Reading Assessment — Help Me Read
Assessment Toolkit

Reading Assessment

A concise, practice-oriented resource that outlines screening, diagnostic, and progress-monitoring tools for the six-component reading framework. Designed for school leaders, classroom teachers and parents who need clear steps to identify needs, design instruction, and measure learning.

Purpose & Principles

Effective assessment serves three purposes: (1) screening to identify who needs support; (2) diagnostic assessment to pinpoint specific skill gaps; and (3) progress monitoring to track response to instruction. Good practice emphasises short, reliable measures used repeatedly, clear cut-scores or decision rules, and rapid data-to-instruction cycles.

Assessment Types & Recommended Measures

Below are practical instruments mapped to each reading component. Where possible use brief, repeatable measures for termly screening and weekly/biweekly probes for progress monitoring.

ComponentScreening / ScreenerDiagnostic tool / Probe
Oral Language & ListeningBrief oral language checklist; story retell (1–2 minutes)Standardised vocabulary checklist; structured story-retell rubric
Phonemic Awareness1-minute phoneme segmentation/blending probePhoneme deletion/substitution tasks; Elkonin box activities
PhonicsLetter–sound knowledge quick checkDecodable word reading list; nonsense-word decoding
FluencyOral reading fluency (WCPM) — short passageRepeated reading passages; prosody checklist
VocabularyTiered vocabulary checklist; receptive namingMorphology tasks; multiple-choice receptive tests
ComprehensionShort passage comprehension (literal & inferential questions)Retell task; cloze paragraphs; comprehension question sets
Screening Protocol (termly)
  1. Administer a 10–15 minute screener covering phonemic awareness, letter–sound knowledge, a short ORF passage, and a brief comprehension item.
  2. Use cut scores to identify Tier 2 & 3 learners (e.g., below 25th percentile or local-equivalent threshold).
  3. For students below the cut, schedule diagnostic assessment within 2 weeks to identify component-specific gaps.
  4. Form small intervention groups based on diagnostic profiles (not by grade alone).
Diagnostic Assessment — How to Prioritise

Diagnostic assessment should be focused and timely. Prioritise the component(s) indicated by the screener. Use brief, curriculum-aligned tasks and avoid battery overload; the goal is actionable information.

  • If phonemic awareness is weak — administer blending, segmentation and deletion tasks.
  • If decoding is weak — use nonsense-word decoding and connected decodable reading.
  • If fluency is weak but decoding is adequate — use repeated reading probes and prosody checks.
  • If comprehension is weak — examine vocabulary depth and text-structure awareness.
Progress Monitoring & Data Use

Use brief weekly or biweekly probes tied to the target skill. Track scores in a simple spreadsheet with baseline, weekly scores and a moving average to visualise trends. Use decision rules (e.g., 3 consecutive non-improving probes) to change intensity or strategy.

Key rule-of-thumb: for intervention groups, aim for at least 3–5 sessions per week of focused instruction plus regular monitoring; adjust groups when 6–8 weeks of monitoring show minimal gains.
Sample Brief Instruments (templates)

Below are short templates you can copy and adapt for classroom use.

1. 60-second Phoneme Segmentation Probe

Read the list of words; student segments aloud into phonemes. Score correct segmentations per word.

2. 1-minute Decodable Word List

Student reads a list of 30 decodable words; score words correct per minute (WC/30s adjusted to WCPM).

3. Oral Reading Fluency (ORF)

Student reads a grade-appropriate 100–200 word passage for one minute. Record WCPM and errors; note prosody qualitatively.

Interpreting Results & Instructional Implications

Translate assessment findings into clear instructional steps. Example:

  • Low PA + low decoding → daily phonemic awareness drills + systematic phonics lessons with decodables.
  • Decoding adequate but low WCPM → fluency practice: repeated reading, paired reading, and timed passages.
  • Strong decoding but weak comprehension → vocabulary instruction, text-structure lessons, and summarisation practice.

Quick Protocols

  • Screening: 10–15 minute termly battery.
  • Diagnostic follow-up: 20–30 minutes per student.
  • Progress monitoring: 1–5 minutes per weekly probe.

Data Tips for Schools

  • Record scores centrally and visualise trends by class and intervention group.
  • Use simple decision rules to change instruction intensity.
  • Keep assessments brief and aligned to instruction to reduce burden.

FAQ (Assessment)

How often should we screen?

A minimum of once per term; twice (termly + mid-term) is preferable when resources allow.

Who should administer diagnostic assessments?

Trained teachers, literacy coaches, or assessment leads. Keep administration consistent.

How do we communicate results to parents?

Share simple, strengths-based reports with clear next steps and home activities tied to the assessed component.