Progress & Performance Level 8

 

Progress & Performance Level 8

 

Overall Achievement

Level8Students who have successfully completed the forty training exercises comprising Level 8 of the MD4 Reading curriculum have successfully demonstrated a fundamental level of skills in a wide range of areas and completed three hundred and twenty exercises in total or forty percent of the overall program. The specific skills trained can be found in the "Skills and Abilities Developed" section below. To view specific skills trained in each "Area" of the curriculum please see the “Skills Training by Area" below.

The successful completion of three hundred and twenty exercises indicates that the student is rapidly approaching a reasonable amount of reading fluency. The skills that the student has acquired are also aligning more quickly and to a greater degree with classwork and the total educational experience. As always, the student should be observed to ensure that boredom or other factors are not affecting training. The order of the exercises may have to be adjusted to help maintain student engagement.

 

Skills & Abilities Developed

The Progress & Performance of cognitive and phonological training for this level of the MD4 Reading program are shown below by training area. To view all skills trained in each individual area please see the "Skill Training by Area" below.

Area 1 - Optic > Visual Perception

Student has demonstrated more highly trained degree of skill in accurately perceiving the difference between dissimilar types of visual information of average complexity. In this level of training the student has also demonstrated the ability to track correctly at a higher rate of speed.

Area 2 - Recall > Sequencing & Tracking

Student has demonstrated a more highly trained ability to accurately capture, remember and retain a series of shapes, and identify that sequence in order while tracking a speed. This accomplishment demonstrates skill in sequencing, and memory at a moderate level. The ability to correctly sequence information beyond simple letters continues to grow and the student is demonstrating these abilities at a higher level of difficulty and complexity and in a shorter amount of time.

Area 3 - Array > Visual & Auditory Memory

Student continues to build strength in strengthen their immediate, short term and long term visual sequential memory and demonstrated that they have an initial ability to retain three pieces of information that they have seen only once for a limited amount of time and replicate that data in its correct sequential order three times while experiencing distraction. Iso-sensory techniques have been employed in this process. This will be the last level in which three pieces of data will be trained.

 Area 4 - Audio > Phonological Awareness & Memory

Student has achieved a degree of elision skills and is able to recognize and remember a syllable when heard and determine if that syllable is present in a second word presented auditorally. Student has demonstrated a stronger ability to use syllables that they have heard to form real phonologically regular words. Multi-sensory tool are being employed to assist in this process. Student may not be completely independent in this area at this time but are beginning to gain proficiency that can be translated to other words containing the same syllables.

Area 5 - Tactile > Visual Motor Integration

Student has demonstrated a higher level of visual perception and visual motor integration skills by being able to reproduce master shapes consisting of five sub-shapes in a specified amount of time. At this level, the student is not provided with the sub-shape outlines as a guide. The skills demonstrated are critical to both the reading and writing process. At this time, the integration process is growing but not maximized.

Area 6 - Bamboozle > Eidetic Processing

Student has mastered and been able to retain a list of forty irregular words of a fourth grade level bringing their total words mastered to three hundred and twenty. Student has not been allowed to misspell these words and has been strictly restrained from ingraining incorrect spellings. Multi-sensory techniques have been employed in this process.  

Area 7 - Harmony > Phonics

Student has achieved a moderate degree of skill in using a variety of syllable to form word and the ability to recognize, distinguish, and remember the sound of open and closed syllables to form words successfully. The understanding and use of open and closed syllable is critical to fluency and the student will receive additional training in this area.

Area 8 – Swift > Fluency

Student continues to build reading speed and comprehension by reading sentences three times at increasing speeds and answering comprehension questions about the material read. Three hundred sentence readings have been completed in this level with twenty four hundred completed overall. This process also incorporates the phonics principles trained at this level. Student is not yet reading fluently but is gaining speed without sacrificing comprehension.

 

Skills Training by Area

Cognitive & Phonological Skill Building by Character and Area

CHARACTER Optic Recall Array Audio Tactile Bamboozle Harmony Swift
AREAS 1 3 4 5 2 6 7 8
Phonological Awareness       Yes     Yes Yes
Sound Matching       Yes     Yes Yes
Elision       Yes     Yes Yes
Blending Words       Yes     Yes Yes
Phonological Memory   Yes Yes Yes     Yes Yes
Nonword Repetition   Yes Yes Yes     Yes Yes
Memory for Digits   Yes Yes Yes Yes   Yes Yes
Rapid Naming   Yes Yes Yes     Yes Yes
Tracking Yes Yes     Yes Yes Yes Yes
Vergence Yes       Yes Yes   Yes
Visual Motor Integration Yes       Yes Yes   Yes
Visual Perception Yes         Yes    
Visual Memory (Overall) Yes Yes       Yes   Yes
Visual Memory (Immediate)   Yes Yes     Yes    
Visual Memory (Short Term)   Yes Yes     Yes    
Visual Memory (Long Term)     Yes     Yes    
Visual Sequential Memory     Yes     Yes    
Auditory Memory (Overall)     Yes     Yes    
Auditory Memory (Immediate)   Yes Yes     Yes    
Auditory Memory (Short Term)   Yes Yes     Yes    
Auditory Memory (Long Term)     Yes     Yes    
Auditory Sequential Memory     Yes     Yes    
Eidetic Processing     Yes     Yes    
Phonetic Processing     Yes   Yes Yes Yes Yes