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AMP Up Interventions

Rated 5 out of 5, based on 3 reviews
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Fremont, Michigan, United States
About the store
Hi, my name is Ann Marie Pettis and the acronym of my name creates the word "AMP" so that is how I came up with the name for my TPT Store: AMP Up Interventions! To "AMP Up" something means "to increase the power of" or "to excite, or energize" something. My goal is to provide you with intervention resources to "AMP up" your time working with students and your impact on their reading progress! I completed a 30 year career working at the early elementary level with students who required extra support and interventions in the area of reading. My roles included teaching students with identified special education supports and IEPS, and working as a Reading Interventionist with students who qualified for extra support through at-risk funding and IRIPS.
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Preview of Teaching Long a Vowel Teams within Multisyllabic Text

Teaching Long a Vowel Teams within Multisyllabic Text

This lesson is a sample from my Vowel Team Multisyllabic Unit of Study. The format for these decodable text lessons are similar to the format used in my Units 1 - 5 syllable type lessons. But these lessons include longer stories. Therefore, each student booklet has 3 sections: Real Words, Sentences, and a 2 page Story. I removed the nonsense word sections that were previously included in the Units 1 - 5 syllable type lessons. This free lesson is for practicing Long a Vowel Teams a
Preview of Closed Syllables: Teaching Syllable Division VC/CV in Multisyllabic Text

Closed Syllables: Teaching Syllable Division VC/CV in Multisyllabic Text

Multisyllabic Phonics Lesson for Teaching Closed Syllables and the Division Rule: (VC/CV)Do you have students who are ready to transition from decoding single syllable words to more complex multisyllabic patterns? Learning the 7 syllable types and the rules for dividing and combining those syllables will help students master the reading code and allow them to decode more complex text. Yet, it can be a challenge to find text that allows students to practice decoding the various multi
Preview of Teaching Diphthongs: oi/oy in Multisyllabic Text

Teaching Diphthongs: oi/oy in Multisyllabic Text

This lesson is a sample from my final unit of study for the 7 syllable types, (Diphthongs). The format for this decodable text lesson is similar to the format used in my Units 1 - 5 syllable type lessons. But the lessons for diphthongs incorporate longer stories. Therefore, each lesson has 3 sections: Real Words, Sentences, and a 2 page Story. There is no nonsense word section in these lessons. This free lesson is for practicing the diphthongs oi/oy and syllable division within Multisyllabic te
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About the store

Experience

Hi, my name is Ann Marie Pettis and the acronym of my name creates the word "AMP" so that is how I came up with the name for my TPT Store: AMP Up Interventions! To "AMP Up" something means "to increase the power of" or "to excite, or energize" something. My goal is to provide you with intervention resources to "AMP up" your time working with students and your impact on their reading progress! I completed a 30 year career working at the early elementary level with students who required extra support and interventions in the area of reading. My roles included teaching students with identified special education supports and IEPS, and working as a Reading Interventionist with students who qualified for extra support through at-risk funding and IRIPS.

Teaching style

I understand first hand the amount of teacher preparation that takes place behind the scenes in every teacher's classroom. I also understand that teachers are often mandated to teach certain standards or implement specific programs without being provided all of the resources required for those mandates. After receiving Orton Gillingham training and certification in November of 2021, I discovered that it was difficult to find quality decodable text to use with students that first of all, made sense, but secondly, followed a systematic sequence in simple progressive steps. Since I couldn't find what I needed, I started to create some of my own supplemental resources. Since retiring in August of 2025, I have been able to fully dive into creating a complete decodable text curriculum to support students transitioning from single syllable decoding to multisyllabic decoding. These word work resources and decodable texts were designed to be supplemental resources for extra practice and will align nicely with other Science of Reading Resources. Even students with strong visual memory skills, will eventually hit a brick wall in their progression of reading skills if they don't master the reading code. All students need to learn the 7 different syllable types, how those syllables can be combined into multisyllabic words, and the division rules for decoding and spelling larger words. The decoding resources I have created provide the repeated step by step practice of syllable division and decoding larger words, not just in isolation, but also within connected text.

Awards & shining teacher moments

I will always hold dear in my heart those moments when I witnessed students make astonishing progress with reading and build stronger confidence in themselves. I will also remember the "magic" that took place at my teacher table during intervention time, where students felt safe, experienced success with big smiles, and stated how much they loved coming to reading groups! That is the part of teaching that I will always miss.

My own education history

I received my bachelor's degree for teaching from Western Michigan University, and my master's degree for the area of learning disabilities from Grand Valley State University.

Additional biographical information

Now that I am retired from education, I still get to share my passion for reading and books, by working part time at a public library in the children's section. It is the best of both worlds! In my spare time, I love to read, exercise, and travel with my husband of 31 years, especially anywhere with sunshine, sand, and palm trees!