
|
...To...
|
Target
|
Response
|
Score
|
|
1
|
MAP
|
/m/ →
|
/n/
|
NAP
|
|
|
|
2
|
BIG
|
/b/ →
|
/d/
|
DIG
|
|
|
|
3
|
SEAT
|
/s/ →
|
/m/
|
MEAT
|
|
|
|
4
|
HOP
|
/h/ →
|
/st/
|
STOP
|
|
|
|
5
|
FLAT
|
/l/ →
|
/r/
|
FRAT
|
|
|
|
6
|
CHIP
|
/tʃ/ →
|
/sh/
|
SHIP
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
|
|
__ / 6
|
FORM B — Phoneme Substitution
|
#
|
Start Word
|
Change...
|
...To...
|
Target
|
Response
|
Score
|
|
1
|
BAT
|
/b/ →
|
/f/
|
FAT
|
|
|
|
2
|
LOG
|
/l/ →
|
/fr/
|
FROG
|
|
|
|
3
|
MICE
|
/aɪ/ →
|
/ɪ/
|
MIS
|
|
|
|
4
|
SHED
|
/ʃ/ →
|
/b/
|
BED
|
|
|
|
5
|
BRING
|
/r/ →
|
/l/
|
BLING
|
|
|
|
6
|
THRONE
|
/θr/ →
|
/gr/
|
GROAN
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
|
|
__ / 6
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 5/6 (83%)
= Mastery.
|
Domain A Total: __ / 62 points (sum all subtests)
DOMAIN B: PHONICS & LETTER KNOWLEDGE
Phonics is the systematic study of the relationship between
the 44 phonemes (sounds) of spoken English and their written representations —
graphemes. The National Reading Panel (2000) found that systematic phonics
instruction significantly improves children's ability to read and spell words.
The HLAI Phonics domain spans from pre-reading letter awareness (age 3) through
advanced multisyllabic decoding (Grade 6+).
This domain includes: uppercase and lowercase letter naming,
letter-sound correspondence for all 44 phonemes, consonant blends, digraphs,
vowel patterns, r-controlled vowels, diphthongs, multisyllabic word reading,
and nonsense word decoding (to isolate phonics skill from sight-word memory).
SUBTEST B-1: UPPERCASE LETTER NAMING
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can name all 26 uppercase letters
of the alphabet in random order.
|
DO: Print the Student
Response Page B-1A or point to each letter in the grid below. Cover the
alphabet line at the top of your manual.
|
|
SAY: 'Look at these
letters. Tell me the NAME of each letter.' (Point to letters one at a time in
the order shown.)
|
|
NOTE: Mark correct (+)
or incorrect (–). Record what the student said for incorrect responses. Do
NOT provide correct answers.
|
FORM A — Uppercase Letter Naming Grid
|
STUDENT STIMULUS — Point to
each letter in order → T F
M B R
W J P
D H A
Z Q X
Y C K
N L G
E S V
U O I
|
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
TOTAL
|
|
T
|
|
F
|
|
M
|
|
B
|
|
R
|
|
W
|
|
|
|
J
|
|
P
|
|
D
|
|
H
|
|
A
|
|
Z
|
|
|
|
Q
|
|
X
|
|
Y
|
|
C
|
|
K
|
|
N
|
|
|
|
L
|
|
G
|
|
E
|
|
S
|
|
V
|
|
U
|
|
__ / 26
|
FORM B — Uppercase Letter Naming Grid
|
STUDENT STIMULUS — Point to
each letter in order → L N
H C T
K P S
A E B
Y V I
Z G D
O M J
F W R
X Q U
|
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
TOTAL
|
|
L
|
|
N
|
|
H
|
|
C
|
|
T
|
|
K
|
|
|
|
P
|
|
S
|
|
A
|
|
E
|
|
B
|
|
Y
|
|
|
|
V
|
|
I
|
|
Z
|
|
G
|
|
D
|
|
O
|
|
|
|
M
|
|
J
|
|
F
|
|
W
|
|
R
|
|
X
|
|
__ / 26
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 26/26 =
Mastery. Reteach any missed letters.
|
SUBTEST B-2: LOWERCASE LETTER NAMING
Purpose
Assesses lowercase letter naming (a, b, c...) in random order.
Research shows lowercase mastery is a stronger predictor of reading than
uppercase.
|
SAY: 'Now look at these
SMALL letters. Tell me the NAME of each small letter.'
|
|
NOTE: Watch carefully
for b/d, p/q, m/n confusions — note these specifically.
|
FORM A — Lowercase Letter Naming Grid
|
STUDENT STIMULUS → t
f m b r w
j p d
h a z
q x y
c k n
l g e
s v u
o i
|
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
+/–
|
TOTAL
|
|
t
|
|
f
|
|
m
|
|
b
|
|
r
|
|
w
|
|
|
|
j
|
|
p
|
|
d
|
|
h
|
|
a
|
|
z
|
|
|
|
q
|
|
x
|
|
y
|
|
c
|
|
k
|
|
n
|
|
|
|
l
|
|
g
|
|
e
|
|
s
|
|
v
|
|
u
|
|
__ / 26
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 26/26.
Flag any b/d/p/q reversals for further assessment.
|
SUBTEST B-3: LETTER-SOUND CORRESPONDENCE —
CONSONANTS
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can produce the correct phoneme
when shown a consonant letter. This is the core alphabetic principle.
|
DO: Show the student
each letter (print the grid or use flashcards). Point to each letter.
|
|
SAY: 'Tell me the SOUND
this letter makes — not its name, its SOUND!'
|
|
NOTE: Accept the most
common phoneme. For 'c' accept /k/; for 'g' accept /g/; for 's' accept /s/ or
/z/. Record what the student says.
|
FORM A — Consonant Letter-Sound Correspondence
|
Letter
|
Target Sound
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
Target Sound
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
Target Sound
|
+/–
|
Letter
|
Target Sound
|
+/–
|
|
b
|
/b/
|
|
f
|
/f/
|
|
h
|
/h/
|
|
j
|
/dʒ/
|
|
|
k
|
/k/
|
|
l
|
/l/
|
|
m
|
/m/
|
|
n
|
/n/
|
|
|
p
|
/p/
|
|
r
|
/r/
|
|
s
|
/s/
|
|
t
|
/t/
|
|
|
v
|
/v/
|
|
w
|
/w/
|
|
y
|
/j/
|
|
z
|
/z/
|
|
|
c
|
/k/
|
|
d
|
/d/
|
|
g
|
/g/
|
|
q
|
/kw/
|
|
|
x
|
/ks/
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
__ / 21
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 19/21
(90%) = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-4: SHORT VOWEL SOUNDS
Purpose
Assesses knowledge of the 5 short vowel phonemes: /æ/ (a), /ɛ/
(e), /ɪ/ (i), /ɒ/ (o), /ʌ/ (u).
|
DO: Show each vowel
letter. Say: 'Tell me the SHORT sound this vowel makes.'
|
|
NOTE: Short vowel
sounds: a = /æ/ as in CAT; e = /ɛ/ as in BED; i = /ɪ/ as in SIT; o = /ɒ/ as
in TOP; u = /ʌ/ as in CUP
|
FORM A — Short Vowels & CVC Word Reading
|
Letter
|
Target
|
+/–
|
CVC Word (Form A)
|
Student Reads
|
Score
|
|
a
|
/æ/ (cat)
|
|
bat — can — hat
|
|
|
|
e
|
/ɛ/ (bed)
|
|
hen — net — wet
|
|
|
|
i
|
/ɪ/ (sit)
|
|
bit — dig — win
|
|
|
|
o
|
/ɒ/ (top)
|
|
hot — mop — rob
|
|
|
|
u
|
/ʌ/ (cup)
|
|
bug — fun — run
|
|
|
|
|
SHORT VOWEL SCORE
|
|
CVC WORD SCORE
|
|
__ / 5 / __ / 15
|
FORM B — Short Vowels & CVC Word Reading
|
Letter
|
Target
|
+/–
|
CVC Word (Form B)
|
Student Reads
|
Score
|
|
a
|
/æ/ (cat)
|
|
mad — nap — sag
|
|
|
|
e
|
/ɛ/ (bed)
|
|
get — pet — vex
|
|
|
|
i
|
/ɪ/ (sit)
|
|
hit — lip — mix
|
|
|
|
o
|
/ɒ/ (top)
|
|
fog — lot — sob
|
|
|
|
u
|
/ʌ/ (cup)
|
|
bun — cut — mud
|
|
|
|
|
SHORT VOWEL SCORE
|
|
CVC WORD SCORE
|
|
__ / 5 / __ / 15
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 5/5 short
vowels + 12/15 CVC words = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-5: CONSONANT DIGRAPHS
Purpose
Assesses knowledge of the 6 primary consonant digraphs: sh,
ch, th (unvoiced), th (voiced), wh, ng. Digraphs are two letters representing a
single phoneme.
|
SAY: 'These two letters
work TOGETHER to make ONE sound. What sound do they make?'
|
FORM A — Consonant Digraph Recognition
|
Digraph
|
Target Phoneme
|
Example Word
|
+/–
|
Form A Word
|
Reads:
|
|
sh
|
/ʃ/
|
shop
|
|
shin / wish
|
|
|
ch
|
/tʃ/
|
chip
|
|
chop / much
|
|
|
th (unv.)
|
/θ/
|
think
|
|
thin / math
|
|
|
th (v.)
|
/ð/
|
this
|
|
that / with
|
|
|
wh
|
/w/ or /hw/
|
when
|
|
whip / whale
|
|
|
ng
|
/ŋ/
|
ring
|
|
sing / long
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 6
|
WORDS
|
__ / 12
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 5/6
digraph sounds + 10/12 words = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-6: CONSONANT BLENDS
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to read words containing common
consonant blends (two or more consonants where each sound is heard).
|
SAY: 'In these words,
the letters at the beginning work together — but you can hear EACH sound.
Read each word out loud.'
|
FORM A — Consonant Blend Word Reading (Initial Blends)
|
Blend
|
Form A Words
|
+/–
|
Blend
|
Form A Words
|
+/–
|
|
bl-
|
black / blend
|
|
br-
|
brown / bring
|
|
|
cl-
|
clam / clock
|
|
cr-
|
crab / cross
|
|
|
fl-
|
flag / flat
|
|
fr-
|
frog / front
|
|
|
gl-
|
glad / glue
|
|
gr-
|
grab / grin
|
|
|
pl-
|
plan / plug
|
|
pr-
|
press / prom
|
|
|
sl-
|
slam / sled
|
|
sc-
|
scab / scan
|
|
|
sm-
|
smack / smell
|
|
sn-
|
snap / snob
|
|
|
sp-
|
span / spin
|
|
st-
|
step / stop
|
|
|
sw-
|
swam / swim
|
|
sk-
|
skill / skid
|
|
|
tr-
|
trap / trim
|
|
tw-
|
twin / twist
|
|
|
|
TOTAL SCORE
|
|
__ / 40
|
|
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 34/40
(85%) = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-7: LONG VOWEL PATTERNS
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to read common long vowel
spelling patterns: silent-e (CVCe), vowel teams, and open syllables.
|
SAY: 'Read each word out
loud.' Present the word list below or on a printed card.
|
FORM A — Long Vowel Pattern Word Reading
|
Pattern
|
Description
|
Form A Words
|
Score
|
|
a_e
|
Silent-e: long /ā/
|
bake / name / gave / late
|
__ / 4
|
|
e_e
|
Silent-e: long /ē/
|
these / scene
|
__ / 2
|
|
i_e
|
Silent-e: long /ī/
|
fine / like / wide / time
|
__ / 4
|
|
o_e
|
Silent-e: long /ō/
|
home / note / woke / code
|
__ / 4
|
|
u_e
|
Silent-e: long /ū/
|
cute / huge / dune
|
__ / 3
|
|
ai / ay
|
Vowel team: long /ā/
|
rain / mail / day / play
|
__ / 4
|
|
ee / ea
|
Vowel team: long /ē/
|
feet / keep / meat / read
|
__ / 4
|
|
oa / ow
|
Vowel team: long /ō/
|
coat / road / slow / snow
|
__ / 4
|
|
ue / ew
|
Vowel team: long /ū/
|
clue / true / flew / new
|
__ / 4
|
|
igh
|
Long /ī/
|
night / fight / light / right
|
__ / 4
|
|
|
TOTAL SCORE
|
|
__ / 37
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 31/37
(84%) = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-8: R-CONTROLLED VOWELS
Purpose
Assesses reading of r-controlled vowel patterns: ar, er, ir,
or, ur — called 'bossy r' patterns because the /r/ changes the vowel sound.
|
SAY: 'When the letter R
comes after a vowel, it changes the vowel sound. Read these words.'
|
FORM A — R-Controlled Vowel Words
|
Pattern
|
Sound
|
Form A Words
|
Form B Words
|
|
ar
|
/ɑːr/ as in car
|
star / barn / park / hard
|
cart / dark / yard / far
|
|
er
|
/ɜːr/ as in her
|
fern / term / verb / herd
|
germ / perm / stern / clerk
|
|
ir
|
/ɜːr/ as in bird
|
girl / shirt / first / stir
|
dirt / firm / quirk / swirl
|
|
or
|
/ɔːr/ as in corn
|
storm / port / fort / lord
|
born / cork / torch / worn
|
|
ur
|
/ɜːr/ as in burn
|
turn / curl / burp / hurt
|
curb / fur / purr / surf
|
|
|
FORM A TOTAL
|
__ / 20
|
FORM B TOTAL → __ / 20
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 17/20
(85%) = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-9: VOWEL DIPHTHONGS & VARIANT
VOWELS
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to read diphthongs (oi/oy,
ou/ow) and variant vowel patterns (oo, au/aw).
FORM A — Diphthong and Variant Vowel Words
|
Pattern
|
Sound
|
Form A Words
|
Score
|
Form B Words
|
|
oi / oy
|
/ɔɪ/ as in oil
|
coin / join / toy / boy
|
__ / 4
|
soil / foil / joy / annoy
|
|
ou / ow
|
/aʊ/ as in out
|
cloud / found / cow / down
|
__ / 4
|
shout / round / crowd / town
|
|
oo (long)
|
/uː/ as in moon
|
food / pool / room / cool
|
__ / 4
|
booth / broom / gloom / zoom
|
|
oo (short)
|
/ʊ/ as in book
|
cook / look / wood / stood
|
__ / 4
|
brook / foot / good / hood
|
|
au / aw
|
/ɔː/ as in saw
|
cause / fault / claw / draw
|
__ / 4
|
sauce / haul / lawn / yawn
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 20
|
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 16/20
(80%) = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-10: NONSENSE WORD DECODING
Purpose
Nonsense word decoding isolates phonics knowledge from
sight-word memory. Because the student has never seen these words, successful
reading proves they are applying phoneme-grapheme knowledge rather than
memorization. Inspired by DIBELS NWF protocols.
|
SAY: 'These are MADE-UP
words — they are not real words! I want you to use your letter sounds to read
them out loud. Do your best!'
|
|
NOTE: Score phonemes
correct (partial credit for each correct sound) OR score whole word correct.
Mark errors above the word.
|
FORM A — Nonsense Words (CVC through CCVC)
|
STUDENT STIMULUS STRIP —
Print and place in front of student:
|
|
tib fom
dap gule shim
thop bract clund
frep splag
|
|
Word
|
Phonemes
|
Target
|
Student
|
Score
|
|
tib
|
/t/ /ɪ/ /b/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
fom
|
/f/ /ɒ/ /m/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
dap
|
/d/ /æ/ /p/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
gule
|
/g/ /juː/ /l/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
shim
|
/ʃ/ /ɪ/ /m/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
thop
|
/θ/ /ɒ/ /p/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
bract
|
/b/ /r/ /æ/ /k/ /t/
|
5
|
|
__ / 5
|
|
clund
|
/k/ /l/ /ʌ/ /n/ /d/
|
5
|
|
__ / 5
|
|
frep
|
/f/ /r/ /ɛ/ /p/
|
4
|
|
__ / 4
|
|
splag
|
/s/ /p/ /l/ /æ/ /g/
|
5
|
|
__ / 5
|
|
|
TOTAL PHONEMES
|
37
|
|
__ / 37
|
FORM B — Nonsense Words
|
STUDENT STIMULUS — Print
and place in front of student:
|
|
meb vot
hup nake chig
whop bleft strum
crep splond
|
|
Word
|
Phonemes
|
Target
|
Student
|
Score
|
|
meb
|
/m/ /ɛ/ /b/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
vot
|
/v/ /ɒ/ /t/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
hup
|
/h/ /ʌ/ /p/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
nake
|
/n/ /eɪ/ /k/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
chig
|
/tʃ/ /ɪ/ /g/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
whop
|
/w/ /ɒ/ /p/
|
3
|
|
__ / 3
|
|
bleft
|
/b/ /l/ /ɛ/ /f/ /t/
|
5
|
|
__ / 5
|
|
strum
|
/s/ /t/ /r/ /ʌ/ /m/
|
5
|
|
__ / 5
|
|
crep
|
/k/ /r/ /ɛ/ /p/
|
4
|
|
__ / 4
|
|
splond
|
/s/ /p/ /l/ /ɒ/ /n/ /d/
|
6
|
|
__ / 6
|
|
|
TOTAL PHONEMES
|
38
|
|
__ / 38
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 85% of
total phonemes correct = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST B-11: SIGHT WORD READING (High-Frequency
Words)
Purpose
Assesses automatic recognition of high-frequency words.
Includes Dolch and Fry word lists organized by grade level. Sight words include
both irregular (non-decodable) and decodable high-frequency words.
|
DO: Present words on a
printed card or printed sheet. Point to each word.
|
|
SAY: 'Read each word as
fast as you can. If you don't know it, just say 'pass' and we'll move on.'
|
|
NOTE: Mark correct (+)
if read within 3 seconds without sounding out. Mark 'DC' if decoded (sounded
out successfully — still credit). Mark (–) if incorrect or no response.
|
Pre-K / Kindergarten Sight Words — Level 1 (Dolch Pre-Primer)
|
a and
the I is
it of to
in you he
was for that
on are at
be this have
from or one
had by but
not with as
all were we
when your can
said there use
an each which
she do how
their if will
up other about
|
|
Level
|
Total Words
|
Form A Score
|
Form B Score
|
Mastery (90%)
|
|
Level 1: Pre-Primer (Dolch
50)
|
50
|
__ / 50
|
__ / 50
|
45+
|
|
Level 2: Primer (Dolch 40)
|
40
|
__ / 40
|
__ / 40
|
36+
|
|
Level 3: Grade 1 (Dolch 41)
|
41
|
__ / 41
|
__ / 41
|
37+
|
|
Level 4: Grade 2 (Dolch 46)
|
46
|
__ / 46
|
__ / 46
|
41+
|
|
Level 5: Grade 3 (Dolch 41)
|
41
|
__ / 41
|
__ / 41
|
37+
|
|
Level 6: Fry 300–500 Words
|
50
|
__ / 50
|
__ / 50
|
45+
|
Note: Administer only the level appropriate for the
student's reading level. A student scoring below 90% at one level should not be
assessed at the next level.
SUBTEST B-12: MULTISYLLABIC WORD READING
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to decode words of two to four
syllables by applying syllabication strategies (open syllable, closed syllable,
VCe, vowel team, r-controlled, final stable syllable).
|
SAY: 'These are longer
words. Take your time. Use what you know about syllables to read each one.'
|
|
NOTE: Score
whole-word-correct only for the Word Score. May also score phoneme-by-phoneme
for diagnostic purposes.
|
FORM A — 2-Syllable Words
|
#
|
Word
|
Syllable Break
|
Pattern
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
basket
|
bas • ket
|
closed + closed
|
|
|
2
|
napkin
|
nap • kin
|
closed + closed
|
|
|
3
|
robot
|
ro • bot
|
open + closed
|
|
|
4
|
sunrise
|
sun • rise
|
closed + VCe
|
|
|
5
|
rainbow
|
rain • bow
|
vowel team + open
|
|
|
6
|
flower
|
flow • er
|
open + r-controlled
|
|
|
7
|
trumpet
|
trum • pet
|
closed + closed
|
|
|
8
|
blanket
|
blan • ket
|
closed + closed
|
|
|
|
SCORE
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
FORM A — 3- and 4-Syllable Words
|
#
|
Word
|
Syllable Break
|
Pattern Type
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
adventure
|
ad • ven • ture
|
closed + closed + final-le
|
|
|
2
|
important
|
im • por • tant
|
closed + r-ctrl + closed
|
|
|
3
|
umbrella
|
um • brel • la
|
closed + closed + open
|
|
|
4
|
understand
|
un • der • stand
|
closed + r-ctrl + closed
|
|
|
5
|
celebrate
|
cel • e • brate
|
closed + open + VCe
|
|
|
6
|
complicated
|
com • pli • ca • ted
|
closed + open + open + closed
|
|
|
|
SCORE
|
|
|
__ / 6
|
FORM B — 2-Syllable Words
|
#
|
Word
|
Syllable Break
|
Pattern
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
signal
|
sig • nal
|
closed + closed
|
|
|
2
|
frozen
|
fro • zen
|
open + closed
|
|
|
3
|
pretend
|
pre • tend
|
open + closed
|
|
|
4
|
cartoon
|
car • toon
|
r-ctrl + vowel team
|
|
|
5
|
mistake
|
mis • take
|
closed + VCe
|
|
|
6
|
harvest
|
har • vest
|
r-ctrl + closed
|
|
|
7
|
complete
|
com • plete
|
closed + VCe
|
|
|
8
|
window
|
win • dow
|
closed + open
|
|
|
|
SCORE
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION:
2-Syllable: 7/8 (87%). 3-4 Syllable: 5/6 (83%).
|
SUBTEST B-13: THE 44 PHONEMES — COMPLETE MASTERY
INVENTORY
|
ADMINISTRATOR: This is a
comprehensive reference checklist. Use it as a diagnostic tool to identify
EXACTLY which of the 44 phonemes the student has mastered. Mark Form A and
Form B separately.
|
THE 44 PHONEMES OF ENGLISH — Production & Recognition Checklist
|
Phoneme
|
Primary Grapheme
|
Example Word
|
Form A +/–
|
Form B +/–
|
Phoneme
|
Grapheme
|
Example
|
|
--- CONSONANTS ---
|
|
|
|
|
--- VOWELS ---
|
|
|
|
/p/
|
p
|
pan
|
|
|
/æ/ (short a)
|
a
|
cat
|
|
/b/
|
b
|
bat
|
|
|
/ɛ/ (short e)
|
e
|
bed
|
|
/t/
|
t
|
top
|
|
|
/ɪ/ (short i)
|
i
|
sit
|
|
/d/
|
d
|
dog
|
|
|
/ɒ/ (short o)
|
o
|
top
|
|
/k/
|
c, k, ck
|
cat/kite
|
|
|
/ʌ/ (short u)
|
u
|
cup
|
|
/g/
|
g
|
got
|
|
|
/eɪ/ (long a)
|
a_e,ai,ay
|
cake
|
|
/f/
|
f, ph
|
fun/phone
|
|
|
/iː/ (long e)
|
ee,ea,e
|
feet
|
|
/v/
|
v
|
van
|
|
|
/aɪ/ (long i)
|
i_e,igh,y
|
kite
|
|
/θ/ (unv. th)
|
th
|
thin
|
|
|
/oʊ/ (long o)
|
o_e,oa,ow
|
bone
|
|
/ð/ (v. th)
|
th
|
this
|
|
|
/juː/ (long u)
|
u_e,ew
|
cube
|
|
/s/
|
s, c
|
sun/ice
|
|
|
/ɑː/ (ar)
|
ar
|
car
|
|
/z/
|
z, s
|
zip/is
|
|
|
/ɜːr/ (er/ir/ur)
|
er,ir,ur
|
her
|
|
/ʃ/ (sh)
|
sh, ti, ci
|
ship
|
|
|
/ɔːr/ (or)
|
or
|
corn
|
|
/ʒ/ (zh)
|
si, ge
|
vision
|
|
|
/ʊ/ (short oo)
|
oo,u
|
book
|
|
/h/
|
h
|
hot
|
|
|
/uː/ (long oo)
|
oo,ue,ew
|
moon
|
|
/tʃ/ (ch)
|
ch, tch
|
chip
|
|
|
/ɔː/ (aw/au)
|
aw,au
|
saw
|
|
/dʒ/ (j)
|
j,g,dge
|
jump/gem
|
|
|
/ɔɪ/ (oi)
|
oi,oy
|
oil
|
|
/m/
|
m
|
man
|
|
|
/aʊ/ (ou/ow)
|
ou,ow
|
out
|
|
/n/
|
n
|
nut
|
|
|
/ə/ (schwa)
|
a,e,i,o
|
about
|
|
/ŋ/ (ng)
|
ng,n
|
sing
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/l/
|
l
|
lip
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/r/
|
r
|
run
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/w/
|
w
|
win
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/j/ (y)
|
y
|
yes
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL CONSONANTS
|
25
|
|
__ /25
|
__ /25
|
TOTAL VOWELS
|
19
|
__ /19 | __ /19
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 40/44
phonemes recognized and produced correctly = Mastery. Circle any missed
phonemes to drive instruction.
|
DOMAIN B TOTAL: _____ / 100 (sum all scored subtests,
weighted)
DOMAIN C: READING FLUENCY
Reading fluency is the ability to read text accurately,
quickly (at an appropriate rate), and with proper expression (prosody). The
National Reading Panel identified fluency as a bridge between word recognition
and comprehension. Fluency is assessed using Words Correct Per Minute (WCPM)
based on the Hasbrouck & Tindal (2017) oral reading fluency norms.
IMPORTANT: Fluency is assessed with ORAL READING of CONNECTED
TEXT — not isolated words. The student reads aloud from a passage for exactly 1
minute. The administrator marks errors and calculates WCPM.
Hasbrouck-Tindal Oral Reading Fluency Norms —
Target WCPM (50th Percentile)
|
Grade
|
Fall (50th %ile)
|
Winter (50th %ile)
|
Spring (50th %ile)
|
Fluency Drill Level
|
|
K
|
n/a
|
~20–30 WCPM
|
~40–60 WCPM
|
Level 1: Pre-Reader
|
|
1
|
~23 WCPM
|
~53 WCPM
|
~71–82 WCPM
|
Level 2: Beginning Reader
|
|
2
|
~72 WCPM
|
~89 WCPM
|
~100 WCPM
|
Level 3: Developing Reader
|
|
3
|
~92 WCPM
|
~107 WCPM
|
~115 WCPM
|
Level 4: Transitional Reader
|
|
4
|
~112 WCPM
|
~123 WCPM
|
~133 WCPM
|
Level 5: Expanding Reader
|
|
5
|
~127 WCPM
|
~140 WCPM
|
~150 WCPM
|
Level 6: Fluent Reader
|
|
6
|
~140 WCPM
|
~148 WCPM
|
~162 WCPM
|
Level 7: Advanced Reader
|
|
7–8
|
~145 WCPM
|
~155 WCPM
|
~165 WCPM
|
Level 7: Advanced Reader
|
|
Students scoring 10+ WCPM
BELOW the 50th percentile need fluency intervention.
|
HOW TO ADMINISTER THE 1-MINUTE FLUENCY PROBE
|
DO: Print the passage.
Place the student copy in front of the student; keep the administrator copy
for marking.
|
|
SAY: 'I want you to read
this passage out loud. Do your best reading. When I say 'begin,' start
reading from the beginning. If you don't know a word, I'll tell it to you.'
|
|
DO: Start your timer
when the student reads the first word.
|
|
DO: Follow along on your
copy. Mark errors with a slash (/) through each error word.
|
|
NOTE: Count as ERRORS:
Mispronunciations, substitutions, omissions, words told after 3-second pause.
Do NOT count: Repetitions, self-corrections, insertions (unless they change
meaning).
|
|
DO: At exactly 1 minute,
say 'Stop.' Place a bracket after the last word read.
|
|
CALCULATE: WCPM = Total
Words Read – Number of Errors
|
|
ACCURACY % = (WCPM ÷ Total
Words Read) × 100
|
FLUENCY PASSAGE LEVEL 1 — Pre-K/Kindergarten
(Pre-Reader)
|
FORM A — THE BIG RED BUS
(approx. 50 words, emerging reader level)
|
The big red bus came down the road. Sam ran to get on. He sat
in the back. His dog was not on the bus. The dog ran and ran. The dog got on
the bus too. Sam and his dog had a good ride. They got off at the park. The
park was fun. Sam and his dog played all day.
|
Metric
|
Form A Result
|
Form B Result
|
|
Total Words in Passage
|
50 words
|
52 words
|
|
Total Words Read in 1 Minute
|
|
|
|
Number of Errors
|
|
|
|
WCPM (Words Correct Per
Minute)
|
|
|
|
Accuracy %
|
|
|
|
Grade-Level Target WCPM
|
K Spring: 40–60
|
K Spring: 40–60
|
|
At/Above/Below Target
|
|
|
|
FORM B — THE LITTLE YELLOW
BOAT (approx. 52 words)
|
The little yellow boat went on the lake. Jess held the rope.
Her cat sat in the boat. A big fish swam by. The cat saw the fish and jumped.
The cat got wet! Jess laughed. She helped the cat get back in the boat. They
went home. Jess dried the cat. The cat purred.
FLUENCY PASSAGE LEVEL 2 — Grade 1 (Beginning
Reader, ~80 words)
|
FORM A — THE SCHOOL GARDEN
(approximately 80 words)
|
Our class planted a garden at school. We dug the dirt and put
in the seeds. Every day we gave the plants water and checked for bugs. After
three weeks, small green plants began to grow. The teacher said we needed to be
patient. We also had to pull out the weeds so the plants could get sunlight. By
the end of spring, we had tomatoes and beans. We picked them and made a salad.
Everyone in class got to try it. It was the best salad we ever had.
|
Metric
|
Form A
|
Form B
|
|
Total Words in Passage
|
80
|
82
|
|
Total Words Read in 1 Minute
|
|
|
|
Number of Errors
|
|
|
|
WCPM
|
|
|
|
Accuracy %
|
|
|
|
Grade 1 Target (50th %ile
Spring)
|
71–82 WCPM
|
71–82 WCPM
|
|
FORM B — THE BIRTHDAY STORM
(approximately 82 words)
|
It was Lily's birthday. She wanted to have a party outside.
But in the morning, dark clouds filled the sky. By noon, rain began to fall.
Lily felt sad. Then her dad had a big idea. They pushed the tables inside.
Lily's friends came with umbrellas and boots. They played games inside and ate
cake. Lily's dad made paper hats for everyone. By the time the cake was gone,
the sun came out. Lily said it was the best birthday she ever had.
FLUENCY PASSAGE LEVEL 3 — Grade 2 (Developing
Reader, ~100 words)
|
FORM A — THE LIGHTHOUSE
KEEPER (approximately 100 words)
|
Long ago, a man named Thomas lived in a lighthouse on the
rocky shore. Every evening, he climbed to the top and lit the great lamp. Ships
far out at sea could see the flashing light and know where the rocks were.
Thomas loved his job. On stormy nights, the waves crashed against the stone
walls. The wind howled and the rain poured down. But Thomas never missed a
night. He said the sailors were counting on him. One winter, a young ship was
caught in a terrible fog. Thomas kept the lamp burning. The ship passed safely.
The captain wrote Thomas a thank-you letter.
|
Metric
|
Form A
|
Form B
|
|
Total Words
|
101
|
103
|
|
WCPM
|
|
|
|
Accuracy %
|
|
|
|
Grade 2 Target (50th %ile
Spring)
|
100 WCPM
|
100 WCPM
|
|
FORM B — THE WILD HORSES
(approximately 103 words)
|
In the open plains of the West, wild horses still roam free.
These horses live in groups called herds. Each herd has a leader, called a
stallion. The stallion protects the herd from danger. When a coyote comes near,
the stallion stamps his hooves and snorts loudly. The other horses run away
quickly. Wild horses eat grass and drink from streams. In summer, they travel
great distances to find food and water. In winter, they use their hard hooves
to dig through snow to reach the grass beneath. People have admired wild horses
for thousands of years. They are a symbol of freedom and strength.
FLUENCY PASSAGE LEVEL 4 — Grade 3 (Transitional
Reader, ~115 words)
|
FORM A — THE INVENTION OF
SLICED BREAD (approximately 115 words)
|
Most people have heard the saying 'the greatest thing since
sliced bread.' But have you ever wondered where sliced bread actually came
from? Before 1928, people bought loaves of bread and cut their own slices at
home. Then an inventor named Otto Rohwedder built a machine that could slice an
entire loaf at once. A bakery in Missouri was the first to sell machine-sliced
bread. Customers loved it immediately. Within a few years, most bakeries across
the country were using the new machines. The invention made breakfast faster
and lunches easier to pack. It also created a need for bags to keep bread
fresh. Sliced bread changed the way Americans ate — and even how they talked.
|
Metric
|
Form A
|
Form B
|
|
Total Words
|
116
|
118
|
|
WCPM
|
|
|
|
Accuracy %
|
|
|
|
Grade 3 Target (50th %ile
Spring)
|
115 WCPM
|
115 WCPM
|
|
FORM B — THE SECRET LIFE OF
TREES (approximately 118 words)
|
Scientists have discovered that trees communicate with each
other in surprising ways. Beneath the forest floor, the roots of trees are
connected to a web of tiny fungi. These fungi carry signals and nutrients from
tree to tree. When one tree is attacked by insects, it sends a chemical warning
through the network. Nearby trees respond by producing chemicals that make
their leaves taste bad to insects. Some researchers call this the 'wood wide
web.' Trees also help each other survive during droughts by sharing water
through the fungal network. Older trees, called mother trees, often send extra
nutrients to younger, smaller trees growing in the shade. The forest, it turns
out, works more like a community than a collection of separate plants.
FLUENCY PASSAGE LEVEL 5 — Grades 4–5 (Expanding
Reader, ~140 words)
|
FORM A — HARRIET TUBMAN AND
THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD (approximately 140 words)
|
Harriet Tubman was born into slavery in Maryland around 1822.
From childhood, she endured brutal conditions, including being struck in the
head with a heavy metal weight — an injury that caused her to experience sudden
blackouts for the rest of her life. In 1849, Tubman escaped to Philadelphia,
following the North Star and trusting a network of abolitionists and free Black
families who sheltered runaways along the Underground Railroad. Rather than
remaining safe in the North, Tubman returned south thirteen times to guide
enslaved people to freedom. She never lost a single passenger. Slave owners
placed a bounty of forty thousand dollars on her head. During the Civil War,
she served as a spy and scout for the Union Army, leading a military raid that
liberated more than seven hundred enslaved people. She is one of the most
courageous figures in American history.
|
Metric
|
Form A
|
Form B
|
|
Total Words
|
142
|
145
|
|
WCPM
|
|
|
|
Accuracy %
|
|
|
|
Gr. 4–5 Target (50th %ile
Spring)
|
133–150 WCPM
|
133–150 WCPM
|
|
FORM B — THE SCIENCE OF
VOLCANOES (approximately 145 words)
|
Volcanoes are one of Earth's most powerful natural forces.
They form where tectonic plates — the massive slabs of rock that make up
Earth's outer layer — meet, separate, or slide against each other. When
pressure builds beneath Earth's crust, magma, which is molten rock mixed with
gases, forces its way upward through cracks and vents. Once magma reaches the
surface, it is called lava. The temperature of lava can exceed 1,100 degrees
Celsius. Some eruptions are explosive, launching ash and debris miles into the
sky. Others are slower, releasing rivers of lava that creep across the
landscape. Volcanoes have shaped much of Earth's surface over millions of
years. Islands like Hawaii were formed entirely by volcanic activity. Although
dangerous, volcanoes also enrich the surrounding soil with minerals, making
volcanic regions some of the most fertile farmland on the planet.
FLUENCY PASSAGE LEVEL 6–7 — Grades 6–8 (Advanced
Reader, ~160+ words)
|
FORM A — THE PRINTING PRESS
AND THE SPREAD OF IDEAS (approximately 162 words)
|
Before Johannes Gutenberg developed his printing press around
1440, books were painstakingly copied by hand, primarily by monks in European
monasteries. The process was so slow and expensive that a single Bible could
take a scribe years to produce. Only wealthy institutions, noblemen, and the
Church could afford books. Information, consequently, was tightly controlled by
those in power. Gutenberg's press changed everything. By using movable metal
type and an oil-based ink, he could produce hundreds of identical pages in the
time it formerly took to copy one. Within fifty years of Gutenberg's invention,
European printers had produced more than twenty million books. Literacy rates
began to climb as texts became affordable. New ideas in science, theology, philosophy,
and politics spread rapidly across national borders. The Reformation, the
Scientific Revolution, and ultimately the Enlightenment were all accelerated by
the printing press. Scholars argue that no single invention has had a greater
impact on human civilization than the ability to mass-produce the written word.
|
Metric
|
Form A
|
Form B
|
|
Total Words
|
163
|
168
|
|
WCPM
|
|
|
|
Accuracy %
|
|
|
|
Gr. 6–8 Target (50th %ile
Spring)
|
162–165 WCPM
|
162–165 WCPM
|
|
FORM B — CLIMATE PATTERNS
AND THE WATER CYCLE (approximately 168 words)
|
Earth's water cycle is one of the most fundamental processes
sustaining life on the planet. It describes the continuous movement of water
between Earth's surface and atmosphere through the processes of evaporation,
condensation, precipitation, and collection. When the sun heats water in
oceans, lakes, and rivers, that water evaporates — transforming from liquid
into water vapor that rises into the atmosphere. As water vapor ascends to
higher altitudes, it cools and condenses around tiny particles of dust or
smoke, forming clouds. When enough water droplets gather in a cloud, gravity
pulls them back to Earth as precipitation — rain, snow, sleet, or hail,
depending on atmospheric conditions. This precipitation collects in rivers,
lakes, and underground aquifers, eventually returning to the ocean, where the
cycle begins again. The water cycle is not merely a scientific curiosity; it
governs regional weather patterns, agricultural productivity, and freshwater
availability across the globe. Disruptions to the cycle — whether from
deforestation, urbanization, or climate change — have cascading consequences
for ecosystems and human societies.
FLUENCY PROSODY RUBRIC
In addition to WCPM, rate the student's PROSODY (expression,
phrasing, and smoothness) using the scale below:
|
Score
|
Level
|
Descriptor
|
|
4
|
Fluent
|
Reads primarily in larger, meaningful phrase groups.
Appropriate expression throughout. Sounds like natural speech.
|
|
3
|
Developing Fluency
|
Reads primarily in three- to four-word phrase groups.
Some variation in expression. Generally smooth with some breaks.
|
|
2
|
Beginning Fluency
|
Reads primarily in two-word phrases. Little or no
expression. Monotone. Frequent pauses.
|
|
1
|
Non-Fluent
|
Reads mostly word-by-word. Lacks expression and
appropriate phrasing. Numerous long pauses.
|
Form A Prosody Score: __ / 4 Form B Prosody Score: __ / 4
DOMAIN D: VOCABULARY
Vocabulary knowledge is one of the strongest predictors of
reading comprehension (Shaywitz, 2020). Beck, McKeown & Kucan (2013)
describe three tiers of vocabulary:
•
TIER 1: Common, everyday words (cat, run, happy) —
usually acquired through conversation; typically not explicitly taught.
•
TIER 2: High-frequency academic words used across
subjects and disciplines (analyze, significant, demonstrate, sequence, infer).
These appear more in written text than conversation and are the PRIORITY for
vocabulary instruction.
•
TIER 3: Domain-specific, low-frequency words tied to
particular content areas (metamorphosis, photosynthesis, democracy,
denominator). Teach as needed within content study.
The HLAI Vocabulary Domain assesses: Listening vocabulary
(receptive), Tier 2 academic word knowledge across grade bands, Tier 3 content
vocabulary (ELA, science, social studies), and word relationships (synonyms,
antonyms, analogies).
SUBTEST D-1: LISTENING VOCABULARY (Receptive —
Ages 3–6)
Purpose
Assesses whether the student understands words they hear —
receptive vocabulary. Administered orally by the examiner. No reading required.
|
SAY: 'I am going to say
a word. Tell me what it means, or use it in a sentence.'
|
|
NOTE: For ages 3–5,
accept any reasonable definition, gesture, or example. For ages 6+, require a
definition or a sentence that demonstrates understanding.
|
|
SCORING: 1 point =
definition/use is clearly correct. 0.5 points = partial understanding. 0
points = no understanding or incorrect.
|
FORM A — Listening Vocabulary (Tier 1 / Early Tier 2)
|
#
|
Word
|
Tier
|
Acceptable Responses
|
Score
|
|
1
|
WET
|
T1
|
Has water on it; not dry; like after a bath
|
__ /1
|
|
2
|
LOUD
|
T1
|
Makes a big noise; very noisy
|
__ /1
|
|
3
|
SAFE
|
T1
|
Not in danger; protected from harm
|
__ /1
|
|
4
|
STRANGE
|
T2
|
Unusual; weird; different from normal
|
__ /1
|
|
5
|
DISCOVER
|
T2
|
To find something for the first time; to learn
something new
|
__ /1
|
|
6
|
SIMILAR
|
T2
|
Almost the same as something; alike in some ways
|
__ /1
|
|
7
|
ENORMOUS
|
T2
|
Very, very big; huge; gigantic
|
__ /1
|
|
8
|
INVESTIGATE
|
T2
|
To look carefully; to find out information; to study
|
__ /1
|
|
9
|
HESITATE
|
T2
|
To stop before doing something; to pause because
you're unsure
|
__ /1
|
|
10
|
CONSEQUENCE
|
T2
|
Something that happens as a result of an action
|
__ /1
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B — Listening Vocabulary
|
#
|
Word
|
Tier
|
Acceptable Responses
|
Score
|
|
1
|
COLD
|
T1
|
Low temperature; not warm; like winter
|
__ /1
|
|
2
|
BRAVE
|
T1
|
Not afraid; courageous; willing to face danger
|
__ /1
|
|
3
|
GENTLE
|
T1
|
Soft; careful; not rough or violent
|
__ /1
|
|
4
|
PERSIST
|
T2
|
To keep trying even when it's hard; to not give up
|
__ /1
|
|
5
|
DESCRIBE
|
T2
|
To tell what something looks, sounds, or feels like
|
__ /1
|
|
6
|
COMPARE
|
T2
|
To look at how two things are the same or different
|
__ /1
|
|
7
|
SUBSTANTIAL
|
T2
|
Large in amount; significant; of great importance
|
__ /1
|
|
8
|
ELABORATE
|
T2
|
To add more detail; to explain more fully
|
__ /1
|
|
9
|
CONTRADICT
|
T2
|
To say the opposite; to disagree with what someone
said
|
__ /1
|
|
10
|
EVIDENCE
|
T2
|
Facts or information that prove something is true
|
__ /1
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST D-2: TIER 2 ACADEMIC VOCABULARY — WORD
KNOWLEDGE (Grades 1–4)
Purpose
Assesses knowledge of high-utility academic vocabulary words
that appear frequently across school subjects. Based on the Academic Word List
(Coxhead, 2000) adapted for elementary levels.
|
SAY: 'I will read a
sentence with a missing word. Choose the best word from the choices.'
|
|
DO: Read the sentence
aloud. Then read the three choices. The student may respond orally.
|
FORM A — Tier 2 Academic Vocabulary (Grades 1–4)
|
#
|
Sentence + Choices
|
Answer
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
The explorer made a great ___ when she found a new
type of bird. A) discovery B) disaster
C) decoration
|
A
|
|
|
2
|
Please ___ your answer by giving three reasons. A) ignore
B) support C) forget
|
B
|
|
|
3
|
The two paintings were ___ in size but different in
color. A) opposite B) similar
C) alone
|
B
|
|
|
4
|
After the storm, scientists went to ___ how much
damage had been done. A) examine B) escape
C) enjoy
|
A
|
|
|
5
|
She tried to ___ what would happen next in the
story. A) predict B) pretend
C) prevent
|
A
|
|
|
6
|
The ___ of the project was to build a model of the
solar system. A) reason B) purpose
C) problem
|
B
|
|
|
7
|
He made a chart to ___ the data he collected during
the experiment. A) organize B) erase
C) copy
|
A
|
|
|
8
|
They had to ___ carefully before giving an
answer. A) hurry B) consider
C) sleep
|
B
|
|
|
9
|
The ___ of the story was that hard work always pays
off. A) chapter B) character C) theme
|
C
|
|
|
10
|
The result was ___, meaning it had the opposite
effect of what was intended. A)
effective B) unintended C) successful
|
B
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B — Tier 2 Academic Vocabulary (Grades 1–4)
|
#
|
Sentence + Choices
|
Answer
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
The scientist kept detailed ___ of every experiment
she conducted. A) records B) recipes
C) rivers
|
A
|
|
|
2
|
To solve the problem, we need to ___ the information
we have. A) delete B) analyze
C) copy
|
B
|
|
|
3
|
The two events happened at the same time; they were
___. A) separate B) simultaneous C) singular
|
B
|
|
|
4
|
His explanation was clear and easy to ___. A) confuse
B) ignore C) follow
|
C
|
|
|
5
|
The results ___ that eating vegetables improves
health. A) suggest B) prevent
C) ignore
|
A
|
|
|
6
|
She gave an ___ answer — one that covered all the
important details. A) inaccurate B) immediate C) thorough
|
C
|
|
|
7
|
The table shows a clear ___ between exercise and
energy. A) relationship B) reaction
C) review
|
A
|
|
|
8
|
The author's main ___ was that people should respect
nature. A) argument B) adventure C) answer
|
A
|
|
|
9
|
When data is spread across many values, it shows
great ___. A) variety B) value
C) volume
|
A
|
|
|
10
|
The new rules will ___ every student in the
school. A) affect B) activate
C) accuse
|
A
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 10
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST D-3: TIER 2 ACADEMIC VOCABULARY —
ADVANCED (Grades 5–8)
Purpose
Assesses higher-level academic vocabulary drawn from the
Academic Word List (Coxhead, 2000). These words are essential for reading
complex nonfiction and literary texts.
FORM A — Advanced Tier 2 Vocabulary
|
#
|
Word
|
Complete the Sentence (Circle best
answer)
|
Ans.
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
INFER
|
From the clues in the story, we can ___ that the
character is angry. A) infer B) inflate
C) ignore
|
A
|
|
|
2
|
AMBIGUOUS
|
His instructions were ___ — no one was sure what he
meant. A) clear B) ambiguous C) aggressive
|
B
|
|
|
3
|
DIMINISH
|
Over time, the noise began to ___. A) increase
B) diminish C) demonstrate
|
B
|
|
|
4
|
VALIDATE
|
The experiment was designed to ___ the scientist's
theory. A) reject B) complicate C) validate
|
C
|
|
|
5
|
COHERENT
|
A ___ essay has ideas that flow logically and connect
clearly. A) scattered B) coherent
C) complex
|
B
|
|
|
6
|
EXEMPLIFY
|
Her behavior helps to ___ what it means to be a
leader. A) exemplify B) explain away C) excuse
|
A
|
|
|
7
|
PERSPECTIVE
|
Reading about historical events from multiple ___
helps us understand them better. A)
solutions B) perspectives C) purposes
|
B
|
|
|
8
|
SUBSEQUENT
|
The earthquake caused significant damage; the ___
fires made things even worse. A)
previous B) subsequent C) similar
|
B
|
|
|
9
|
BIAS
|
A newspaper article written with ___ presents facts
in a one-sided way. A) balance B) clarity
C) bias
|
C
|
|
|
10
|
ELABORATE
|
Please ___ on your answer — give more details. A) elaborate B) erase
C) estimate
|
A
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ /10
|
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 =
Mastery.
|
SUBTEST D-4: TIER 3 ACADEMIC VOCABULARY — ENGLISH
LANGUAGE ARTS
Purpose
Assesses knowledge of ELA-specific Tier 3 terms that students
encounter in language arts instruction. Essential for literary analysis and
grammar.
FORM A — ELA Tier 3 Vocabulary
|
#
|
Term
|
Student Defines (or points to best
match):
|
Correct Definition
|
|
1
|
protagonist
|
Circle one: A)
the villain B) the main character C) the setting
|
B
|
|
2
|
metaphor
|
A) comparing two unlike things using 'like' or
'as' B) a direct comparison without
'like' or 'as' C) a repeated beginning
sound
|
B
|
|
3
|
inference
|
A) information stated in the text B) a conclusion drawn from clues C) the author's opinion
|
B
|
|
4
|
narrative
|
A) a poem B) a
list C) a story that describes events
|
C
|
|
5
|
alliteration
|
A) rhyming words
B) repeated beginning sounds C)
words that sound like what they mean
|
B
|
|
6
|
genre
|
A) a type or category of literature B) the main idea C) the ending of a story
|
A
|
|
7
|
exposition
|
A) the climax
B) the introduction and background at the start C) the turning point
|
B
|
|
8
|
theme
|
A) the title
B) the setting C) the central
message or life lesson of a text
|
C
|
|
9
|
point of view
|
A) the author's name
B) the perspective from which a story is told C) the type of book
|
B
|
|
10
|
foreshadowing
|
A) hints about what will happen later B) a flashback C) the resolution
|
A
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B — ELA Tier 3 Vocabulary
|
#
|
Term
|
Circle best definition:
|
Correct
|
|
1
|
antagonist
|
A) the main character
B) the setting C) the character
who opposes the protagonist
|
C
|
|
2
|
simile
|
A) a direct comparison B) a comparison using 'like' or 'as' C) a repeated sound
|
B
|
|
3
|
connotation
|
A) the dictionary meaning B) the emotional meaning or feeling a word
carries C) a spelling rule
|
B
|
|
4
|
plot
|
A) the sequence of events in a story B) the setting C) the author's purpose
|
A
|
|
5
|
onomatopoeia
|
A) a comparison
B) a word that imitates the sound it represents (buzz, crash) C) exaggeration
|
B
|
|
6
|
conflict
|
A) the resolution
B) the main character C) the
problem or struggle in a story
|
C
|
|
7
|
hyperbole
|
A) a factual statement B) deliberate extreme exaggeration C) a type of poem
|
B
|
|
8
|
context clues
|
A) dictionary entries
B) words or ideas near an unknown word that help define it C) proper nouns
|
B
|
|
9
|
mood
|
A) the emotion a reader feels while reading B) the author's tone C) the setting
|
A
|
|
10
|
syntax
|
A) the meaning of words B) the structure and arrangement of
sentences C) punctuation rules
|
B
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 10
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST D-5: TIER 3 VOCABULARY — SCIENCE &
SOCIAL STUDIES (Grades 3–8)
Purpose
Assesses content-area Tier 3 vocabulary in science and social
studies — the language students must know to access informational text.
FORM A — Science Tier 3 Vocabulary
|
#
|
Term
|
Circle best definition:
|
Correct
|
|
1
|
photosynthesis
|
A) animal migration
B) process plants use to make food from sunlight C) water cycle
|
B
|
|
2
|
hypothesis
|
A) a proven fact
B) a conclusion C) a testable
prediction or educated guess
|
C
|
|
3
|
ecosystem
|
A) a type of weather
B) all living things and their environment in an area C) Earth's core
|
B
|
|
4
|
vertebrate
|
A) an animal without a backbone B) an animal with a backbone C) a type of plant cell
|
B
|
|
5
|
erosion
|
A) the growth of rocks B) the wearing away of land by wind, water,
or ice C) volcanic eruption
|
B
|
|
6
|
chromosome
|
A) a type of atom
B) a part of the digestive system
C) structure in cells that carries genetic info
|
C
|
|
7
|
condensation
|
A) water vapor turning into liquid B) liquid turning into gas C) ice melting
|
A
|
|
8
|
orbit
|
A) the path of a planet around the sun B) the moon's surface C) a star's explosion
|
A
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 8
|
FORM A — Social Studies Tier 3 Vocabulary
|
#
|
Term
|
Circle best definition:
|
Correct
|
|
1
|
democracy
|
A) rule by a single king B) government by the people C) a type of economy
|
B
|
|
2
|
immigration
|
A) moving within a country B) moving to a new country to live C) touring for vacation
|
B
|
|
3
|
latitude
|
A) horizontal lines measuring distance N or S of
equator B) vertical lines C) altitude
|
A
|
|
4
|
amendment
|
A) a type of law
B) a punishment C) a formal
change made to a legal document
|
C
|
|
5
|
primary source
|
A) most important subject B) a firsthand account from the time
period C) main textbook
|
B
|
|
6
|
tariff
|
A) a tax on imported goods B) a type of government C) a treaty between nations
|
A
|
|
7
|
constitution
|
A) a list of taxes
B) a type of election C) the
basic law governing a country
|
C
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 7
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 6/8
science (75%) + 6/7 social studies (85%) = Mastery.
|
Domain D Total: _____ / 60 (sum scored subtests)
DOMAIN E: READING & LISTENING
COMPREHENSION
Reading comprehension is the ultimate goal of reading
instruction — the ability to understand, interpret, and use text. The National
Reading Panel (2000) identified comprehension as one of the five core reading
pillars. The HLAI assesses comprehension at multiple levels following the
framework described by Really Great Reading and supported by the Simple View of
Reading (Gough & Tunmer, 1986):
•
LITERAL COMPREHENSION: Finding information directly
stated in the text (who, what, where, when).
•
INFERENTIAL COMPREHENSION: Drawing conclusions from
clues in the text (why, how, what if).
•
APPLIED/EVALUATIVE COMPREHENSION: Connecting text to
prior knowledge and evaluating the author's message.
•
LISTENING COMPREHENSION: Understanding text read ALOUD
— separates decoding skill from comprehension to diagnose the source of any
reading difficulty.
SUBTEST E-1: LISTENING COMPREHENSION — Grades K–1
(Ages 5–7)
Purpose
Assesses comprehension when the administrator reads aloud.
This tests LANGUAGE COMPREHENSION independent of decoding. If a student scores
well on listening but poorly on reading comprehension, the deficit is in
decoding/word recognition, not language.
|
SAY: 'I am going to read
you a short story. Listen carefully — when I am done, I will ask you some
questions.'
|
|
DO: Read the passage
aloud clearly and naturally. Do NOT show the student the text. After reading,
close the book.
|
|
SAY: 'Now let's see what
you remember!'
|
FORM A — Listening Passage K–1: 'The Rabbit and the Garden'
|
READ ALOUD to student — Do
NOT show text:
|
One sunny morning, a small rabbit named Pip hopped into
Farmer Brown's garden. Pip saw rows of bright orange carrots, red tomatoes, and
leafy green lettuce. He was very hungry. Just as Pip reached for a big carrot,
he heard Farmer Brown's boots crunching on the path. Pip froze. His heart beat
fast. Then he squeezed under the fence and ran as fast as his legs could carry
him. He did not stop until he reached his burrow. Pip was safe — but still very
hungry.
Comprehension Questions — Form A, E-1
|
#
|
Question
|
Type
|
Correct Answer
|
Score
|
|
1
|
What is the name of the rabbit in the story?
|
Literal
|
Pip
|
|
|
2
|
Where did Pip go at the beginning of the story?
|
Literal
|
Farmer Brown's garden
|
|
|
3
|
Why did Pip run away from the garden?
|
Literal
|
He heard the farmer coming / boots crunching
|
|
|
4
|
How do you think Pip felt when he heard the farmer?
Why?
|
Inferential
|
Scared/frightened; because his heart beat fast and he
froze
|
|
|
5
|
What do you think will happen the next time Pip is
hungry?
|
Inferential
|
Accept any reasonable prediction with support
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 5
|
FORM B — Listening Passage K–1: 'The Lost Kite'
On a windy afternoon, Maya took her new kite to the park.
The kite was red with a yellow star. She held the string tight as the kite
soared high into the blue sky. Then a strong gust of wind came and — snap! —
the string broke. The kite flew higher and higher until it disappeared behind a
cloud. Maya sat on the bench and cried. An old man on the next bench noticed
her tears. He smiled kindly and opened his bag. Inside was a bright green kite.
'Would you like to try mine?' he asked. Maya wiped her eyes and smiled back.
|
#
|
Question
|
Type
|
Correct Answer
|
Score
|
|
1
|
What happened to Maya's kite?
|
Literal
|
The string broke / it flew away
|
|
|
2
|
What did Maya's kite look like?
|
Literal
|
Red with a yellow star
|
|
|
3
|
Why do you think the old man offered Maya his kite?
|
Inferential
|
He saw she was sad; he wanted to help
|
|
|
4
|
How did Maya feel at the end of the story? How can
you tell?
|
Inferential
|
Better/happy; she wiped her eyes and smiled
|
|
|
5
|
What is a lesson you could learn from this story?
|
Applied
|
Accept: kindness helps; things can be replaced; good
things happen if...
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 5
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 4/5 (80%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST E-2: READING COMPREHENSION — Grade 2
(Level 3)
Purpose
Student reads a passage independently and answers
comprehension questions. Assesses both literal recall and inferential thinking.
|
DO: Give the student a
printed copy of the passage. Allow them to read it silently or aloud.
|
|
SAY: 'Read this passage.
When you are done, I will ask you questions. You may look back at the
passage.'
|
FORM A Reading Passage E-2: 'Penguins Don't Fly'
|
STUDENT READS THIS PASSAGE:
|
Penguins are birds, but they cannot fly. Instead of using
their wings for flying, they use them like flippers to swim through the ocean.
Penguins are remarkable swimmers and can reach speeds of up to 15 miles per
hour underwater. Most penguins live in the cold southern regions of the world,
especially Antarctica. Emperor penguins, the largest of all penguins, can stand
nearly four feet tall and survive in temperatures below -40 degrees Fahrenheit.
During winter, male emperor penguins keep their eggs warm by balancing them on
their feet and covering them with a warm flap of skin called a brood pouch.
They huddle together in groups to share warmth while the females are away at
sea finding food. By the time the eggs hatch, the fathers may not have eaten
for two months.
Comprehension Questions — Form A, E-2
|
#
|
Question
|
Type
|
Acceptable Answers
|
Score
|
|
1
|
How do penguins use their wings?
|
Literal
|
Like flippers to swim
|
|
|
2
|
What is a brood pouch?
|
Literal
|
A warm flap of skin used to cover eggs
|
|
|
3
|
How fast can penguins swim?
|
Literal
|
Up to 15 miles per hour
|
|
|
4
|
Why do male penguins huddle together in winter?
|
Inferential
|
To share body warmth / stay warm in the cold
|
|
|
5
|
What can you conclude about emperor penguins based on
this passage?
|
Inferential
|
They are devoted parents; they can survive extreme
conditions
|
|
|
6
|
What is the main idea of this passage?
|
Applied
|
Penguins are remarkable birds adapted for life in
cold, aquatic environments
|
|
|
7
|
How is a penguin SIMILAR to and DIFFERENT from other
birds?
|
Evaluative
|
Similar: has wings, is a bird. Different: cannot fly,
uses wings to swim
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 7
|
FORM B Reading Passage E-2: 'The Hummingbird's Secret'
|
STUDENT READS THIS PASSAGE:
|
The hummingbird is one of nature's most extraordinary
creatures. These tiny birds — some no bigger than a human thumb — are the only
birds in the world that can fly backwards. They beat their wings up to 80 times
per second, which creates the humming sound that gives them their name. To fuel
this incredible speed, hummingbirds must eat constantly. A hummingbird can
visit between 1,000 and 2,000 flowers in a single day to drink nectar. Their
long, thin beaks are perfectly shaped to reach deep inside flowers. As they
feed, pollen sticks to their heads and gets carried to the next flower, helping
plants reproduce. This makes hummingbirds important pollinators. Despite their
beauty and importance, hummingbirds are incredibly territorial. They will chase
away other birds — and even large insects — to protect a good food source.
Comprehension Questions — Form B, E-2
|
#
|
Question
|
Type
|
Acceptable Answers
|
Score
|
|
1
|
What makes hummingbirds unique compared to other
birds?
|
Literal
|
Only birds that can fly backwards
|
|
|
2
|
Why are hummingbirds important to plants?
|
Literal
|
They carry pollen between flowers (pollinators)
|
|
|
3
|
How many times do hummingbirds beat their wings per
second?
|
Literal
|
Up to 80 times
|
|
|
4
|
Why do hummingbirds need to eat so much?
|
Inferential
|
They use enormous energy flying so fast
|
|
|
5
|
What does 'territorial' mean in this passage?
|
Vocabulary in Context
|
Protective of their space/food; will chase others
away
|
|
|
6
|
What is the main idea of this passage?
|
Applied
|
Hummingbirds are remarkable, vital birds with amazing
adaptations
|
|
|
7
|
How does the hummingbird's beak help it survive?
|
Applied
|
Long/thin shape lets it reach deep inside flowers for
nectar
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 7
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 6/7 (85%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST E-3: READING COMPREHENSION — Grades 3–4
(Level 5)
Purpose
Student reads an informational passage and responds to
questions requiring literal recall, inference, vocabulary in context, and text
structure analysis.
FORM A Passage E-3: 'The Life of a Monarch Butterfly'
|
STUDENT READS THIS PASSAGE:
|
The monarch butterfly undergoes one of the most astonishing
migrations in the animal kingdom. Each autumn, millions of monarchs travel up
to 3,000 miles from Canada and the United States to the oyamel fir forests of
central Mexico, where they spend the winter clustered in enormous groups on
tree branches. What makes this journey particularly remarkable is that no
single butterfly makes the round trip. The butterflies that travel south in
autumn are not the same individuals that traveled north the previous spring.
Scientists call these the 'super generation' — a generation that lives several
months longer than normal monarchs. The entire migration is guided by a
combination of the sun's position and an internal magnetic compass. Habitat
loss and the decline of milkweed — the only plant monarch caterpillars can eat
— have caused monarch populations to drop dramatically over recent decades.
Conservation efforts, including citizen science programs that ask volunteers to
plant milkweed and track butterfly populations, are helping to slow the
decline.
Comprehension Questions — Form A, E-3
|
#
|
Question
|
Type
|
Answer Key
|
Score
|
|
1
|
How far do monarchs travel during migration?
|
Literal
|
Up to 3,000 miles
|
|
|
2
|
What is the 'super generation'?
|
Literal
|
A generation that lives much longer and completes the
southern migration
|
|
|
3
|
What do monarch caterpillars eat?
|
Literal
|
Milkweed only
|
|
|
4
|
How do scientists think butterflies navigate?
|
Literal
|
Sun position + internal magnetic compass
|
|
|
5
|
Why is the monarch migration 'remarkable' according
to the author?
|
Inferential
|
No single butterfly makes the full round trip; the
'super gen' lives longer
|
|
|
6
|
What does 'conservation' mean in the context of this
passage?
|
Vocab in Context
|
Protecting/preserving monarch butterflies and their
habitat
|
|
|
7
|
What are TWO causes of the decline of monarch
butterflies?
|
Literal
|
Habitat loss + decline of milkweed
|
|
|
8
|
What is the author's purpose in this passage?
|
Applied
|
To inform readers about monarchs and inspire
conservation action
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 7/8 (87%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST E-4: READING COMPREHENSION — Grades 5–6
(Level 6)
Purpose
Assesses comprehension of longer, more complex informational
text with academic vocabulary and more complex inference demands.
FORM A Passage E-4: 'Microplastics: The Invisible Threat'
|
STUDENT READS THIS PASSAGE:
|
Microplastics are tiny plastic particles less than five
millimeters in size — smaller than a grain of rice. They form when larger
plastic items break down in the environment, or they are manufactured at that
tiny size for use in products like facial scrubs, toothpaste, and synthetic
fabrics. Because they are so small, they pass easily through water filtration
systems and accumulate in oceans, rivers, and soil. Scientists have detected
microplastics in rainwater, deep-ocean sediments, Arctic ice, the bloodstream
of marine mammals, and — most recently — in human blood and lungs. Research is
still ongoing, but early studies suggest that microplastic exposure may disrupt
hormones, damage cells, and carry harmful chemical pollutants deep into the
body. The scale of the problem is staggering: researchers estimate that by
2050, there will be more plastic in the ocean by weight than fish. Addressing
microplastic pollution requires action at multiple levels — individual consumer
choices, corporate responsibility in manufacturing, and international policy
agreements that regulate the production and disposal of single-use plastics.
Comprehension Questions — Form A, E-4
|
#
|
Question
|
Type
|
Answer Key
|
Score
|
|
1
|
How are microplastics formed?
|
Literal
|
From larger plastics breaking down OR manufactured
small for products
|
|
|
2
|
Where have scientists found microplastics?
|
Literal
|
Rain, ocean, Arctic ice, animal blood, human
blood/lungs
|
|
|
3
|
What does 'accumulate' mean in this passage?
|
Vocab in Context
|
To build up / collect / gather over time
|
|
|
4
|
Why is the prediction about 2050 significant?
|
Inferential
|
Shows extreme severity; more plastic than fish =
ecosystems at risk
|
|
|
5
|
Why does the author say addressing the problem
requires 'multiple levels'?
|
Inferential
|
Because the problem is too big for any single
person/entity to solve alone
|
|
|
6
|
What is the author's overall argument?
|
Applied
|
Microplastics are a serious, growing threat requiring
urgent, coordinated action
|
|
|
7
|
What is one action the author implies individuals
should take?
|
Applied
|
Reduce single-use plastics / make different consumer
choices
|
|
|
8
|
Evaluate: Is the author persuading you, informing
you, or both? Support your answer.
|
Evaluative
|
Both: provides facts (inform) and ends with call to
action (persuade)
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 7/8 (87%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST E-5: READING COMPREHENSION — Grades 7–8
(Level 7)
Purpose
Assesses comprehension of complex argumentative and analytical
text. Requires evidence-based reasoning, text structure analysis, and critical
evaluation.
FORM A Passage E-5: 'The Paradox of Choice' (adapted)
|
STUDENT READS THIS PASSAGE:
|
In contemporary Western society, freedom of choice is widely
regarded as one of the highest goods. We celebrate the supermarket with fifty
varieties of salad dressing and the streaming service with thousands of films.
Yet psychologist Barry Schwartz has argued, in his influential work 'The
Paradox of Choice,' that the proliferation of options may actually be reducing
— rather than enhancing — human well-being. Schwartz draws on a now-famous
study in which shoppers at a gourmet grocery store were offered either six or
twenty-four varieties of jam to sample. When only six jams were offered, 30% of
shoppers made a purchase. When twenty-four were offered, only 3% did so. The
abundance of choice, it appears, can lead to decision paralysis — an inability
to choose at all. Moreover, Schwartz argues that even when we do choose from a
large set, we are less satisfied with our choice, because we cannot help
comparing it to all the options we rejected. He terms this the 'opportunity
cost of foregone alternatives.' The implications extend beyond grocery
shopping. In education, healthcare, career paths, and personal relationships,
the expansion of choice has created a new and unexpected source of anxiety: the
burden of infinite possibility.
Comprehension Questions — Form A, E-5
|
#
|
Question
|
Type
|
Answer Key
|
Score
|
|
1
|
What is Barry Schwartz's main argument?
|
Literal
|
Too many choices reduces happiness/well-being, not
increases it
|
|
|
2
|
Summarize the jam study and its finding.
|
Literal
|
More jam choices = fewer purchases; less choice =
more buying
|
|
|
3
|
What is 'decision paralysis'?
|
Vocab in Context
|
Being unable to decide because there are too many
options
|
|
|
4
|
What does 'opportunity cost of foregone alternatives'
mean?
|
Vocab/Inferential
|
The regret of not choosing the other options we gave
up
|
|
|
5
|
Why does the author say the expansion of choice
creates 'anxiety'?
|
Inferential
|
Infinite choices = pressure to make the perfect
choice; fear of regret
|
|
|
6
|
Is the jam study sufficient evidence for Schwartz's
argument? Why/why not?
|
Evaluative
|
Open-ended; strong responses note one study ≠ proof;
limited scope
|
|
|
7
|
What text structure does this passage primarily use?
|
Text Structure
|
Claim + evidence; argumentative/expository
|
|
|
8
|
How might this argument apply to education?
|
Applied
|
Accept any reasonable application: too many elective
choices, etc.
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 8
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 7/8 (87%)
= Mastery.
|
Domain E Total: _____ / 50 points (sum all subtests)
DOMAIN F: WRITING — LETTER FORMATION, SPELLING
& WRITTEN EXPRESSION
Writing and spelling are the productive counterparts of
reading. The relationship between reading and writing is reciprocal: children
who learn to write letters, spell words, and compose sentences reinforce their
phoneme-grapheme knowledge, which in turn strengthens decoding and reading
comprehension (Graham & Hebert, 2010). The HLAI Writing Domain assesses
four interconnected areas:
•
LETTER FORMATION — The ability to write uppercase and
lowercase letters legibly from dictation (ages 3–6).
•
INVENTED/DEVELOPMENTAL SPELLING — How the student
spells words without a model, revealing their current stage of phonics and
orthographic knowledge (Graham, Harris & Fink, 2000).
•
SPELLING ACCURACY — Correct spelling of words at the
student's instructional level, using formal word lists aligned to phonics scope
and sequence.
•
WRITTEN EXPRESSION — Sentence construction, use of
complete sentences, paragraph organization, and voice.
Spelling Developmental Stages — Reference Guide
|
Use this chart to interpret
invented spelling errors diagnostically.
|
|
Stage
|
Typical Age/Grade
|
What You See
|
Example
|
|
Pre-Communicative
|
Age 3–5
|
Random letters/scribbles; no sound-letter
relationship
|
XBQTP for 'cat'
|
|
Semi-Phonetic
|
Age 4–6 / Pre-K
|
1–2 letters represent whole words; initial/final
sounds
|
KT for 'cat'; BK for 'bike'
|
|
Phonetic
|
Age 5–7 / K–Gr.1
|
All sounds represented; may be unconventional
|
KAT, BIEK, RAYN
|
|
Within-Word Pattern
|
Age 6–9 / Gr.1–3
|
Correct basic patterns; errors in long
vowels/patterns
|
TRANE for 'train'
|
|
Syllables & Affixes
|
Age 8–10 / Gr.3–5
|
Errors in compound/syllable boundaries, affixes
|
HOPEING for 'hoping'
|
|
Derivational Relations
|
Age 10+ / Gr.5+
|
Errors in derivational morphology
|
CRITISISM for 'criticism'
|
SUBTEST F-1: LETTER FORMATION FROM DICTATION
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can write uppercase and lowercase
letters correctly when the letter name is spoken. Evaluates both letter
knowledge and fine-motor letter formation.
Materials Needed
•
Blank unlined paper (for ages 3–5) or wide-ruled lined
paper (ages 6+)
•
Pencil
|
DO: Give the student a
blank or lined sheet. Write the student's name in the top corner.
|
|
SAY: 'I am going to say
a letter name. Write that letter on your paper. Write it as neatly as you
can.'
|
|
DO: Say each letter
slowly and clearly. Allow 10 seconds between letters. Do NOT show a model.
|
|
FORM A Letters (dictate in
this order): T, b, M, d, F, p, S, q, A, n, G, l, R, m, J, w, K, h, X, e, Z,
i, V, u, O, y
|
|
FORM B Letters (dictate in
this order): L, t, N, g, H, f, C, r, B, s, D, k, P, j, A, v, W, c, E, z, Y,
o, Q, x, U, a
|
|
NOTE: Score each letter
1 = legible and correctly formed; 0.5 = recognizable but reversed or poorly
formed; 0 = unrecognizable. Record any reversals specifically (b/d, p/q).
|
FORM A — Letter Formation Score Sheet
|
Letter Dictated
|
UC/LC
|
Score (0/0.5/1)
|
Notes (Reversals?)
|
Letter Dictated
|
UC/LC
|
Score
|
Notes
|
|
T
|
UC
|
|
|
b
|
LC
|
|
|
|
M
|
UC
|
|
|
d
|
LC
|
|
|
|
F
|
UC
|
|
|
p
|
LC
|
|
|
|
S
|
UC
|
|
|
q
|
LC
|
|
|
|
A
|
UC
|
|
|
n
|
LC
|
|
|
|
G
|
UC
|
|
|
l
|
LC
|
|
|
|
R
|
UC
|
|
|
m
|
LC
|
|
|
|
J
|
UC
|
|
|
w
|
LC
|
|
|
|
K
|
UC
|
|
|
h
|
LC
|
|
|
|
X
|
UC
|
|
|
e
|
LC
|
|
|
|
Z
|
UC
|
|
|
i
|
LC
|
|
|
|
V
|
UC
|
|
|
u
|
LC
|
|
|
|
O
|
UC
|
|
|
y
|
LC
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 26
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 26
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 24/26
(92%) letters legibly formed. Any b/d/p/q reversals after age 7 = flag for
follow-up.
|
Letter Formation Observation Notes
|
Observation Area
|
Form A Notes
|
Form B Notes
|
SUBTEST F-2: DEVELOPMENTAL SPELLING INVENTORY —
Early (Pre-K through Grade 1)
Purpose
Administered by dictation — the administrator says a word,
uses it in a sentence, and says it again. The student writes the word as best
they can. Scoring uses the Developmental Spelling stage rubric. Based on Bear
et al. (2020) Words Their Way spelling inventory principles.
|
SAY: 'I am going to say
some words. Write each word as best you can. Some of them might be hard —
just try your best. There is no grade for this.'
|
|
DO: For each word: (1)
Say the word. (2) Read the sentence. (3) Say the word again. Allow 30
seconds.
|
|
NOTE: Do NOT correct
spelling during the test. Do NOT spell words for the student.
|
FORM A — Early Spelling Inventory (10 words)
|
#
|
Dictated Word
|
Dictation Sentence
|
Student Writes
|
Stage Notes
|
|
1
|
fan
|
The fan blew cool air.
|
|
|
|
2
|
pet
|
She has a pet cat.
|
|
|
|
3
|
dig
|
He will dig a hole.
|
|
|
|
4
|
rob
|
Do not rob from others.
|
|
|
|
5
|
hope
|
I hope it will be sunny.
|
|
|
|
6
|
wait
|
Please wait for me.
|
|
|
|
7
|
gum
|
The gum stuck to the desk.
|
|
|
|
8
|
sled
|
We rode the sled down the hill.
|
|
|
|
9
|
stick
|
The dog chased the stick.
|
|
|
|
10
|
shine
|
The sun will shine today.
|
|
|
|
|
STAGE IDENTIFIED:
|
|
|
|
FORM B — Early Spelling Inventory (10 words)
|
#
|
Dictated Word
|
Dictation Sentence
|
Student Writes
|
Stage Notes
|
|
1
|
nap
|
The baby took a nap.
|
|
|
|
2
|
bed
|
Go to bed early.
|
|
|
|
3
|
win
|
I want to win the race.
|
|
|
|
4
|
hop
|
The bunny will hop away.
|
|
|
|
5
|
cute
|
The puppy is very cute.
|
|
|
|
6
|
rain
|
The rain made puddles.
|
|
|
|
7
|
drum
|
He played the drum.
|
|
|
|
8
|
clap
|
Clap your hands!
|
|
|
|
9
|
black
|
The night sky was black.
|
|
|
|
10
|
chase
|
She likes to chase butterflies.
|
|
|
|
|
STAGE IDENTIFIED:
|
|
|
|
Spelling Stage Score Sheet — Early Inventory
|
Feature
|
Possible Points
|
Form A Points
|
Form B Points
|
Instructional Implication
|
|
Initial Consonants
|
10
|
|
|
Pre-communicative → Semi-phonetic
|
|
Final Consonants
|
10
|
|
|
Semi-phonetic → Phonetic
|
|
Short Vowels Present
|
10
|
|
|
Early Phonetic
|
|
Short Vowels Correct
|
10
|
|
|
Phonetic stage
|
|
Blends/Digraphs
|
10
|
|
|
Phonetic → Within-Word
|
|
Long Vowel Markers
|
10
|
|
|
Within-Word Pattern
|
|
TOTAL
|
60
|
__ / 60
|
__ / 60
|
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: Use stage
rubric. If student is in Phonetic stage by end of Grade 1, mastery is on
track.
|
SUBTEST F-3: SPELLING ACCURACY — Grade-Level Word
Lists (Grades 1–6)
Purpose
Assesses spelling accuracy of grade-level words tied directly
to the phonics scope and sequence in Domain B. Words are administered by
dictation. Score one point per correctly spelled word.
|
SAY: 'I am going to say
a word, use it in a sentence, and say it again. Spell the word correctly on
your paper.'
|
|
DO: Administer ONLY the
level(s) appropriate for the student. Use the basal/ceiling rules.
|
GRADE 1 SPELLING WORDS — Form A
|
Phonics Focus: CVC,
digraphs, short vowels, basic blends
|
|
#
|
Word
|
Sentence
|
Phonics Pattern
|
+/–
|
Form B Word
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
map
|
Use a map to find the way.
|
CVC
|
|
tap
|
|
|
2
|
chin
|
My chin is itchy.
|
ch digraph
|
|
ship
|
|
|
3
|
wish
|
Make a birthday wish.
|
sh digraph
|
|
with
|
|
|
4
|
flag
|
The flag waved in the wind.
|
fl blend
|
|
frog
|
|
|
5
|
step
|
Watch the step.
|
st blend
|
|
snap
|
|
|
6
|
chop
|
Chop the vegetables.
|
ch+short o
|
|
thin
|
|
|
7
|
path
|
Follow the path.
|
th digraph
|
|
bath
|
|
|
8
|
glad
|
I am glad you came.
|
gl blend
|
|
plan
|
|
|
9
|
skin
|
My skin got sunburned.
|
sk blend
|
|
spin
|
|
|
10
|
ring
|
She wore a gold ring.
|
ng digraph
|
|
song
|
|
|
|
GRADE 1 TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B
|
__ / 10
|
GRADE 2 SPELLING WORDS — Form A
|
Phonics Focus: Long vowel
patterns, r-controlled, vowel teams
|
|
#
|
Word
|
Sentence
|
Pattern
|
+/–
|
Form B Word
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
bake
|
Bake the bread for one hour.
|
CVCe long a
|
|
cave
|
|
|
2
|
rain
|
The rain fell all day.
|
ai vowel team
|
|
sail
|
|
|
3
|
feet
|
My feet hurt.
|
ee vowel team
|
|
tree
|
|
|
4
|
night
|
Good night!
|
igh pattern
|
|
light
|
|
|
5
|
bone
|
The dog found a bone.
|
CVCe long o
|
|
note
|
|
|
6
|
corn
|
I love corn on the cob.
|
or r-controlled
|
|
torn
|
|
|
7
|
bird
|
A bird sang outside.
|
ir r-controlled
|
|
girl
|
|
|
8
|
burn
|
Be careful not to burn it.
|
ur r-controlled
|
|
turn
|
|
|
9
|
boil
|
Boil the water.
|
oi diphthong
|
|
soil
|
|
|
10
|
cloud
|
A dark cloud appeared.
|
ou diphthong
|
|
shout
|
|
|
|
GRADE 2 TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B
|
__ / 10
|
GRADE 3 SPELLING WORDS — Form A
|
Phonics Focus:
Multisyllabic words, inflectional endings, common prefixes/suffixes
|
|
#
|
Word
|
Sentence
|
Pattern
|
+/–
|
Form B Word
|
+/–
|
|
1
|
running
|
She is running the race.
|
-ing doubling
|
|
sitting
|
|
|
2
|
hoped
|
He hoped for a gift.
|
-ed drop e
|
|
baked
|
|
|
3
|
happily
|
She skipped happily.
|
-ily suffix
|
|
easily
|
|
|
4
|
replay
|
Can you replay the song?
|
re- prefix
|
|
reread
|
|
|
5
|
unhappy
|
She was unhappy.
|
un- prefix
|
|
unsafe
|
|
|
6
|
helpful
|
He is a helpful friend.
|
-ful suffix
|
|
careful
|
|
|
7
|
basket
|
Put it in the basket.
|
VCC pattern
|
|
carpet
|
|
|
8
|
number
|
Pick a number.
|
open syllable + r-ctrl
|
|
winter
|
|
|
9
|
mistake
|
I made a mistake.
|
mis- prefix + CVCe
|
|
unlike
|
|
|
10
|
birthday
|
Happy birthday!
|
compound
|
|
sunshine
|
|
|
|
GRADE 3 TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B
|
__ / 10
|
GRADE 4–5 SPELLING WORDS — Form A
|
Phonics Focus: Latin/Greek
roots, affixes, complex patterns
|
|
#
|
Word
|
Sentence
|
Pattern/Root
|
+/–
|
Form B Word
|
|
1
|
gracious
|
She gave a gracious smile.
|
-ous suffix
|
|
famous
|
|
2
|
signature
|
Sign your signature here.
|
sign- root
|
|
signal
|
|
3
|
necessary
|
Sleep is necessary.
|
c+ss pattern
|
|
possible
|
|
4
|
ancient
|
Ancient Egypt fascinated him.
|
ti=/sh/ pattern
|
|
patient
|
|
5
|
conscience
|
Let your conscience guide you.
|
sci- pattern
|
|
science
|
|
6
|
privilege
|
It is a privilege.
|
unusual spelling
|
|
stomach
|
|
7
|
temperature
|
Check the temperature.
|
temp- root
|
|
literature
|
|
8
|
government
|
The government passed a law.
|
-ment suffix
|
|
environment
|
|
9
|
mischievous
|
The mischievous cat knocked it.
|
-ous pattern
|
|
courageous
|
|
10
|
curiosity
|
Curiosity drives discovery.
|
-ity suffix
|
|
electricity
|
|
|
GRADE 4–5 TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B __ / 10
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION AT ALL
LEVELS: 8/10 (80%) = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST F-4: SENTENCE WRITING — CONVENTIONS &
CONSTRUCTION
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can write grammatically complete,
conventionally correct sentences. Tests capitalization, punctuation,
subject-verb agreement, and sentence completeness.
|
DO: Give student lined
paper.
|
|
SAY: 'I am going to say
some sentences. Write each sentence exactly as I say it. Use correct
spelling, capital letters, and punctuation.'
|
|
FORM A sentences (dictate
clearly): 1) The brown dog ran fast.
2) She ate three apples for lunch.
3) Did you see the rainbow yesterday?
4) The children laughed and played in the park. 5) My teacher said that reading every day
makes you smarter.
|
|
FORM B sentences: 1) Two
birds sat on a branch. 2) He finished
his homework before dinner. 3) Where
did you put my blue jacket? 4) The storm
knocked down several tall trees. 5)
Scientists have discovered many new species in the deep ocean.
|
Sentence Writing Scoring Rubric
|
Feature
|
Description
|
Points Each
|
Form A
|
Form B
|
|
Initial Capital
|
First word of sentence capitalized
|
1 per sentence
|
|
|
|
End Punctuation
|
Correct . ! or ? used
|
1 per sentence
|
|
|
|
Internal Punctuation
|
Commas, apostrophes used correctly
|
1 per sentence
|
|
|
|
Spelling Accuracy
|
90%+ words spelled correctly
|
1 per sentence
|
|
|
|
Complete Sentence
|
Subject + predicate, no fragment
|
1 per sentence
|
|
|
|
TOTAL (5 sentences × 5
points)
|
|
25
|
__ / 25
|
__ / 25
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 21/25
(84%) = Mastery.
|
SUBTEST F-5: WRITTEN EXPRESSION — PARAGRAPH &
COMPOSITION
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to compose a paragraph or short
piece of writing in response to a prompt. Evaluates idea development,
organization, sentence variety, vocabulary, and conventions. Use only ONE
prompt per administration (Form A prompt for pre-assessment, Form B prompt for
post-assessment).
Writing Prompts by Level
LEVEL 1 (Grades K–1):
Sentence Writing
|
Form
|
Prompt (read aloud; student may draw then
write)
|
|
A
|
Draw a picture of your favorite animal. Then write
ONE sentence about why you like it.
|
|
B
|
Draw a picture of something you love to do. Then
write ONE sentence about it.
|
LEVEL 2 (Grades 2–3):
Paragraph Writing
|
Form
|
Prompt
|
|
A
|
Write a paragraph (at least 5 sentences) about your
favorite season. Tell why you like it and give at least two specific
examples.
|
|
B
|
Write a paragraph (at least 5 sentences) about an
animal you find interesting. Include at least two facts about it.
|
LEVEL 3 (Grades 4–5): Short
Essay
|
Form
|
Prompt
|
|
A
|
Some people think children should be allowed to have
cell phones in school. Others disagree. Write 2–3 paragraphs expressing YOUR
opinion and giving at least two reasons with examples to support it.
|
|
B
|
Should students have homework every night? Write 2–3
paragraphs stating your position and supporting it with at least two specific
reasons.
|
LEVEL 4 (Grades 6–8):
Extended Essay
|
Form
|
Prompt
|
|
A
|
What is the most important challenge facing young
people today? Write a well-organized essay of 3–5 paragraphs that states a
clear claim, provides evidence to support it, and acknowledges at least one
opposing viewpoint.
|
|
B
|
What historical figure from any time period do you
believe had the greatest positive impact on the world? Write a 3–5 paragraph
essay defending your choice with specific evidence.
|
Written Expression Analytic Rubric (6-Point Scale per Trait)
|
Trait
|
6 — Advanced
|
4–5 — Proficient
|
2–3 — Developing
|
0–1 — Beginning
|
Score
|
|
IDEAS & CONTENT
|
Clear, focused, supported with specific details and
examples
|
Topic clear, mostly developed with some detail
|
Topic present but underdeveloped; few details
|
No clear topic or details
|
__ /6
|
|
ORGANIZATION
|
Strong intro, body, conclusion; logical flow;
transitions used
|
Recognizable structure; mostly logical
|
Some structure present but uneven
|
No discernible structure
|
__ /6
|
|
VOICE & WORD CHOICE
|
Engaging, original voice; varied, precise vocabulary
|
Some voice; adequate word choice
|
Flat voice; repetitive or imprecise vocabulary
|
No voice; very limited vocabulary
|
__ /6
|
|
SENTENCE FLUENCY
|
Varied sentence structures; reads smoothly aloud
|
Some variety; mostly readable
|
Choppy or run-on sentences; little variety
|
Fragments; sentences difficult to read
|
__ /6
|
|
CONVENTIONS
|
Few or no errors in spelling, caps, punct., grammar
|
Some errors, do not interfere with reading
|
Frequent errors; some interference
|
Pervasive errors; meaning obscured
|
__ /6
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
|
|
__ /30
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 24/30
(80%) = Mastery. Target below-mastery traits for explicit writing
instruction.
|
|
Score Range
|
Performance Level
|
Instructional Implication
|
|
25–30
|
Advanced
|
Extend through more complex prompts; focus on genre
study
|
|
19–24
|
Proficient
|
Enrichment; focus on specific weaker traits
|
|
13–18
|
Developing
|
Targeted instruction in lowest-scoring traits; daily
writing practice
|
|
Below 13
|
Beginning
|
Sentence-level instruction first; use mentor texts;
frequent conferencing
|
Domain F Total — Letter Formation: __ / 26 |
Spelling: __ / 40 | Sentences: __ / 25 |
Composition: __ / 30 | DOMAIN TOTAL: __ / 121
DOMAIN G: GRAMMAR, LANGUAGE CONVENTIONS &
MORPHOLOGY
Knowledge of grammar, syntax, and morphology is strongly
linked to reading comprehension and writing quality (Myhill et al., 2012).
Morphological awareness — understanding how prefixes, suffixes, and root words
combine to create meaning — is especially predictive of vocabulary growth and
reading comprehension in Grades 3 and above (Carlisle, 2010). The HLAI Grammar
Domain covers: parts of speech identification, sentence structure, punctuation
conventions, and morphological analysis.
SUBTEST G-1: PARTS OF SPEECH IDENTIFICATION
(Grades 2–8)
Purpose
Assesses the student's ability to identify and use nouns,
verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, and
interjections in sentences.
|
SAY: 'Read each
sentence. Then answer the question about the underlined word.'
|
|
DO: For younger students
(Gr. 2–3), administer orally. For Gr. 4+, student may read independently.
|
FORM A — Parts of Speech (Grades 2–4)
|
#
|
Sentence & Question
|
Correct Answer
|
Student Answer
|
Score
|
|
1
|
The fluffy cat slept on the warm rug. What part of
speech is 'cat'?
|
Noun
|
|
|
|
2
|
She ran quickly to the door. What part of speech is
'ran'?
|
Verb
|
|
|
|
3
|
The tall man wore a blue hat. What part of speech is
'blue'?
|
Adjective
|
|
|
|
4
|
He spoke very softly. What part of speech is
'softly'?
|
Adverb
|
|
|
|
5
|
She gave her book to him. What part of speech is
'her'?
|
Pronoun (possessive)
|
|
|
|
6
|
The dog ran under the table. What part of speech is
'under'?
|
Preposition
|
|
|
|
7
|
I like apples and oranges. What part of speech is
'and'?
|
Conjunction
|
|
|
|
8
|
Wow! That was amazing! What part of speech is 'Wow'?
|
Interjection
|
|
|
|
9
|
The children played happily in the park. Identify ALL
nouns.
|
children, park
|
|
|
|
10
|
Although it rained, we played outside. What type of
sentence is this?
|
Complex
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
FORM B — Parts of Speech (Grades 2–4)
|
#
|
Sentence & Question
|
Correct Answer
|
Student Answer
|
Score
|
|
1
|
Three tiny birds sat on the fence. What part of
speech is 'fence'?
|
Noun
|
|
|
|
2
|
The wind howled through the trees. What part of
speech is 'howled'?
|
Verb
|
|
|
|
3
|
She wore a sparkly dress. What part of speech is
'sparkly'?
|
Adjective
|
|
|
|
4
|
He finished his work quite rapidly. What part of
speech is 'rapidly'?
|
Adverb
|
|
|
|
5
|
They brought their lunch to school. What part of
speech is 'their'?
|
Pronoun (possessive)
|
|
|
|
6
|
The cat sat beside the fireplace. What part of speech
is 'beside'?
|
Preposition
|
|
|
|
7
|
We can go, but we must leave early. What part of
speech is 'but'?
|
Conjunction
|
|
|
|
8
|
Ouch! That really hurt! What part of speech is
'Ouch'?
|
Interjection
|
|
|
|
9
|
The generous teacher gave extra time to every
student. Identify ALL adjectives.
|
generous, extra, every
|
|
|
|
10
|
Because he studied hard, he passed the test. What
type of sentence is this?
|
Complex
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST G-2: ADVANCED GRAMMAR — SENTENCE
STRUCTURE (Grades 4–8)
Purpose
Assesses understanding of sentence types, clause analysis,
subject-verb agreement, verb tense, and common grammatical conventions required
for complex reading and writing.
FORM A — Advanced Grammar
|
#
|
Question / Sentence
|
Correct Answer
|
Student
|
Score
|
|
1
|
Correct the error: 'Neither the students nor the
teacher were ready.'
|
was ready
|
|
|
|
2
|
Identify the clause type: 'when the storm ended' —
independent or dependent?
|
Dependent
|
|
|
|
3
|
Combine using a semicolon: 'I was tired. I kept
working.'
|
I was tired; I kept working.
|
|
|
|
4
|
What is the antecedent of 'they' in: 'The birds flew
south because they sensed winter.'?
|
birds
|
|
|
|
5
|
Change to passive voice: 'The dog chased the cat.'
|
The cat was chased by the dog.
|
|
|
|
6
|
Identify the error: 'Running to the store, the rain
started to fall.'
|
Dangling modifier
|
|
|
|
7
|
What is the function of the dash in: 'One skill —
persistence — sets leaders apart.'?
|
Parenthetical emphasis / appositive
|
|
|
|
8
|
Identify: 'She sings well' vs. 'She sang well.' What
grammatical feature changes?
|
Verb tense
|
|
|
|
9
|
What type of phrase is 'in the morning' in: 'She
exercises in the morning'?
|
Prepositional phrase (adverbial)
|
|
|
|
10
|
Correct: 'Between you and I, this is difficult.'
|
Between you and me...
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
__ / 10
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery.
|
SUBTEST G-3: MORPHOLOGICAL AWARENESS — PREFIXES,
SUFFIXES & ROOTS
Purpose
Assesses whether the student can use knowledge of morphemes —
the smallest units of meaning — to determine word meaning. Morphological
awareness is one of the strongest predictors of vocabulary and reading
comprehension growth in Grades 3–8 (Carlisle, 2010).
MORPHEME REFERENCE CHART
|
Common Prefixes — Teach these
first:
|
|
Prefix
|
Meaning
|
Example
|
Prefix
|
Meaning
|
Example
|
Prefix
|
Meaning
|
Example
|
|
un-
|
not/opposite
|
unhappy
|
re-
|
again
|
replay
|
pre-
|
before
|
preview
|
|
dis-
|
not/opposite
|
disagree
|
mis-
|
wrong
|
mistake
|
non-
|
not
|
nonsense
|
|
over-
|
too much
|
overload
|
under-
|
too little
|
underpay
|
inter-
|
between
|
interact
|
|
trans-
|
across
|
transport
|
sub-
|
under
|
submarine
|
super-
|
above
|
superman
|
|
anti-
|
against
|
antifreeze
|
auto-
|
self
|
automatic
|
bi-
|
two
|
bicycle
|
|
Suffix
|
Meaning/Function
|
Example
|
Suffix
|
Meaning/Function
|
Example
|
|
-tion/-sion
|
act or process (noun)
|
creation
|
-ment
|
result/state (noun)
|
movement
|
|
-ness
|
state of being (noun)
|
happiness
|
-ity/-ty
|
state/quality (noun)
|
clarity
|
|
-ful
|
full of (adj)
|
careful
|
-less
|
without (adj)
|
careless
|
|
-able/-ible
|
capable of (adj)
|
readable
|
-ous/-ious
|
having quality (adj)
|
famous
|
|
-ly
|
in the manner of (adv)
|
quickly
|
-er/-est
|
comparative/superlative
|
bigger
|
|
-ed
|
past tense
|
walked
|
-ing
|
present participle
|
walking
|
|
Common Latin & Greek
Roots:
|
|
Root
|
Origin
|
Meaning
|
Words
|
Root
|
Origin
|
Meaning
|
Words
|
|
port
|
Latin
|
carry
|
transport, portable
|
rupt
|
Latin
|
break
|
disrupt, corrupt
|
|
dict
|
Latin
|
say/tell
|
predict, dictate
|
aud
|
Latin
|
hear
|
audible, audience
|
|
vis/vid
|
Latin
|
see
|
visible, video
|
scrib/script
|
Latin
|
write
|
describe, scripture
|
|
struct
|
Latin
|
build
|
construct, instruct
|
spec/spect
|
Latin
|
look
|
inspect, spectator
|
|
graph
|
Greek
|
write
|
biography, photograph
|
phon
|
Greek
|
sound
|
telephone, phonics
|
|
geo
|
Greek
|
earth
|
geography, geology
|
bio
|
Greek
|
life
|
biology, biography
|
|
chron
|
Greek
|
time
|
chronology, chronic
|
astro
|
Greek
|
star
|
astronomy, astronaut
|
|
micro
|
Greek
|
small
|
microscope, microbe
|
tele
|
Greek
|
far
|
telescope, television
|
FORM A — Morphology Assessment (Grades 3–8)
|
#
|
Question
|
Correct Answer
|
Score
|
|
1
|
What does the prefix 'un-' mean in 'unlock'?
|
Not; to reverse
|
|
|
2
|
What does the suffix '-ful' mean in 'hopeful'?
|
Full of; having
|
|
|
3
|
If 'port' means carry, what does 'transport' mean?
|
To carry across; move from one place to another
|
|
|
4
|
What does 'unhelpful' mean? Break it into parts.
|
Un- (not) + help + -ful (full of) = not full of help
|
|
|
5
|
If 'vis' means see, what does 'invisible' mean?
|
Not able to be seen
|
|
|
6
|
Create a word using 're-' that means 'to read again'.
|
reread
|
|
|
7
|
What root word do 'predict,' 'dictionary,' and
'contradict' share? What does it mean?
|
'dict' = to say/tell
|
|
|
8
|
What does 'disruption' mean? (dis- + rupt + -ion)
|
dis- (apart) + rupt (break) + -ion (noun) = breaking
apart; interference
|
|
|
9
|
What part of speech is 'careless'? What suffix makes
it that part of speech?
|
Adjective; -less suffix
|
|
|
10
|
If 'chronology' means the arrangement of events in
time, what does 'chron' mean?
|
Time
|
|
|
11
|
What does 'autobiography' mean? (auto + bio + graph +
y)
|
Self (auto) + life (bio) + write (graph) = the story
of one's own life
|
|
|
12
|
Change 'happy' to a noun using a suffix.
|
happiness (-ness)
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 12
|
FORM B — Morphology Assessment
|
#
|
Question
|
Correct Answer
|
Score
|
|
1
|
What does 'misunderstand' mean? (mis- + understand)
|
To understand incorrectly or wrongly
|
|
|
2
|
What does the suffix '-tion' tell you about a word's
part of speech?
|
It's a noun
|
|
|
3
|
If 'aud' means hear, what does 'auditorium' mean?
|
A place where you go to hear (performances)
|
|
|
4
|
What does 'prehistoric' mean? (pre- + historic)
|
Before recorded history; from before history
|
|
|
5
|
What root do 'description,' 'manuscript,' and
'prescribe' share? What does it mean?
|
'scrib/script' = write
|
|
|
6
|
Add a suffix to 'create' to make a noun.
|
creation (-tion) or creator (-or)
|
|
|
7
|
What does 'microphone' mean? (micro + phon + e)
|
Small (micro) + sound (phon) = instrument that
captures/amplifies small sounds
|
|
|
8
|
What does 'nonfiction' mean? Use morpheme analysis.
|
non- (not) + fiction = writing that is not fictional;
factual writing
|
|
|
9
|
What does 'predictable' mean? (pre- + dict + -able)
|
pre (before) + dict (say) + able (capable of) = able
to be said/known before it happens
|
|
|
10
|
If 'sub' means under and 'terr' means earth, what
does 'subterranean' mean?
|
Under the earth; underground
|
|
|
11
|
Change 'biology' to an adjective.
|
biological (-ical suffix)
|
|
|
12
|
What does 'telescope' help you do? (tele + scope)
|
tele (far) + scope (look at) = look at things that
are far away
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 12
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 10/12
(83%) = Mastery.
|
Domain G Total: __ / 10 (POS) + __ / 10 (Advanced Grammar) +
__ / 12 (Morphology) = __ / 32
DOMAIN H: PRINT CONCEPTS, BOOK HANDLING &
PRE-READING FOUNDATIONS
|
FOR AGES 3–5 ONLY — Pre-K
& Kindergarten
|
Before children can learn to decode, they must understand that
print carries meaning — a concept called Print Awareness or Concepts About
Print (Clay, 2000). The HLAI Pre-Reading Domain assesses early literacy
foundations that are predictive of reading success in kindergarten and Grade 1.
SUBTEST H-1: CONCEPTS ABOUT PRINT
Purpose
Assesses whether the student understands how books work and
how print is organized on a page. Administer using any simple picture book.
|
DO: Sit beside the child
with a picture book. Present the book to the child.
|
|
SAY each prompt below.
Observe and record what the child does.
|
FORM A — Concepts About Print Checklist
|
#
|
Prompt (Say or Do)
|
Skill Being Assessed
|
Form A +/–
|
Form B +/–
|
|
1
|
Show me the FRONT of this book.
|
Front cover identification
|
|
|
|
2
|
Show me where to START reading this book.
|
Beginning of book
|
|
|
|
3
|
Show me ONE word on this page.
|
Word concept
|
|
|
|
4
|
Show me ONE letter.
|
Letter concept
|
|
|
|
5
|
Show me where to START reading on this page.
|
Left-to-right directionality
|
|
|
|
6
|
Which way do I go when I get to the end of the line?
|
Return sweep
|
|
|
|
7
|
Show me the PERIOD in this sentence.
|
Period identification
|
|
|
|
8
|
Show me where to go when I finish this page.
|
Page turning / sequence
|
|
|
|
9
|
How many WORDS are in this sentence? (point to a
simple sentence)
|
Word boundaries
|
|
|
|
10
|
Show me a CAPITAL letter and a lowercase letter.
|
Upper/lowercase distinction
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
__ / 10
|
__ / 10
|
|
MASTERY CRITERION: 8/10 (80%)
= Mastery. Any child below mastery should receive explicit print concept
instruction.
|
SUBTEST H-2: LETTER-WRITING READINESS (Ages 3–5)
Purpose
Assesses pre-writing and early letter formation readiness by
having the student copy simple shapes and attempt letter writing. This assesses
fine motor development and early print-to-symbol mapping.
|
DO: Give the student a
pencil and unlined paper.
|
|
SAY: 'Try to copy each
shape I draw for you.' (Draw each shape slowly in front of the child, then
slide the paper to them.)
|
|
SHAPES TO COPY (draw on
separate paper): Vertical line | Horizontal line |
Circle | Cross (+)
| Square |
Triangle | Diagonal line |
Letter T | Letter O
| Letter L
|
FORM A — Shape/Letter Copying Checklist
|
Shape/Letter
|
Form A: Legible Copy?
|
Form B: Legible Copy?
|
Developmental Note
|
|
Vertical line
|
|
|
Age 2–3 typically developing
|
|
Horizontal line
|
|
|
Age 2–3
|
|
Circle
|
|
|
Age 3
|
|
Cross (+)
|
|
|
Age 4
|
|
Square
|
|
|
Age 4–5
|
|
Triangle
|
|
|
Age 5
|
|
Diagonal line
|
|
|
Age 4–5
|
|
Letter T
|
|
|
Age 4–5
|
|
Letter O
|
|
|
Age 4–5
|
|
Letter L
|
|
|
Age 4–5
|
|
TOTAL COPIED LEGIBLY
|
__ / 10
|
__ / 10
|
|
|
NOTE: If a child cannot copy
a circle or cross by age 5, consult an occupational therapist about fine
motor development.
|
SUBTEST H-3: ORAL LANGUAGE & LISTENING
VOCABULARY — AGES 3–5
Purpose
Assesses receptive and expressive oral language development in
preschool-aged children. Strong oral language at age 4–5 predicts reading
comprehension success at Grades 3–5 (Scarborough, 2001).
|
This subtest is done as a
CONVERSATION, not a formal test. Sit comfortably with the child.
|
|
OBSERVE and RECORD
responses. Do NOT correct.
|
Oral Language Observation Checklist — Ages 3–5
|
Skill
|
Age Typical
|
Observed? Y/N
|
Example/Notes
|
|
Speaks in 3-word sentences
or more
|
Age 3
|
|
|
|
Answers simple 'what' and
'where' questions
|
Age 3
|
|
|
|
Knows 5+ colors by name
|
Age 3–4
|
|
|
|
Tells a simple 2–3 event
story
|
Age 4
|
|
|
|
Asks 'why' questions
spontaneously
|
Age 3–4
|
|
|
|
Uses past tense correctly
most of the time
|
Age 4–5
|
|
|
|
Speaks in complete,
grammatical sentences
|
Age 4–5
|
|
|
|
Can follow 3-step oral
directions
|
Age 4–5
|
|
|
|
Vocabulary of 1,500+ words
(estimate by conversation)
|
Age 4
|
|
|
|
Can retell a simple story
with beginning/middle/end
|
Age 5
|
|
|
|
Rhymes words and plays with
language
|
Age 4–5
|
|
|
|
Identifies own first name in
print
|
Age 4–5
|
|
|
|
TOTAL OBSERVED
|
|
__ / 12
|
|
|
NOTE: 10/12 by age 5 = On
track. Below 7/12 at age 5 = recommend speech/language screening.
|
DOMAIN I: ORAL READING ANALYSIS — RUNNING
RECORD & MISCUE ANALYSIS
A Running Record (Clay, 2000) or Informal Reading Inventory
(IRI) captures a detailed picture of a student's reading behavior during oral
reading — recording not just whether words are correct, but HOW errors
(miscues) are made. Miscue analysis, developed by Goodman (1969) and refined
through decades of literacy research, reveals which cueing systems a student
relies on and which need strengthening.
This domain provides a structured Running Record protocol for
any of the fluency passages in Domain C, plus a Miscue Analysis System for
interpreting error patterns diagnostically.
RUNNING RECORD CONVENTIONS
|
Symbol
|
Meaning
|
Example
|
What It Tells You
|
|
✓
|
Correct word
|
✓ ✓ ✓ ✓
|
Accurate reading
|
|
[error word]
|
Substitution
|
horse [house]
|
Student said 'house' for 'horse'
|
|
—
|
Omission
|
The — dog ran
|
Student skipped the word
|
|
[inserted word]
|
Insertion
|
The [big] dog ran
|
Added a word not in text
|
|
T
|
Told (after 5 sec pause)
|
T
|
Examiner told the word
|
|
SC
|
Self-correction
|
[house] SC
|
Student caught and fixed the error
|
|
R
|
Repetition
|
R2 (the)
|
Student repeated; number indicates how many times
|
|
[A]
|
Appeal
|
[A]
|
Student looked to examiner for help
|
CALCULATING READING LEVELS
|
Accuracy Rate
|
Reading Level
|
Instructional Implication
|
|
96–100%
|
INDEPENDENT
|
Student can read this level alone without support.
|
|
90–95%
|
INSTRUCTIONAL
|
Student benefits from guided reading at this level.
|
|
Below 90%
|
FRUSTRATIONAL
|
Text is too hard; use easier material for
instruction.
|
Formula: Accuracy % = (Total Words – Errors) ÷ Total Words ×
100
Self-Correction Rate: SC Rate = (Errors + Self-Corrections) ÷
Self-Corrections. A ratio of 1:4 or better indicates healthy self-monitoring
behavior.
RUNNING RECORD RECORDING SHEET
|
DO: Print the passage
from Domain C (or any leveled text). Place the student copy in front of the
student.
|
|
DO: Use the
administrator copy to mark each word as the student reads.
|
|
DO: Record EVERY word
using the Running Record conventions above.
|
|
SAY: 'Read this story
out loud to me. Do your best.'
|
|
DO: When finished,
calculate Accuracy %, WCPM, and Self-Correction Rate.
|
Running Record Data Summary
|
Field
|
Form A (Pre)
|
Form B (Post)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Record: Student Name, Date, Passage Title, Level, Total Words,
Errors, Self-Corrections, Accuracy %, WCPM, Reading Level (Ind/Inst/Frust),
Dominant Error Type
MISCUE ANALYSIS SYSTEM
Purpose
After completing a Running Record, use this system to
categorize and analyze error patterns. Each error (miscue) is examined across
three cueing systems.
The Three Cueing Systems
|
Cueing System
|
Code
|
What It Means
|
Example Error
|
|
Semantic (Meaning)
|
M
|
Does the error make sense in context? Does it fit the
meaning of the sentence?
|
horse → pony (makes sense)
|
|
Syntactic (Structure)
|
S
|
Does the error sound like a grammatically correct
sentence? Does it fit the grammatical structure?
|
horse → horses (grammatical)
|
|
Graphophonic (Visual/Sound)
|
V
|
Does the error look like the printed word? Share
beginning, middle, or ending letters?
|
horse → house (looks similar)
|
Miscue Analysis Recording Grid
|
Page
|
Text Says
|
Student Said
|
M?
|
S?
|
V?
|
SC?
|
Analysis Notes
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOTALS
|
|
|
__ /
|
__ /
|
__ /
|
__ /
|
|
Miscue Analysis Interpretation Guide
|
Error Pattern
|
What It Suggests
|
Instructional Response
|
|
High M, High S, Low V
|
Reader uses meaning/grammar; ignores letters
|
Strengthen phonics; point-by-point decoding practice
|
|
High V, Low M, Low S
|
Reader decodes but ignores meaning
|
Strengthen comprehension monitoring; semantic cues
|
|
Low M, Low S, Low V
|
Reader is guessing randomly
|
Emergent reader needing foundational phonics and oral
language
|
|
All High
|
Flexible, proficient reader
|
Advance to more complex text
|
|
Many SCs (self-corrections)
|
Reader is actively monitoring for meaning
|
Very positive; celebrate and support this strategy
|
|
Few or no SCs
|
Reader not monitoring comprehension
|
Teach 'Does that make sense?' strategy
|
ORAL READING ANALYSIS: WORD ATTACK STRATEGIES
INVENTORY
Purpose
When a student encounters an unknown word during oral reading,
what do they do? This checklist helps identify which word-solving strategies
the student uses independently.
Word Attack Strategies Observation Checklist
|
Strategy
|
Description
|
Observed Y/N
|
Notes
|
|
Sounds It Out (L→R)
|
Student decodes letter-by-letter or in chunks from
left to right
|
|
|
|
Uses Onset + Rime
|
Student identifies the initial consonant(s) + the
vowel-ending chunk
|
|
|
|
Looks for Known Parts
|
Student finds a smaller word or recognizable chunk
inside the word
|
|
|
|
Uses Context Clues
|
Student reads surrounding words/sentences to guess
the unknown word
|
|
|
|
Rereads the Sentence
|
Student goes back to the beginning of the sentence
for more context
|
|
|
|
Looks at the Picture
|
Student uses illustrations to help identify the word
|
|
|
|
Skips & Returns
|
Student skips the word, reads to end of sentence,
then returns
|
|
|
|
Applies Syllabication
|
Student breaks multisyllabic word into syllables to
decode
|
|
|
|
Monitors Self
|
Student notices when reading doesn't make sense and
tries again
|
|
|
|
Asks for Help
|
Student appeals to examiner immediately without
trying independently
|
|
|
|
Makes No Attempt
|
Student stops and waits without trying any strategy
|
|
|
|
TARGET: Students should
flexibly use multiple strategies. Overreliance on any ONE strategy
(especially 'Asks for Help' or 'Makes No Attempt') indicates need for
strategy instruction.
|
APPENDIX A: GOAL-SETTING GUIDE
Use the following framework to write instructional goals and
objectives based on HLAI assessment results. Goals should be SMART: Specific,
Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound.
Goal-Writing Template
|
Given [CONDITION], [STUDENT
NAME] will [SKILL/BEHAVIOR] at [CRITERION LEVEL] as measured by [ASSESSMENT]
by [DATE].
|
Sample Goals by Domain
Domain A — Phonemic
Awareness
•
Given a set of 10 spoken word pairs, [Student] will
identify whether the pairs rhyme with 80% accuracy as measured by HLAI Subtest
A-1 Form B.
•
Given 8 spoken words, [Student] will correctly segment
each word into individual phonemes with 80% accuracy as measured by HLAI
Subtest A-6 Form B.
Domain B — Phonics
•
Given 26 uppercase letters in random order, [Student]
will name all 26 letters correctly in under 60 seconds as measured by HLAI
Subtest B-1 Form B.
•
Given a list of 20 CVC and CCVC words, [Student] will
decode each word correctly with 90% accuracy using vowel-consonant knowledge as
measured by HLAI Subtest B-4 Form B.
Domain C — Fluency
•
Given a Grade 2 unpracticed passage, [Student] will
read at 95+ WCPM with 95% accuracy as measured by a 1-minute HLAI Fluency
Probe.
•
Given a Grade 3 passage, [Student] will read with a
prosody score of 3 or 4 on the HLAI Prosody Rubric.
Domain D — Vocabulary
•
Given 10 Tier 2 academic words in context sentences,
[Student] will select the correct definition or use with 80% accuracy as
measured by HLAI Subtest D-2 Form B.
•
Given 10 ELA Tier 3 terms, [Student] will correctly
define or identify each term with 80% accuracy as measured by HLAI Subtest D-4
Form B.
Domain E — Comprehension
•
Given a Grade 2 leveled passage, [Student] will
correctly answer 6/7 comprehension questions (including at least 2 inferential)
as measured by HLAI Subtest E-2 Form B.
•
Given a Grade 4 informational passage read aloud,
[Student] will demonstrate listening comprehension by correctly answering 7/8
questions including literal and inferential items.
APPENDIX B: LEARNING CONTINUUM — LITERACY
DEVELOPMENT SEQUENCE
This continuum maps HLAI subtests to the typical sequence of
literacy skill development. Use this to identify where a student is on the
learning continuum and which skills to target next.
|
Level
|
Age/Grade
|
Key Skills at This Level
|
HLAI Subtests
|
|
1
|
Age 3–4
|
Rhyme recognition, alliteration, concept of print,
oral vocabulary, ABC song
|
A-1, A-2, D-1
|
|
2
|
Age 4–5 / Pre-K
|
Letter naming (UC/LC), initial sound awareness,
phoneme isolation, oral vocabulary
|
A-3, A-4, B-1, B-2, D-1
|
|
3
|
Age 5–6 / K
|
All short vowels, CVC decoding, phoneme
blending/segmenting, 50 sight words, 40+ WCPM
|
A-5, A-6, B-3, B-4, B-11 L1, C-L1
|
|
4
|
Age 6–7 / Gr.1
|
Digraphs, blends, long vowel CVCe, 100+ sight words,
phoneme deletion, 70+ WCPM
|
A-7, B-5, B-6, B-7, B-11 L2–3, C-L2
|
|
5
|
Age 7–8 / Gr.2
|
R-controlled vowels, diphthongs, variant vowels,
nonsense word decoding, 100+ WCPM
|
A-8, B-8, B-9, B-10, C-L3, D-2 L1–2, E-2
|
|
6
|
Age 8–9 / Gr.3
|
2-syllable decoding, Tier 2 vocab, 115+ WCPM,
inferential comprehension
|
B-12, B-13, C-L4, D-2, D-4, E-3
|
|
7
|
Age 9–10 / Gr.4
|
Multi-syllabic reading, Tier 3 vocab, 133+ WCPM, text
structure, author's purpose
|
B-12, C-L5, D-3, D-5, E-3, E-4
|
|
8
|
Age 10–11 / Gr.5
|
Fluent reading 140+ WCPM, advanced Tier 2, literary
analysis, informational text
|
C-L5–6, D-3, D-4, D-5, E-4
|
|
9
|
Age 11–13 / Gr.6–8
|
165+ WCPM, academic argument, critical evaluation,
complex text structure
|
C-L7, D-3, D-5, E-5
|
APPENDIX C: FLUENCY DRILL PASSAGES —
ADDITIONAL PRACTICE SETS
These passages are designed for repeated oral reading practice
— NOT assessment. To build fluency, have the student read each passage 3–5
times until they reach the target WCPM. Track progress with the Fluency Log
below.
Fluency Practice Passage P-1: Grade 1 Level
|
THE SNOWY DAY (~75
words) | Target: 71–82 WCPM
|
Snow fell all night long. In the morning, the yard was white.
Jake put on his boots and coat. He ran outside. The snow was soft and deep. He
made a big snowball. Then he made another. He stacked them up. He found a
carrot for a nose and buttons for eyes. His snowman looked just right. Mom
called him in for hot cocoa. Jake looked back at his snowman and smiled.
Fluency Practice Passage P-2: Grade 2 Level
|
BEES AND FLOWERS (~100
words) | Target: 95–105 WCPM
|
Bees and flowers need each other to survive. When a bee visits
a flower in search of nectar, tiny grains of pollen stick to its fuzzy body. As
the bee travels from flower to flower, it carries this pollen along with it.
When the pollen falls onto a new flower of the same type, the flower can
produce seeds. This process is called pollination, and it is essential for
growing fruits and vegetables. Without bees, many of our favorite foods — from
apples to almonds — would not exist. That is why protecting bee populations is
so important for all of us.
Fluency Practice Passage P-3: Grade 3–4 Level
|
THE SAHARA DESERT (~120
words) | Target: 115–133 WCPM
|
The Sahara Desert is the largest hot desert on Earth, covering
nearly a third of the African continent. Although many people picture the
Sahara as an endless sea of sand dunes, most of its terrain is actually rocky,
flat plains. Temperatures in the Sahara can exceed 130 degrees Fahrenheit
during the day, yet plunge below freezing at night — a difference of more than
100 degrees in a single day. The Sahara is home to a surprising variety of
life, including camels, fennec foxes, scorpions, and over 500 species of
plants. Along its edges and in hidden oases, communities of people have lived
for thousands of years, adapting their lifestyles to one of Earth's most
extreme environments. The Sahara continues to grow slightly each year as
climate change alters rainfall patterns.
Fluency Log
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Date
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Passage
|
Attempt #
|
WCPM
|
Accuracy %
|
Prosody Score
|
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APPENDIX D: REFERENCE CHARTS
The 44 Phonemes of English — Quick Reference
|
Phoneme
|
Grapheme(s)
|
Example
|
Phoneme
|
Grapheme(s)
|
Example
|
Phoneme
|
Grapheme(s)
|
Example
|
|
/p/
|
p
|
pen
|
/b/
|
b
|
bat
|
/t/
|
t
|
tap
|
|
/d/
|
d
|
dog
|
/k/
|
c,k,ck
|
cat
|
/g/
|
g
|
got
|
|
/f/
|
f,ph
|
fun
|
/v/
|
v
|
van
|
/θ/
|
th
|
thin
|
|
/ð/
|
th
|
this
|
/s/
|
s,c
|
sun
|
/z/
|
z,s
|
zip
|
|
/ʃ/
|
sh,ti,ci
|
ship
|
/ʒ/
|
si,ge
|
vision
|
/h/
|
h
|
hot
|
|
/tʃ/
|
ch,tch
|
chip
|
/dʒ/
|
j,g,dge
|
jump
|
/m/
|
m
|
man
|
|
/n/
|
n
|
nut
|
/ŋ/
|
ng,n
|
sing
|
/l/
|
l
|
lip
|
|
/r/
|
r
|
run
|
/w/
|
w
|
win
|
/j/
|
y
|
yes
|
|
/x/ (kw)
|
qu
|
queen
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Phoneme
|
Grapheme(s)
|
Example
|
Phoneme
|
Grapheme(s)
|
Example
|
|
/æ/ short a
|
a
|
cat
|
/ɛ/ short e
|
e,ea
|
bed
|
|
/ɪ/ short i
|
i
|
sit
|
/ɒ/ short o
|
o,a
|
top
|
|
/ʌ/ short u
|
u,o
|
cup
|
/eɪ/ long a
|
a_e,ai,ay,ei
|
cake
|
|
/iː/ long e
|
ee,ea,e,y
|
feet
|
/aɪ/ long i
|
i_e,igh,ie,y
|
kite
|
|
/oʊ/ long o
|
o_e,oa,ow
|
bone
|
/juː/ long u
|
u_e,ew,ue
|
cube
|
|
/ɑːr/ ar
|
ar
|
car
|
/ɜːr/ er/ir/ur
|
er,ir,ur,ear
|
her
|
|
/ɔːr/ or
|
or,ore
|
corn
|
/ʊ/ short oo
|
oo,u
|
book
|
|
/uː/ long oo
|
oo,ue,ew
|
moon
|
/ɔː/ aw/au
|
aw,au,al
|
saw
|
|
/ɔɪ/ oi
|
oi,oy
|
oil
|
/aʊ/ ou/ow
|
ou,ow
|
out
|
|
/ə/ schwa
|
a,e,i,o,u
|
about
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX E: BIBLIOGRAPHY & RESEARCH
FOUNDATION
Core Research Sources
•
Beck, I. L., McKeown, M. G., & Kucan, L. (2013).
Bringing Words to Life: Robust Vocabulary Instruction (2nd ed.). Guilford
Press.
•
Coxhead, A. (2000). A New Academic Word List. TESOL
Quarterly, 34(2), 213–238.
•
Duke, N. K., & Cartwright, K. B. (2021). The
science of reading progresses: Communicating advances beyond the Simple View of
Reading. Reading Research Quarterly, 56, S25–S44.
•
Ehri, L. C. (2014). Orthographic mapping in the
acquisition of sight word reading, spelling memory, and vocabulary learning.
Scientific Studies of Reading, 18(1), 5–21.
•
Gough, P. B., & Tunmer, W. E. (1986). Decoding,
reading, and reading disability. Remedial and Special Education, 7(1), 6–10.
[Simple View of Reading]
•
Hasbrouck, J., & Tindal, G. (2017). An update to
compiled ORF norms (Technical Report No. 1702). University of Oregon,
Behavioral Research and Teaching.
•
Kilpatrick, D. A. (2015). Essentials of Assessing,
Preventing, and Overcoming Reading Difficulties. Wiley.
•
National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development. (2000). Report of the National Reading Panel: Teaching Children to
Read. NIH Publication No. 00-4769. U.S. Government Printing Office.
•
Scarborough, H. S. (2001). Connecting early language
and literacy to later reading (dis)abilities: Evidence, theory, and practice.
In S. Neuman & D. Dickinson (Eds.), Handbook for research in early
literacy. Guilford Press. [Scarborough's Reading Rope]
•
Shaywitz, S. (2020). Overcoming Dyslexia (2nd ed.).
Vintage Books.
Additional References
•
Dolch, E. W. (1936). A basic sight vocabulary.
Elementary School Journal, 36, 456–460.
•
Fry, E. (1980). The new instant word list. The Reading
Teacher, 34(3), 284–289.
•
Good, R. H., & Kaminski, R. A. (Eds.). (2011).
DIBELS Next Assessment Manual. Dynamic Measurement Group.
•
Glascoe, F. P. (2009). Brigance Comprehensive Inventory
of Basic Skills II. Curriculum Associates.
•
Rasinski, T. (2010). The Fluent Reader: Oral and Silent
Reading Strategies for Building Word Recognition, Fluency, and Comprehension
(2nd ed.). Scholastic.
•
Wolf, M. (2018). Reader, Come Home: The Reading Brain
in a Digital World. HarperCollins.
APPENDIX F: QUICK-START GUIDE FOR HOMESCHOOL
FAMILIES
Getting Started in 6 Steps
9.
PRINT THIS INVENTORY. Print this full document.
Separate the Student Response Pages (marked 'STUDENT STIMULUS' throughout) and
keep the Administrator Pages separate.
10. IDENTIFY
YOUR STARTING LEVEL. Look at the Age and Grade Level Guide on page 3 (Welcome
section) and find your child's approximate level. You do NOT need to start at
the very beginning — start where your child is.
11. ADMINISTER
FORM A (Pre-Assessment). Give one domain per sitting. Do not rush. Complete all
subtests at your child's level.
12. SCORE
AND INTERPRET. Use the Mastery Criteria at the bottom of each subtest. Transfer
scores to the Student Profile Sheet (page 2 of the inventory).
13. SET
GOALS using Appendix A. Write 3–5 goals based on the subtests where your child
scored below the Mastery Criterion. Focus on the foundational skill that is
LOWEST on the continuum.
14. TEACH,
PRACTICE, REASSESS. After a period of instruction and practice (8–12 weeks
recommended), administer Form B to measure growth.
How Much Time Will This Take?
|
Age/Grade
|
Domains to Assess
|
Estimated Time
|
|
Ages 3–4
|
Domain A, Domain B (B-1 only)
|
2–3 sittings, 15–20 min each
|
|
Kindergarten
|
Domains A, B (B-1 through B-5)
|
3–4 sittings, 20–30 min each
|
|
Grade 1
|
Domains A, B, C (L2), D-1
|
4–5 sittings, 30 min each
|
|
Grade 2
|
Domains B, C (L3), D-2, E-2
|
3–4 sittings, 40 min each
|
|
Grades 3–4
|
Domains B-12, C, D, E-3
|
3 sittings, 45 min each
|
|
Grades 5–8
|
Domains C, D, E-4/5
|
2–3 sittings, 60 min each
|
Signs to Watch For
|
SEEK ADDITIONAL EVALUATION if
you observe:
|
•
Difficulty learning letter names or sounds despite
consistent practice over 3+ months
•
Inability to blend phonemes by age 6 even with
instruction
•
Reading significantly below grade level despite
regular, structured instruction
•
Signs of letter/number reversal that persist beyond age
7–8
•
Strong listening comprehension but very weak reading
comprehension at the same grade level
•
Fluency scores consistently 20+ WCPM below grade-level
norms despite intervention
These may indicate dyslexia or another learning difference.
Early intervention is crucial. Contact a reading specialist, educational
psychologist, or your local public school's special education department for a
free evaluation.
|
HLAI — Homeschool Literacy
Assessment Inventory | Based on the Science of Reading | Rooted in Research,
Designed for Families
|
APPENDIX G: COMPLETE SCOPE AND SEQUENCE —
PHONICS & SPELLING
Use this scope and sequence to plan systematic phonics
instruction aligned to student performance on HLAI Domain B and Domain F
assessments. Skills are listed in recommended teaching order from research
(Spear-Swerling, 2019; Moats, 2020).
|
Level
|
Grade
|
Phonics Skills in Teaching Order
|
HLAI Subtests
|
|
1
|
Pre-K/K
|
Letter names (UC) → Letter names (LC) → Consonant
sounds (high-frequency) → Short /a/ + CVC → Short /i/ → Short /o/ → Short /e/
→ Short /u/ → CVC blending + segmenting
|
B-1, B-2, B-3, B-4
|
|
2
|
K–1
|
Digraphs: sh, ch, th (voiced + unvoiced), wh, ng →
Initial blends (s-blends, l-blends, r-blends) → Final blends (-nd, -st, -lt,
-sk) → Sight words levels 1–2
|
B-5, B-6, B-11 L1–2
|
|
3
|
Gr. 1
|
CVCe (long a, i, o, u, e) → Vowel teams: ai/ay,
ee/ea, oa/ow, ue/ew → igh pattern → Sight words level 3
|
B-7, B-11 L3
|
|
4
|
Gr. 1–2
|
R-controlled: ar, or, er/ir/ur → Vowel diphthongs:
oi/oy, ou/ow → Variant vowels: oo (long + short), au/aw → Sight words level 4
|
B-8, B-9
|
|
5
|
Gr. 2–3
|
Compound words → Inflectional endings (-s, -es, -ed,
-ing, -er, -est) with consonant doubling, drop-e, change-y rules →
Contractions → Sight words level 5–6
|
F-3 Grade 3
|
|
6
|
Gr. 3–4
|
Open + closed syllable patterns → VCCle syllable type
→ Prefix: un-, re-, pre-, dis-, mis- → Suffix: -ful, -less, -ness, -tion,
-ment → 2-syllable decoding
|
B-12, G-3
|
|
7
|
Gr. 4–5
|
Latin roots: port, dict, rupt, aud, vis, scrib,
struct, spec → Greek roots: graph, phon, geo, bio, chron → Prefix: inter-,
trans-, sub-, super-, anti- → Suffix: -ous, -ive, -ible/-able, -ity
|
G-3
|
|
8
|
Gr. 5–6
|
Derivational suffixes → Multisyllabic word strategies
→ Homophones + homographs → Advanced irregular spelling patterns → Academic
word morphology
|
F-3 Grade 4–5, G-3
|
APPENDIX H: COMPREHENSIVE GOAL-WRITING TOOLKIT
Complete IEP/Homeschool Goal Bank — All Domains
Goals are provided at three levels: Long-Term Goal (annual),
Short-Term Objective (6–8 weeks), and Benchmark (2–3 weeks). Customize by
inserting student name, current baseline, and target date.
|
DOMAIN A — PHONEMIC AWARENESS
GOALS
|
Rhyme Awareness
•
LTG: Given 20 spoken word pairs, [Student] will
correctly identify rhyming pairs with 90% accuracy as measured by HLAI A-1 Form
B.
•
STO: Given 10 spoken word pairs, [Student] will
correctly identify rhyming pairs with 80% accuracy in 2 of 3 consecutive
trials.
•
Benchmark: Given 5 spoken word pairs, [Student] will
correctly identify at least 4 rhyming pairs.
Phoneme Segmentation
•
LTG: Given 10 spoken words of 3–5 phonemes, [Student]
will correctly segment all phonemes in 8/10 words as measured by HLAI A-6 Form
B.
•
STO: Given CVC words, [Student] will correctly segment
all 3 phonemes in 8/10 words.
•
Benchmark: Given 5 CVC words, [Student] will segment at
least 4 words correctly.
•
LTG: Given 26 uppercase and 26 lowercase letters in
random order, [Student] will name all 52 letters correctly as measured by HLAI
B-1 and B-2.
•
LTG: Given a list of 15 CVC and CCVC nonsense words,
[Student] will decode 85% correctly as measured by HLAI B-10 Form B.
•
LTG: Given connected text at Grade [X] level, [Student]
will read with 95%+ accuracy using phonics knowledge as measured by running
record.
•
LTG: Given an unpracticed Grade [X] passage, [Student]
will read at [XX] WCPM (50th percentile for grade level) with 95% accuracy as
measured by HLAI fluency probe.
•
STO: Given a Grade [X] passage practiced 3x, [Student]
will read at [XX] WCPM by [date].
•
LTG: Given an oral reading passage, [Student] will
receive a prosody rating of 3 or 4 on the HLAI Prosody Rubric.
|
DOMAIN D — VOCABULARY GOALS
|
•
LTG: Given 20 Tier 2 academic words in context
sentences, [Student] will demonstrate understanding of 80% of words through
definition, use, or sentence context as measured by HLAI D-2 Form B.
•
LTG: Given 10 ELA-specific Tier 3 terms, [Student] will
correctly identify the definition or usage of 8/10 terms.
•
STO: Given 5 new Tier 2 vocabulary words in a semantic
word map activity, [Student] will use 4/5 words correctly in oral sentences.
|
DOMAIN E — COMPREHENSION
GOALS
|
•
LTG: Given a grade-level informational passage,
[Student] will correctly answer 85% of comprehension questions including at
least 3 inferential items.
•
STO: Given a Grade [X] passage, [Student] will
correctly answer all literal questions (100%) and at least 1 inferential
question.
•
LTG: Given a passage read aloud, [Student] will
demonstrate listening comprehension by correctly answering 80% of questions
including at least 2 inferential questions.
|
DOMAIN F — WRITING &
SPELLING GOALS
|
•
LTG: Given dictation of 26 uppercase and 26 lowercase
letters, [Student] will write 50/52 letters legibly and without reversals as
measured by HLAI F-1 Form B.
•
LTG: Given dictation of 10 grade-level spelling words,
[Student] will spell 8/10 correctly as measured by HLAI F-3 Form B.
•
LTG: Given a writing prompt, [Student] will compose a
5-sentence paragraph scored 4/5 or higher per trait on the HLAI Written
Expression Rubric.
•
STO: Given a writing prompt, [Student] will write 3
complete sentences with correct capitalization and end punctuation.
|
DOMAIN G — GRAMMAR &
MORPHOLOGY GOALS
|
•
LTG: Given 12 sentences, [Student] will correctly
identify the part of speech of the underlined word in 10/12 sentences.
•
LTG: Given 12 morphology questions, [Student] will
correctly use prefix/suffix/root knowledge to determine word meaning in 10/12
items.
•
STO: Given 5 new words containing known Latin roots,
[Student] will determine the meaning of 4/5 words using morpheme analysis.
APPENDIX I: PROGRESS MONITORING SCHEDULE &
RECORD
For students receiving intervention or who scored below
mastery on any HLAI domain, use this schedule for ongoing progress monitoring.
Recommended Progress Monitoring Frequency
|
Student Profile
|
Progress Monitoring Frequency
|
Tools to Use
|
|
At/above grade level
|
Quarterly (every 8–10 weeks)
|
HLAI Form B at end of year
|
|
1 year below grade level
|
Monthly (every 4–5 weeks)
|
HLAI subtests in target domains
|
|
2+ years below grade level
|
Bi-weekly (every 2–3 weeks)
|
Selected HLAI subtests + fluency probes
|
|
Suspected learning
disability
|
Weekly
|
Targeted skill probes; consult specialist
|
Progress Monitoring Log
|
Date
|
Domain/Subtest
|
Score / WCPM
|
Mastery?
|
Instructional Focus This Period
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
APPENDIX J: INSTRUCTIONAL RESOURCES &
RECOMMENDED PROGRAMS
The HLAI is an assessment tool, not a curriculum. Once you
have identified areas of need using the HLAI, the following evidence-based
programs and resources align with science of reading principles and can be used
for instruction.
Programs by Domain
Phonemic Awareness
•
Heggerty Phonemic Awareness Curriculum (heggerty.com) —
daily 10-minute lessons, Pre-K through Grade 2
•
Equipped for Reading Success (David Kilpatrick) —
phonemic awareness and orthographic mapping
•
Road to Reading (Blachman et al.) — research-based
phonemic awareness activities
Phonics & Decoding
•
SPIRE (Specialized Program Individualizing Reading
Excellence) — structured literacy, K–8
•
Barton Reading and Spelling System — Orton-Gillingham
based, highly scripted for parents
•
Logic of English — comprehensive phonics with all 74
phonogram spellings
•
All About Reading / All About Spelling —
parent-friendly Orton-Gillingham approach
•
Wilson Reading System — for students with significant
decoding deficits
•
RAVE-O — meaning + fluency + phonics integration,
Grades 2–5
Fluency
•
Repeated Reading — student reads same passage 3–5x to
build automaticity (research: Samuels, 1979)
•
Readers Theater — performance-based fluency practice
with high engagement
•
Six-Minute Solution (Adams & Brown) — structured
daily fluency practice K–8
•
Great Leaps Reading — one-on-one timed fluency practice
Vocabulary
•
Beck, McKeown & Kucan's Tier 2 vocabulary
instruction (Bringing Words to Life)
•
Vocabulary Their Way (Bear et al.) — word sorts and
vocabulary development
•
Flocabulary — video-based vocabulary for Grades 4–12
(online)
•
Word Generation (SERP Institute) — academic vocabulary
for Grades 4–8
Comprehension
•
Visualizing and Verbalizing (Lindamood-Bell) —
comprehension through imagery
•
SRA Reading Mastery — direct instruction comprehension
•
Reciprocal Teaching (Palincsar & Brown) — predict,
question, clarify, summarize
•
Close Reading routines (Fisher & Frey) —
text-dependent questioning
Writing & Spelling
•
Words Their Way (Bear et al.) — developmental spelling
based on word study
•
RAVE-O — vocabulary + spelling integration
•
6 Traits Writing — organization, ideas, voice, word
choice, fluency, conventions
•
Step Up to Writing (Sopris West) — structured writing
for Grades 3–8
•
All About Spelling — sequential, Orton-Gillingham
spelling aligned to phonics sequence
APPENDIX K: QUICK REFERENCE — DYSLEXIA
INDICATORS & NEXT STEPS
|
IMPORTANT NOTICE: The HLAI is
NOT a dyslexia diagnostic tool. It identifies skill gaps. Only qualified
professionals (educational psychologists, neuropsychologists, reading
specialists) can diagnose dyslexia.
|
However, the HLAI can help identify students who may need
further evaluation. The following indicators, especially when persistent across
multiple HLAI administrations despite quality instruction, may suggest the need
for a comprehensive evaluation.
Potential Indicators of Dyslexia or Reading
Disability
Early Indicators (Ages 3–6)
•
Difficulty learning and remembering letter names
despite repeated exposure
•
Below average phonological awareness — especially
difficulty with rhyming, segmenting, and blending
•
Slow or inaccurate letter-sound learning
•
Family history of reading difficulties
•
Limited word retrieval — takes unusual time to think of
common words
Primary Grade Indicators (Ages 6–8 / Grades 1–2)
•
Reading significantly below grade level despite
systematic phonics instruction
•
Very slow reading; excessive effort on word-level
reading
•
Persistent letter/number reversals beyond age 7
•
Difficulty with nonsense word decoding (HLAI B-10) even
after phonics instruction
•
Poor phoneme segmentation and manipulation (HLAI A-6,
A-7, A-8)
•
Spelling far below grade level; phonetically bizarre
spellings for known words
•
Strong comprehension when text is READ ALOUD, but weak
reading comprehension when reading independently
Later Indicators (Ages 8+ / Grades 3+)
•
Fluency 20+ WCPM below grade-level norms despite
intervention
•
Continued difficulty with multisyllabic word decoding
•
Avoidance of reading; significant anxiety around
reading tasks
•
Significant discrepancy between verbal ability (strong)
and reading/spelling (weak)
•
Difficulty learning and retaining new vocabulary from
print
What to Do
15. DOCUMENT:
Record HLAI assessment data across at least two administrations.
16. PROVIDE
INTERVENTION: Use structured literacy approaches (Orton-Gillingham, Wilson,
Barton) for at least 8–12 weeks.
17. MONITOR
RESPONSE: If the student does not respond to quality intervention, escalate.
18. CONTACT
your local public school district: By law in the U.S. (IDEA 2004), all children
— including homeschooled students — are entitled to a free evaluation for
learning disabilities. Contact your local district's special education
department.
19. PRIVATE
EVALUATION: A neuropsychologist or educational psychologist can administer a
comprehensive psychoeducational evaluation to diagnose dyslexia and other
learning differences.
20. ACCOMMODATIONS:
Students with a confirmed learning disability may be entitled to testing
accommodations (extended time, text-to-speech) for standardized tests including
the SAT, ACT, and AP exams.
|
RESOURCES: International
Dyslexia Association (dyslexiaida.org)
• Reading Rockets
(readingrockets.org) • LD Online (ldonline.org) •
Decoding Dyslexia (decodingdyslexia.net)
|