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Authored by First Book Staff on May 16, 2022
Posted in: Pour les éducateurs, Nos Partenaires
Educators are continuously confronted with a growing and diverse range of student needs, necessitating a responsive and individualized approach to teaching. In recent years, the prevalence of literacy challenges, particularly among English language learners and students with learning differences, has increased significantly, particularly in underserved communities.
To level the playing field for all learners and support educators and students, Microsoft has developed several resources, including Reading Progress, Reading Coach, Education Insights, and Immersive Reader. These resources are now integrated into Microsoft 365 for Education under a new category called 'Learning Accelerators'. They were designed to facilitate the development of foundational and future-ready skills by enabling educators to offer students more opportunities for learning, practice, and personalized coaching.
Below are a few frequently asked questions to help you get started with Microsoft’s Literacy Tools, including ourQuick Start Guidethat includes descriptions of each tool, letters to request IT support, and tips from educators that explore time-saving features.
These tools will help educators to:
If that sounds like the support you need in your classroom, download ourQuick Start Guide.
You can accessOffice 365for free using web applications and/or your school may already have a license which you can confirm with your IT administrator. To help educators get started, we have created two emails to cut and paste for your convenience. You should use the first if your school has a license for Office 365 Education but you need help getting it set up on your computer and your students’ devices.
The second email should be used to request Office 365 Education for yourself and your students when your district does not already have a license.
You can access both of these templates in our Quick Start Guide.Download it for free.
It can be used at all levels, from Pre-K to AP classes, because of the insights that you get with word clouds. The program identifies challenging vocabulary to help students learn new words, regardless of their level. It’s been used in special education, with speech and pathology groups, for students with all types of learning needs.
Since it’s built right into Microsoft Teams, educators can add in other resources and assignments to help bring in more comprehension work. Educators can use additional Microsoft tools like Flipgrid or OneNote to extend activities or use external tools to further support the entire reading solution and literacy skills.
Yes and yes. There are several hundred pre-loaded passages, but educators can also upload their own. Some districts may have dedicated teams that have previously uploaded reading passages to support the work of educators across the region or teachers can choose to use their own. It’s dependent on the experience the teacher chooses to build.
There are also additional resources in the Quick Start Guide to help you learn how to create your own reading repository.
This tool can be used for pre-k educators, particularly those who upload sight words, lists, or letter names. There have been successful instances of educators using these tools with sight words specifically. Additional tools are launching, like Reading Coach, which will further support literacy goals for students.
With the languages that are available in the tools along with being able to upload resources that can then be translated, English language learners are able to practice which is essential when developing the skills.
In terms of intervention, to determine where a child is struggling with comprehension or fluency, this tool allows you to go back to the native language to diagnose a student’s needs. This tool helps you meet a student where they’re at by using the assessment and creating a custom solution.
While there are several Microsoft products that can be beneficial, Reading Progress and Reading Coach are particularly helpful for progress monitoring. With Reading Progress and Reading Coach, students can practice reading aloud while receiving real-time feedback about their pronunciation. The picture dictionary and the text-to-speech and syllable breaking tools provide appropriate support for beginning readers.
Education Insights provides data about individual student progress that can be used to adjust instruction as needed as part of the intervention process.
Thank you to Microsoft for partnering with First Book to bring these free tools to educators serving students in low-income communities.
If you are an educator at a Title I or Title I eligible school, health care provider, school support personnel, librarian, early learning professional, community program or afterschool staff, or you serve kids in need in another capacity, join our free Network of educators. Our community receives access to additional benefits like low-cost books, funding opportunities, and free tools like the one provided by Microsoft.
This blog was last updated on May 23, 2023.