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Response to Intervention – A Good IDEIA

Response to Intervention – A Good IDEIA. Assessment Driving Instruction. David Lillenstein, Ed.D., NCSP Director of Psychological Services (717) 531-2277 x5436 dlillenstein@hershey.k12.pa.us www.hershey.k12.pa.us. General Education. Special Education.

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Response to Intervention – A Good IDEIA

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  1. Response to Intervention – A Good IDEIA Assessment Driving Instruction David Lillenstein, Ed.D., NCSP Director of Psychological Services (717) 531-2277 x5436 dlillenstein@hershey.k12.pa.us www.hershey.k12.pa.us

  2. General Education Special Education The Historical Disconnect … Sea of Ineligibility

  3. Historical Discrepancy Model - Problems • Wait to Fail • Needs are known in K or 1st grade but discrepancy often not present until 3rd or 4th grade • By 8 it’s too late…window is closing… • LD is a catch-all label • “a sociological sponge to wipe up the spills of general education” (Reid Lyon – cited in Gresham, 2001) • LD is arbitrarily and inconsistently defined in policy and practice • Tends to not identify students needing intensive instruction found in special ed. – no discrepancy! • “For Tx, the use of discrepancy models forces identification to an older age when interventions are demonstrably less effective (Fletcher et al., 1998)

  4. Historical Discrepancy Model – IQ Tests & Problems • No direct link to instruction or intervention!! • Discrepancy includes measurement error • Decisions to intervene focus on amount of discrepancy, not on student skills or need • IQ tests do not differentiate well between LD, MR, and low achieving students • There is actually much overlap among groups (Gresham et al., 1996) • Few differences between low achieving and LD (Algozzine, 1995) • IQ does not help differentiate the needs of students who need help (Vellutino at al., 2000) • IQ tests discriminate • Minorities may be under-represented in LD, but over in MR

  5. Response to Intervention - Definition • RTI is the practice of … • Providing high quality instruction and intervention matched to student need • Monitoring progress frequently to make decisions about change in instruction or goals • Applying child response data to important educational decisions (NASDSE, 2005)

  6. Ch. 14 - State Law • PA has required school districts to conduct screening • §14.122. Screening (a) Each school district shall establish a system of screening… (b) Each school district shall implement a comprehensive screening process. School districts may implement instructional support according to Department guidelines or an alternative screening process. School districts which elect not to use instructional support for screening shall develop and implement a comprehensive screening process …

  7. The Screening Process Shall Include: (1) For students with academic concerns, an assessment of the student's functioning in the curriculum including curriculum-based or performance–based assessment (2) For students with behavioral concerns, a systematic observation of the student's behavior in the classroom or area in which the student is displaying difficulty. (3) An intervention based on the results of the assessments under paragraph (1) or (2). (4) An assessment of the student's response to the intervention. (5) A determination as to whether the student's assessed difficulties are due to a lack of instruction or limited English proficiency. (6) A determination as to whether the student's needs exceed the functional ability of the regular education program to maintain the student at an appropriate instructional level.

  8. IDEIA 2004 – Federal Law • Each SD must establish and implement a comprehensive system of screening to accomplish the following: • Identify and provide initial screening prior to referral • Provide peer support for teachers and other school personnel to assist in working with students in the general education curriculum • Conduct hearing and vision screening • Identify students who may need to be referred for eligibility evaluation

  9. The Screening Process Shall Include: • Curriculum-based or performance based assessments • Observation • Intervention • Student response to intervention • Determination whether difficulties are due to lack of instruction or Limited English Proficiency • Determination whether student’s needs exceed functional ability of regular education program • Activities to gain parent involvement

  10. Why Response to Intervention? • Brings together Regular, Remedial, and Special Education • Documents effective education • Aligns identification procedures with effective instruction • AYP – RTI fits with NCLB – It is about maximizing results! • Provides self correcting mechanisms for schools to take control of their outcomes, driven by student results

  11. Core RTI Principles • All students can learn • Early intervention • Multi-tier models of instruction and intervention • Use of problem-solving models • Use of scientifically-validated instruction and assessment • Progress monitoring to inform instruction • Data-based decision making • Assessment drives instruction – • Screening, diagnostic, progress monitoring

  12. Common RTI practices • Scientifically-based curricula & practices • Explicit • Matched to student need • Designed to produce high rates of learning • 3-tier models of instruction and intervention • Progress monitoring and formative evaluation • Continuous, ongoing • Data-based analysis and diagnosis • Considers growth over time in comparison to baseline • Compared to expected level of performance (self & peers) • Functional behavioral & academic assessment • Standard treatment protocols

  13. Data Collection in RTI • Replace Norm-referenced tests • Not sensitive to change over time • Do not inform instruction • Measure individual differences, not growth • Cannot be administered frequently or quickly • CBM – Curriculum-Based Measurement • Reliable and valid • Sensitive to change • Directly related to instruction • Allow for goal setting • Allow for prediction • Can be administered frequently and quickly • Measure individual differences and growth

  14. 3 Tier Intervention Model • Prevention Model • Each Tier provides more intensive and supportive intervention • Layers of intervention in response to student needs <5% IEP - Data + Tier 3 + Tier 2 15% - Supplemental + 100% Regular Classroom Tier 1

  15. Pennsylvania’s Models

  16. 3 Tier Intervention Model - Behavior PBIS Model Tertiary = Individual Secondary = Classroom Primary = School-wide

  17. At the classroom level, RtI might look like this for academics: Independent Activities Paraprofessional Regular Education Teacher With Group 1 Group 3 Resource Teacher With Group 2 Group 4 Volunteer

  18. Tier 1- Regular Classroom (ALL) • Is the comprehensive program scientifically-validated? • Are supplemental programs and materials aligned with the comprehensive programs and scientifically-validated? • Are teachers/staff adequately trained in comprehensive and supplemental programs?

  19. Tier 1- Regular Classroom • How are assessments used to inform instruction? • Is there a data management system in place? • Is adequate time allocated for instruction? • Is there time for Tier 1 to meet and assess RTI?

  20. Tier 1- Important Goals • Establish Scientifically-Validated core program • Conduct benchmark assessments 3X per year with all students • Flexible grouping • 90 minutes a day or more of instruction in reading

  21. Tier 2 - Standard Protocol (SOME) • Errorless teaching - assume nothing - clearly state everything • Sequential scope and sequence - carefully scaffolding • In more difficult skills - I do, we do, you do • Immediate corrective feedback • Higher number of opportunities to respond (1:15 seconds) • Built-in mastery through repeated practice (guided and independent)

  22. Tier 2 – Important Goals • Acquire Scientifically-Validated interventions that target beginning skills • Homogeneous small group instruction (1:3, 1:4, or 1:5) • Minimum of 30 minutes/day + 90 min of core instruction • Progress-monitoring twice per month

  23. What should Tier 2 look like? • Systematic, explicit instruction • Pacing to match student needs • Multiple opportunities to respond • Providing students with corrective feedback

  24. When should Tier 2 Start? • Tier 2 should start as soon as possible after students are falling behind grade level expectations through benchmark assessment • …or when behavior is interfering with learning of self or others

  25. How long is a round of Tier 2? • Tier 2 lasts 10-12 weeks or at least 50 sessions of supplemental intervention. • Exit Tier 2 • Continue with Tier 2 • Referral to Tier 3 for more intensive intervention

  26. Questions for Tier 2 • Who will provide Tier 2 intervention? • Is additional time scheduled for Tier 2? • Where will it be delivered? • Is a system in place for progress-monitoring - • Every two weeks? Every week? • How will progress-monitoring be used to regroup students? Change interventions? Target instruction? • What are the criteria for entry and exit? • Who will provide oversight of Tier 2?

  27. Responder - Academic:

  28. Responder – Behavior:

  29. Inadequate Responder:

  30. Inadequate Responder - ???

  31. Response to Intervention – RTI Advantages • Focus is on attainment of learning standards…on improving educational outcomes and learning abilities! (student learning is the focus) • Regular classroom is 1st line of intervention • Merges regular, remedial, and special education • Promotes data-based decisions • Lack of progress change in intervention • Not just for special education or for determining eligibility • Reduced paperwork load

  32. RTI Advantages - Continued • Considers cause of learning deficits outside of the learner • Identification process is embedded in the intervention process – removes “wait to fail” • Frequent and regularly scheduled assessment drives instruction • Program and curriculum evaluation. Learner The Environment Instruction Curriculum

  33. Resources http://www.pbis.org/main.htm

  34. Helpful Books “I’ve DIBEL’d, Now What?” Susan Hall (Sopris West) Bringing Words to Life - Beck “The Voice of Evidence in Reading Research”- McCardle & Chhabra Overcoming Dyslexia – Shaywitz

  35. More Books… Fluency Instruction – Research-Based Practices Rasinski Assessing Reading: Multiple Measures – CORE Learning Vocabulary Instruction: Research to Practice – Baumann & Kame’enui Response to Intervention – NASDSE

  36. …and More Books…. Response to Intervention – Guilford Phonemic Awareness for Young Children – Brookes Road to the Code - Brookes

  37. Helpful Websites… www.sopriswest.com www.projectread.com www.fcrr.org www.sedl.org www.aimsweb.com www.progressmonitoring.org www.aea11.k12.ia.us

  38. More Websites… http://dibels.uoregon.edu/ www.interventioncentral.org www.nationalreadingpanel.org www.texasreading.org/utcrla/ http://reading.uoregon.edu/ www.studentprogress.org www.hershey.k12.pa.us/56039310111408/site/default.asp

  39. Yes…More Websites!! www.fsds.org http://oregonreadingfirst.uoregon.edu/ www.interdys.org http://www.nasponline.org/

  40. More? www.grownetwork.com https://solutions1.emetric.net/pssa/ www.drc-web.com/reportdelivery

  41. Contact Information Cindy Goldsworthy Director of Curriculum & Instruction 717-534-2501 x3205 cgoldsworthy@hershey.k12.pa.us David Lillenstein, Ed.D., NCSP Director of Psychological Services 717-531-2277 x5436 dlillenstein@hershey.k12.pa.us Joseph McFarland Primary School Principal (2-3) 717-531-2277 x5202 jmcfarland@hershey.k12.pa.us Lori Dixon Intermediate School Principal (4-5) 717-531-2222 x5302 ldixon@hershey.k12.pa.us Jackie Castleman Early Childhood Center Principal (K-1) 717-531-2211 x6202 jcastleman@hershey.k12.pa.us

  42. Questions ???

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