The Reading Company - Rhoades to Reading

Home

Contact Us

discount store

Reading Program Research

2008-2009 Data Summary

2007-2008 Data Summary

2006-2007 Research Paper

2006-2007 Data Summary

2005-2006 Data Summary

1999 Research Paper

Reading Program TOCs

How to Use RtoR

Teaching Guide Workbook A

Student Workbook A

Teaching Guide Workbook B

Student Workbook B

Teaching Guide Workbook C

Student Workbook C

Teaching Guide Workbook D

Student Workbook D

No Child Left Behind

JacquieRhoades

Staff

Teachers

Tutors Advanced Degrees

Tutors Upper Division

Special Projects Staff

Our Mission

Awards

What People are Saying

Online Community Partners

My Education Discount

Oasesonline.com

Resources

Non-Profit Partners

Certifications

Teaching Guide for Workbook D
Teaching Standards in a way that students can learn

Word Analysis, Fluency, and Systematic Vocabulary Development
Reading Comprehension
Literary Response and Analysis
Writing
Listening and Speaking Strategies
Written and Oral English Language Conventions

Story: Where did That Come From

Story: New Kid in School

Story: Maple Syrup

Story: The Day the Bear Caught the Show

Story: The Year of Confusion

Story: Thumb and Cucumbers

Story: Yesterday

Story: School of Stone

Story: The Greatest Measure Ever

Story: The Elusive Eel

Story: Why Are Railroads built that Way?

Story: Gato

Story: Bullies Bug Me

Story: Queen of Coleslaw

Story: An Ode to Old Joe


use common word origins to determine the historical influences on English word meanings

achieve an effective balance between researched information and original ideas

create compositions that establish a controlling impression, have a coherent thesis, and end with a clear and well-supported conclusion

write sentences using the sentence writing rubric

clarify word meanings through the use of definition, example, restatement, or contrast

create compositions that establish a controlling impression, have a coherent thesis, and end with a clear and well-supported conclusion

write sentences using the sentence writing rubric

use word meanings in the appropriate context and show ability to verify those meanings by definition

paraphrase a speaker’s purpose and point of view and ask three relevant questions concerning the speaker’s content, delivery, and purpose

revise writing for word choice, appropriate organization, consistent point of view, and transitions between paragraphs, passages, and ideas

analyze idioms, analogies, metaphors, and similes to infer the literal and figurative meaning of phrases

exhibit careful reading and insight in their interpretations

connect the student’s own responses to the writer’s techniques and to specific textual references

draw supported inferences about the effects of a literary work on the audience

support judgments through references to the text, other works, other authors, or to personal knowledge

contrast point of view (e, g, first and third person, limited and omniscient, subjective and objective) in narrative text and explain how they affect the overall theme of the work

write a research report which includes evidence compiled through the formal research process (e.g., use of a card catalog, Reader’s Guide to Periodical Literature, a computer catalog, magazines, newspapers, dictionaries

assess adequacy, accuracy, and appropriateness of research materials

identify events that advance the plot and determine how each e vent explains past or present actions



It is with great pleasure that I recommend the Rhoades to Reading program. Tutoring with this program has helped my daughter build her self esteem. She is now a strong and confident reader. My daughter (a special education student) has grown in the last year from a kindergarten reading level to a third grade reading level.


Established in 1994                                           A Certified Woman Owned Small Business
 

changing education one student at a time™