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Planning for Small Group Instruction: Reading in Kindergarten and 1st Grade

Read this guide to help you set up and plan for small-group reading instruction. From grouping to scheduling and planning, these tips will help you feel confident about starting your skill groups and streamline your lesson-planning process. Perfect for kindergarten and first grade.

Planning for small group instruction in your K-1 classroom can feel like a daunting task, but with a little thoughtful preparation and some practical tips, small-group reading can become the highlight of your teaching day! 

Whether you’re looking to create groups, fine-tune your schedule, or streamline your lesson-planning, I’ve got some tried and true strategies that can help! 

Here are the 3 steps I take when planning for small groups:

First, start with a baseline assessment. Your district may have an assessment to give you a starting point for each student. It’s important to get information such as:

  • Phonemic awareness
  • Letter/sound awareness
  • Word decoding skills
  • Spelling skills
  • Comprehension

In first grade and beyond, you can also assess reading with my Decodable Running Records, to give you an overview of reading behaviors and specific phonics skills. (You can also use these in kindergarten after students have some knowledge reading CVC words). These are best for progress-monitoring, once you have provided instruction on a particular phonics skill, or if you already have a general idea of which phonics level to start with.

Once you’ve assessed your students, it’s time to form your groups. Here are some things to keep in mind: 

  • Group similar levels together- it’s much easier to teach students with common gaps and abilities
  • Try to keep your group size small (the more support needed, the smaller the group should be)
  • Take behaviors and personalities into consideration

When you have students grouped, it’s time to make your schedule. Think about which groups need the most support. You’ll want to meet with these more often. If you have an assistant, have them work with your more advanced students, since you have the expertise to best support those that need additional help.

Here are some questions to consider:

  • How much time do you have for each group? (My groups last about 20 minutes, but yours may depend on how much time you have in your block)
  • How often will you meet with each group?
  • Who gets pulled out for extra services? When?

Once you know how many groups you can see daily, here’s how you can fill in your schedule.

My groups are labeled 1-6, in order of most support to least support needed.

  1. Plug in the group you need to meet with daily. 
  2. Then, add the group that next needs most support. 
  3. Add your remaining groups.

TIP: Notice that groups 2 and 3 are reversed on a day. Sometimes I don’t get to all 3 groups, so I order them this way to make sure I don’t always skip seeing group 3.

When making a schedule for small-group reading, start by plugging in the group you want to meet with daily- kids in most need of support. Then, add students who need a little less support 3 times per week. Next, add the remainder of your groups, in order of students who need the most support.

I like this scheduling form because I can add the main teaching focus right on it to view my plans at-a-glance, and having the names of students in each group lets me quickly see who to call for each session.

**TIP- Not every session has to be the same length. If you’re crunched for time or want to meet with more groups, plan a 5-minute mini-session where you focus on practicing one skill. You can use a game like Write, Read, and Erase, practice high-frequency words, or have kids reread decodable texts or sight word fluency cards.

Click on the image to view Write, Find, and Read on my Instagram page.

Reinforce letter-sound connections with this activity: Write, Find, Erase. Dictate words for students to write, then have them find one word at a time and erase it as they say the sound for each grapheme. Perfect for reviewing phonics skill and practicing new skills.
Dictate words for students to write, then have them find one word at a time and erase it as they say the sound for each grapheme.

TIP* When doing activities like this, it can be time-consuming to come up with word lists, especially for reviewing skills. My Word and Sentence cards are super helpful because I always have words for each skill at my fingertips.

These decodable word and sentence cards are perfect for reviewing phonics skills in small groups with your kindergarten and first-grade students. Just take out word cards with your focus skill, and have kids read or write the words or sentences! Words for every skill at your fingertips.

Having a clear objective for each session helps you stay focused! Read this post for what I include in my very first small-group lesson and read this post for the components to include in subsequent lessons!

The Lesson Plan Template

Templates make planning for small groups so much easier! Having a routine to follow helps save you time when planning, and lets students know what to expect as well.

Just plug in the skills and text you’ll be using into your template, then use it as a guide during your lesson.

Here’s a sample of my lesson-planning template. It’s included in all of my phonics intervention packs and is simple to use for planning AND taking notes during your lesson.

When planning for small group instruction, use lesson-planning templates to save time.  Just plug in your focus skills and text, then check off as students read and practice skills.

You can see that I start by reviewing skills and this includes a 3-part review:

  • Sound drill
  • Reading/ writing words
  • High-frequency sight word review

I also do a quick phonemic awareness activity and keep track of how many sounds each student can blend/segment.

After our review, I teach the new skill, and we do several activities with it:

  • Decode (read) words
  • Encode (write) words
  • Read words in phrases, then sentences or a short passage
  • Comprehension check of the text
  • Write (Students apply phonics skill in writing a sentence that I dictate)

Sometimes we learn a new high-frequency word and map it as well. You can cover these components with any resources you have, but I like my Phonics Intervention pages because they cover all of them in a sequential way and saves me time when planning. **Get 4 FREE lessons to try below!**

Finally, my biggest tip is to have everything you’ll need at your fingertips because we all know what happens when kids have 2 seconds of free time! #cuethedistractions🤦‍♀️ Read this post or watch this video for help setting up your small-group reading area. 

I hope these tips were helpful to you. In my next post, I’ll show you my system for keeping anecdotal records to help me keep track of student progress! Let me know if you have any questions you’d like me to include.

If you’d like to try my Phonics Intervention Pages, you can get 4 free lessons by signing up below!

Resources in this post to add to your small-group toolbox:

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