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Problem-Solving/RtI: Implementing an Intervention Data Collection System with Integrity

Problem-Solving/RtI: Implementing an Intervention Data Collection System with Integrity. NASP Annual Convention New Orleans, LA George M. Batsche Professor and Co-Director Institute for School Reform Florida Problem-Solving RtI Statewide Project Jose’ M. Castillo PS/RtI Project Evaluator

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Problem-Solving/RtI: Implementing an Intervention Data Collection System with Integrity

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  1. Problem-Solving/RtI: Implementing an Intervention Data Collection System with Integrity NASP Annual Convention New Orleans, LA George M. Batsche Professor and Co-Director Institute for School Reform Florida Problem-Solving RtI Statewide Project Jose’ M. Castillo PS/RtI Project Evaluator RtI Coach - Pasco County School District University of South Florida

  2. The Vision • 95% of students at “proficient” level • Students possess social and emotional behaviors that support “active” learning • A “unified” system of educational services • One “ED” • Student Support Services perceived as a necessary component for successful schooling

  3. Components of the Organizational Delivery System • Academic and Behavior Instruction • Learning Supports • Leadership

  4. Response to Intervention • RtI is the practice of (1) providing high-quality instruction/intervention matched to student needs and (2) using learning rate over time and level of performance to (3) make important educational decisions. (Batsche, et al., 2005) • Problem-solving is the process that is used to develop effective instruction/interventions.

  5. Stages of Implementing Problem-Solving/RtI • Consensus • Belief is shared • Vision is agreed upon • Implementation requirements understood • Infrastructure Development • Problem-Solving Process • Data System • Policies/Procedures • Training • Tier I and II intervention systems • E.g., K-3 Academic Support Plan • Technology support • Decision-making criteria established • Implementation

  6. The Process of Systems Change • Until, and unless, Consensus (understanding the need and trusting in the support) is reached no support will exist to establish the Infrastructure. Until, and unless, the Infrastructure is in place Implementation will not take place. • A fatal flaw is to attempt Implementation without Consensus and Infrastructure • Leadership must come both from the Principal and from the educators in the building.

  7. Consensus Development:Methods • Knowledge • Data

  8. Consensus Development:Knowledge • Rationale for PS/RtI • Impact on students • Reduces disproportionality • Equity in Educaiton • Research • NASDSE Book • Law and Regulations

  9. Building Consensus • Beliefs • Understanding the “Need” • Skills and/or Support

  10. Essential Beliefs • Student performance is influenced most by the quality of the interventions we deliver and how well we deliver them- not preconceived notions about child characteristics • Decisions are best made with data • Our expectations for student performance should be dependent on a student’s response to intervention, not on the basis of a “score” that “predicts” what they are “capable” of doing.

  11. How Do We Know If This is a General Education Initiative? • Priority of superintendent and school board • District Leadership Team • Strategic Plan • Focus is on effectiveness of Tier 1 for disaggregated groups • Unit of Analysis is the BUILDING

  12. How Do We Know If This is a General Education Initiative? • Principal Led • Regular data analysis • Data Days • Team focuses in improving impact of core instruction • Prevention and Early Intervention • Screening and early intervention with Kindergarten students

  13. Contextual Issues Affecting The Problem-Solving Process in General and Special Education • IDEA Re-Authorization • Focus on academic outcomes • General education as baseline metric • Labeling as a “last resort” • Increasing general education options • Pooling building-based resources • Flexible funding patterns • RtI Introduced as option for LD eligibility • ESEA Legislation-No Child Left Behind • National Emphasis on Reading • Evidence-based Interventions

  14. Is It All About Reading? Maybe At First! • 52% of IDEA $$ go to LD Programs • 70% +/- of special education “activities” (e.g., evaluations, staffings, IEPs) related to LD cases • 94% of students in LD because of reading/language arts • 46% of IDEA $$ go to improve reading • Changes in LD Rules will affect the vast majority of special education “activities”

  15. Why Problem-Solving ?BIG IDEAS • AYP and Disaggregated Data (NCLB) move focus of attention to student progress, not student labels • Building principals and superintendents want to know if students are achieving benchmarks, regardless of the students “type” • Accurate “placements” do not guarantee that students will be exposed to interventions that maximize their rate of progress • Effective interventions result from good problem-solving, rather than good “testing” • Progress monitoring is done best with “authentic” assessment that is sensitive to small changes in student academic and social behavior

  16. Big Ideas (con’d) • Interventions must be “evidence based” (IDEA/NCLB) • Response to Intervention(RtI) is the best measure of problem “severity” • Program eligibility (initial and continued) decisions are best made based on RtI • Staff training and support (e.g., coaching) improve intervention skills • “Tiered” implementation improves service efficiency

  17. New Regulations: LD • The child does not achieve adequately for the • child’s age or to meet State-approved grade-level standards • in one or more of the following areas, when provided with • learning experiences and instruction appropriate for the • child’s age or State-approved grade–level standards: • The child does not make sufficient progress to • meet age or State-approved grade-level standards in one or • more of the areas identified in paragraph (a)(1) of this • section when using a process based on the child’s response • to scientific, research-based intervention;

  18. New Regulations: LD • Data that demonstrate that prior to, or as a part of, the referral process, the child was provided appropriate instruction in regular education settings, delivered by qualified personnel; and • (2) Data-based documentation of repeated assessments of achievement at reasonable intervals, reflecting formal assessment of student progress during instruction, which was provided to the child’s parents.

  19. New Regulations: LD • If the child has participated in a process that • assesses the child’s response to scientific, research-based • intervention-– • (i) The instructional strategies used and the • student-centered data collected; and • (ii) The documentation that the child’s parents were • notified about-- • (A) The State’s policies regarding the amount and • nature of student performance data that would be collected • and the general education services that would be provided; • (B) Strategies for increasing the child’s rate of Learning AND the relationship between student behavior and academic performance.

  20. WhatDoes the USDOE Say? • “The Department does not believe that an assessment of psychological or cognitive processing should be required in determining whether a child has an SLD. There is no current evidence that such assessments are necessary or sufficient for identifying SLD. Further, in many cases, these assessments have not been used to make appropriate intervention decisions.” (IDEIA, 2004, p. 46651)

  21. Criteria for Special Education Eligibility • Significant gap exists between student and benchmark/peer performance • The Response to Intervention is insufficient to predict attaining benchmark • Student is not a functionally independent learner • Complete comprehensive evaluation

  22. Implications • Tier 1 Decision Making • Ensure that the “core curriculum” is effective • What does “effective” mean? • 80% of students achieving benchmarks • Disaggregated data • Race, SES, LEP • Who determines “effective?” • Principal, Teacher, Data “Person”

  23. Implications • Poor/lack of instruction must be ruled out • Curricular access blocked by any of the following must be addressed • Attendance • Health • Mobility • Sufficient exposure to and focus on the curriculum must occur • Frequent, repeated assessment must be conducted

  24. Consensus Development:Data • Are you happy with your data? • Building/Grade Level Student Outcomes • Disaggregated • AYP

  25. Infrastructure:Critical Issues • Policies and Procedures • The Model • Steps in the Model • Decision Rules • Decision Rules and Impact on Intervention Development • Expectation for Tier Functions/Integration • Data Collection and Interpretation • Intervention Development • Intervention Integrity and Documentation

  26. Infrastructure:Policies and Procedures • Clearly delineate the components of the model • Triangle • 4-Step Model • Identify steps/skills required for each component • Decision Rules

  27. Define the Problem Defining Problem/Directly Measuring Behavior Problem Analysis Validating Problem Ident Variables that Contribute to Problem Develop Plan Evaluate Response to Intervention (RtI) Implement Plan Implement As Intended Progress Monitor Modify as Necessary Problem Solving Process

  28. Steps in the Problem-Solving Process • PROBLEM IDENTIFICATION • Identify replacement behavior • Data- current level of performance • Data- benchmark level(s) • Data- peer performance • Data- GAP analysis • PROBLEM ANALYSIS • Develop hypotheses( brainstorming) • Develop predictions/assessment • INTERVENTION DEVELOPMENT • Develop interventions in those areas for which data are available and hypotheses verified • Proximal/Distal • Implementation support • Response to Intervention (RtI) • Frequently collected data • Type of Response- good, questionable, poor

  29. 1-5% 1-5% 5-10% 5-10% Students 80-90% 80-90% Problem-Solving/RtIResource Management Academic Behavior • Public Education Resource Deployment • Support staff cannot resource more than 20% of the students • Service vs Effectiveness--BIG ISSUE

  30. 1-5% 1-5% 5-10% 5-10% Students 80-90% 80-90% Intervention Framework Academic Behavior • Intensive Interventions • A few • Supplemental Interventions • Some • Core/Universal Interventions • All

  31. Results Monitoring Addl. Diagnostic Assessment Instruction All Students at a grade level Individualized Intensive Individual Diagnostic Intensive 1-5% weekly Small Group Differen- tiated By Skill Supplemental 5-10% Standard Protocol Behavior Academics 2 times/month Core Bench- Mark Assessment Annual Testing ODRs Monthly Bx Screening None Continue With Core Instruction Grades Classroom Assessments Yearly Assessments 80-90% How Does it Fit Together?Standard Treatment Protocol Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 1

  32. Tier Functions/Integration • How the Tiers work • Time aggregation • Tier integration

  33. How the Tiers Work • Goal: Student is successful with Tier 1 level of support-academic or behavioral • Greater the tier, greater support and “severity” • Increase level of support (Tier level) until you identify an intervention that results in a positive response to intervention • Continue until student strengthens response significantly • Systematically reduce support (Lower Tier Level) • Determine the relationship between sustained growth and sustained support.

  34. Integrating the Tiers • Tier 1 (Core) instruction present at all three levels • Purpose of Tier 2 is to improve success in Tier 1 • Purpose of Tier 3 is to improve success in Tier 2 • Is there a single “intervention” plan made up of different Tier services?

  35. Integrating the Tiers • 5th grade student reading at the 2nd grade level • Tier 3 • Direct Instruction, Targeted, Narrow Focus (e.g., phonemic awareness, phonics, some fluency) • Tier 2 • Fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, pre-teach for Tier 1 • Tier 1 • Focus on comprehension, participation, scripted decoding • Use core materials for content • Progress monitor both instructional level and grade placement level skills

  36. Cascade of Interventions • Entire staff understands “triangle” and the available interventions at each Tier. • Supplemental and intensive interventions are in addition to core instruction. • A student intervention plan is a singledocument that is integrated across the tiers. • Different tiers ensure that outcomes in Tier 1 are improved • Tier 1 progress monitoring data are used for effectiveness determination for all Tiers

  37. Three Tiered Model of School Supports: Anclote Elementary-Pasco County Behavioral Systems Academic Systems Tier 3: Intensive Interventions Individual Counseling FBA/BIP Teach, Reinforce, and Prevent (TRP) Assessment-based Intense, durable procedures Tier 3: Comprehensive and Intensive Interventions Individual Students or Small Group (2-3) Reading: Scholastic Program, Reading,Mastery, ALL, Soar to Success, LeapTrack, Fundations 1-5% 1-5% Tier 2: Targeted Group Interventions Some students (at-risk) Small Group Counseling Parent Training (Behavior & Academic) Bullying Prevention Program FBA/BIP Classroom Management Techniques, Professional Development Small Group Parent Training ,Data 5-10% Tier 2: Strategic Interventions Students that don’t respond to the core curriculum Reading: Soar to Success, Leap Frog, CRISS strategies, CCC Lab Math: Extended Day Writing: Small Group, CRISS strategies, and “Just Write Narrative” by K. Robinson 5-10% Students Tier 1: Universal Interventions All settings, all students Committee, Preventive, proactive strategies School Wide Rules/ Expectations Positive Reinforcement System (Tickets & 200 Club) School Wide Consequence System School Wide Social Skills Program, Data (Discipline, Surveys, etc.) Professional Development (behavior) Classroom Management Techniques,Parent Training 80-90% Tier 1: Core Curriculum All students Reading: Houghton Mifflin Math: Harcourt Writing: Six Traits Of Writing Learning Focus Strategies 80-90%

  38. Decision Rules • Response to Intervention Rules • Linking RtI to Intervention Decisions

  39. Decision Rules: What is a “Good” Response to Intervention? • Positive Response • Gap is closing • Can extrapolate point at which target student will “come in range” of peers--even if this is long range • Questionable Response • Rate at which gap is widening slows considerably, but gap is still widening • Gap stops widening but closure does not occur • Poor Response • Gap continues to widen with no change in rate.

  40. Decision Rules: Linking RtI to Intervention Decisions • Positive, Questionable, Poor Response • Intervention Decision Based on RtI (General Guidelines) • Positive • Continue intervention until student reaches benchmark (at least). • Fade intervention to determine if student has acquired functional independence. • Questionable • Increase intensity of current intervention for a short period of time and assess impact. If rate improves, continue. If rate does not improve, return to problem solving. • Poor • Return to problem solving for new intervention

  41. Data Collection and Interpretation:Issues and Models • Where to data come from • Which data are used across tiers • High school applications • Data analysis and display

  42. Data Coach • Gathers and Organizes Tier 1 and Tier 2 Data • Supports staff for small group and individual data • Provides coaching for data interpretation • Facilitates regular data meetings for building and grade levels

  43. Skills Required • Collaborative problem solving • Interpersonal • Problem solving process • Data-based decision making • Collection • Management • Display & analysis • Interpretation • Action planning • Assessment & intervention • Support

  44. Skill Assessment Examples • Measure skills • Problem-solving process • Data-based decision making • Examples • Problem ID - Tier I focus • Hypothesis evaluation • Hypothesis production & validation

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