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RTI for Middle & High Schools: Status Review Jim Wright interventioncentral

RTI for Middle & High Schools: Status Review Jim Wright www.interventioncentral.org. Resources from this workshop series can be downloaded from:. http://www.interventioncentral.org/ dcboces.php. RTI & Academic Interventions: Shakedown Cruise.

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RTI for Middle & High Schools: Status Review Jim Wright interventioncentral

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  1. RTI for Middle & High Schools: Status ReviewJim Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org

  2. Resources from this workshop series can be downloaded from: • http://www.interventioncentral.org/dcboces.php

  3. RTI & Academic Interventions: Shakedown Cruise • Definition: “a period of testing or a trial journey undergone by a ship, aircraft or other craft and its crew before being declared operational.” Source: Shakedown cruise. Wikipedia. Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakedown_cruise

  4. Possible Elements of Middle & High School RTI Trainings • Update on developments in RTI • Technical assistance: Questions from teams • Networking / sharing of best practices across participating teams • Time for team planning • Question: How should our sessions be structured? How much time should be set aside for each element?

  5. What Works Clearinghouse Practice Guide: Study & Organizational Skills Source: Pashler, H., Bain, P., Bottge, B., Graesser, A., Koedinger, K., McDaniel, M., and Metcalfe, J. (2007) Organizing instruction and study to improve student learning (NCER 2007-2004). Washington, DC: National Center for Education Research, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. Retrieved from http://ncer.ed.gov.

  6. RTI Assumption: Struggling Students Are ‘Typical’ Until Proven Otherwise… RTI logic assumes that: • A student who begins to struggle in general education is typical, and that • It is general education’s responsibility to find the instructional strategies that will unlock the student’s learning potential Only when the student shows through well-documented interventions that he or she has ‘failed to respond to intervention’ does RTI begin to investigate the possibility that the student may have a learning disability or other special education condition.

  7. Tier 3: Intensive interventions. Students who are ‘non-responders’ to Tiers I & II may be eligible for special education services, intensive interventions. Tier 3 Tier 2 Individualized interventions. Subset of students receive interventions targeting specific needs. Tier 2 Tier 1: Universal interventions. Available to all students in a classroom or school. Can consist of whole-group or individual strategies or supports. Tier 1 RTI ‘Pyramid of Interventions’

  8. Complementary RTI Models: Standard Treatment & Problem-Solving Protocols “The two most commonly used RTI approaches are (1) standard treatment and (2) problem-solving protocol. While these two approaches to RTI are sometimes described as being very different from each other, they actually have several common elements, and both fit within a problem-solving framework. In practice, many schools and districts combine or blend aspects of the two approaches to fit their needs.” Source: Duffy, H. (August 2007). Meeting the needs of significantly struggling learners in high school. Washington, DC: National High School Center. Retrieved from http://www.betterhighschools.org/pubs/ p. 5

  9. RTI Interventions: Standard-Treatment vs. Problem-Solving There are two different vehicles that schools can use to deliver RTI interventions: Standard-Protocol (Standalone Intervention). Programs based on scientifically valid instructional practices (‘standard protocol’) are created to address frequent student referral concerns. These services are provided outside of the classroom. A middle school, for example, may set up a structured math-tutoring program staffed by adult volunteer tutors to provide assistance to students with limited math skills. Students referred for a Tier II math intervention would be placed in this tutoring program. An advantage of the standard-protocol approach is that it is efficient and consistent: large numbers of students can be put into these group interventions to receive a highly standardized intervention. However, standard group intervention protocols often cannot be individualized easily to accommodate a specific student’s unique needs. Problem-solving (Classroom-Based Intervention). Individualized research-based interventions match the profile of a particular student’s strengths and limitations. The classroom teacher often has a large role in carrying out these interventions. A plus of the problem-solving approach is that the intervention can be customized to the student’s needs. However, developing intervention plans for individual students can be time-consuming.

  10. Tier I Instruction/Interventions Tier I instruction/interventions: • Are universal—available to all students. • Can be delivered within classrooms or throughout the school. • Are likely to be put into place by the teacher at the first sign that a student is struggling. All children have access to Tier 1 instruction/interventions. Teachers have the capability to use those strategies without requiring outside assistance. Tier 1 instruction/interventions encompass: • The school’s core curriculum and all published or teacher-made materials used to deliver that curriculum. • Teacher use of ‘whole-group’ teaching & management strategies. • Teacher use of individualized strategies with specific students. Tier I instruction/interventions attempt to answer the question: Are classroom instructional strategies & supports sufficient to help the student to achieve academic success?

  11. Tier 1: Classroom-Level Interventions • Decision Point: Student is struggling and may face significant high-stakes negative outcome if situation does not improve. • Collaboration Opportunity: Teacher can refer the student to a grade-level, instruction team, or department meeting to brainstorm ideas – OR – teacher seeks out consultant in school to brainstorm intervention ideas. • Documentation: Teacher completes ‘Classroom Intervention Form’ prior to carrying out intervention. Teacher collects classroom data. • Decision Rule [Example]: Teacher should refer student to the next level of RTI support if the intervention is not successful within 8 instructional weeks.

  12. Tier 2: Supplemental (Standard-Protocol Model) Interventions Tier 2 interventions are typically delivered in small-group format. About 15% of students in the typical school will require Tier 2/supplemental intervention support. Group size for Tier 2 interventions is limited to 4-6 students. Students placed in Tier 2 interventions should have a shared profile of intervention need. The reading progress of students in Tier 2 interventions are monitored at least 1-2 times per month. Source: Burns, M. K., & Gibbons, K. A. (2008). Implementing response-to-intervention in elementary and secondary schools. Routledge: New York.

  13. Tier 2: Supplemental Interventions • Decision Point: Building-wide academic screenings • Collaboration Opportunity: After each building-wide academic screening, ‘data teams’ meet (teachers at a grade level; building principal; reading teacher, etc.) At the meeting, the group considers how the assessment data should shape/inform core instruction. Additionally, the data team sets a cutpoint to determine which students should be recruited for Tier 2 group interventions. NOTE: Team may continue to meet every 5 weeks to consider student progress in Tier 2; move students into and out of groups. • Documentation: Tier 2 instructor completes a Tier 2 Group Assignment Sheet listing students and their corresponding interventions. Progress-monitoring occurs 1-2 times per month. • Decision Rules [Example]: Student is returned to Tier 1 support if they perform above the 25th percentile in the next school-wide screening. Student is referred to Tier 3 (RTI Team) if they fail to make expected progress despite two Tier 2 (group-based) interventions.

  14. Scheduling Elementary Tier 2 Interventions Option 3: ‘Floating RTI’:Gradewide Shared Schedule. Each grade has a scheduled RTI time across classrooms. No two grades share the same RTI time. Advantages are that outside providers can move from grade to grade providing push-in or pull-out services and that students can be grouped by need across different teachers within the grade. Anyplace Elementary School: RTI Daily Schedule Grade K Classroom 1 Classroom 2 Classroom 3 9:00-9:30 Grade 1 Classroom 1 Classroom 2 Classroom 3 9:45-10:15 Grade 2 Classroom 1 Classroom 2 Classroom 3 10:30-11:00 Grade 3 Classroom 1 Classroom 2 Classroom 3 12:30-1:00 Grade 4 Classroom 1 Classroom 2 Classroom 3 1:15-1:45 Grade 5 Classroom 1 Classroom 2 Classroom 3 2:00-2:30 Source: Burns, M. K., & Gibbons, K. A. (2008). Implementing response-to-intervention in elementary and secondary schools: Procedures to assure scientific-based practices. New York: Routledge.

  15. Tier 3: Intensive Individualized Interventions (Problem-Solving Model) Tier 3 interventions are the most intensive offered in a school setting. About 5 % of a general-education student population may qualify for Tier 3 supports. Typically, the RTI Problem-Solving Team meets to develop intervention plans for Tier 3 students. Students qualify for Tier 3 interventions because: • they are found to have a large skill gap when compared to their class or grade peers; and/or • They did not respond to interventions provided previously at Tiers 1 & 2. Tier 3 interventions are provided daily for sessions of 30 minutes. The student-teacher ratio is flexible but should allow the student to receive intensive, individualized instruction. The academic or behavioral progress of students in Tier 3 interventions is monitored at least weekly. Source: Burns, M. K., & Gibbons, K. A. (2008). Implementing response-to-intervention in elementary and secondary schools. Routledge: New York.

  16. Tier 3: RTI Team • Decision Point: RTI Problem-Solving Team • Collaboration Opportunity: Weekly RTI Problem-Solving Team meetings are scheduled to handle referrals of students that failed to respond to interventions from Tiers 1 & 2. • Documentation: Teacher referral form; RTI Team minutes form; progress-monitoring data collected at least weekly. • Decision Rules [Example]: If student has failed to respond adequately to 3 intervention trials of 6-8 weeks (from Tiers 2 and 3), the student may be referred to Special Education.

  17. Advancing Through RTI: Flexibility in the Tiers For purposes of efficiency, students should be placed in small-group instruction at Tier 2. However, group interventions may not always be possible because –due to scheduling or other issues—no group is available. (For example, students with RTI behavioral referrals may not have a group intervention available.) In such a case, the student will go directly to the problem-solving process (Tier 3)—typically through a referral to the school RTI Team. Nonetheless, the school must still document the same minimum number of interventions attempted for every student in RTI, whether or not a student first received interventions in a group setting.

  18. Avg Classroom Academic Performance Level Discrepancy 1: Skill Gap (Current Performance Level) Discrepancy 2: Gap in Rate of Learning (‘Slope of Improvement’) Target Student ‘Dual-Discrepancy’: RTI Model of Learning Disability(Fuchs 2003)

  19. NYSED RTI Guidance Memo: April 2008

  20. “The Regents policy framework for RtI:Defines RtI to minimally include: Appropriate instruction delivered to all students in the general education class by qualified personnel. Appropriate instruction in reading means scientific research-based reading programs that include explicit and systematic instruction in phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary development, reading fluency (including oral reading skills) and reading comprehension strategies.Screenings applied to all students in the class to identify those students who are not making academic progress at expected rates.”

  21. “Instruction matched to student need with increasingly intensive levels of targeted intervention and instruction for students who do not make satisfactory progress in their levels of performance and/or in their rate of learning to meet age or grade level standards.Repeated assessments of student achievement which should include curriculum based measures to determine if interventions are resulting in student progress toward age or grade level standards.The application of information about the student’s response to intervention to make educational decisions about changes in goals, instruction and/or services and the decision to make a referral for special education programs and/or services.”

  22. “Written notification to the parents when the student requires an intervention beyond that provided to all students in the general education classroom that provides information about the: -amount and nature of student performance data that will be collected and the general education services that will be provided;-strategies for increasing the student’s rate of learning; and-parents’ right to request an evaluation for special education programs and/or services.”

  23. “The Regents policy framework for RtI:Defines RtI to minimally include: Requires each school district to establish a plan and policies for implementing school-wide approaches and prereferral interventions in order to remediate a student’s performance prior to referral for special education, which may include the RtI process as part of a district’s school-wide approach. The school district must select and define the specific structure and components of its RtI program, including, but not limited to the: -criteria for determining the levels of intervention to be provided to students, -types of interventions, amount and nature of student performance data to be collected, and -manner and frequency for progress monitoring.”

  24. Team Activity: Rate Your Elementary or Secondary School’s ‘RTI Readiness’ • In your elbow groups: • Review the RTI Readiness Survey for Middle & High School. • Rate your school on this survey. • Discuss with your group how ‘RTI ready’ your school is at the present time.

  25. Building Teacher Capacity to Deliver Tier 1 Interventions: An 8-Step Checklist Jim Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org

  26. Team Activity: Tier 1: How to Make This Happen? • In your elbow groups: • Discuss how to standardize what Tier 1 looks like in your school. • How will your teachers meet with colleagues to discuss the student? • What documentation requirements would you select? • How will your teachers get access to recommended ‘Tier 1’ intervention ideas?

  27. RTI & Intervention: Key Concepts

  28. Essential Elements of Any Academic or Behavioral Intervention (‘Treatment’) Strategy: • Method of delivery (‘Who or what delivers the treatment?’)Examples include teachers, paraprofessionals, parents, volunteers, computers. • Treatment component (‘What makes the intervention effective?’)Examples include activation of prior knowledge to help the student to make meaningful connections between ‘known’ and new material; guide practice (e.g., Paired Reading) to increase reading fluency; periodic review of material to aid student retention.

  29. Core Instruction,Interventions, Accommodations & Modifications: Sorting Them Out • Core Instruction. Those instructional strategies that are used routinely with all students in a general-education setting are considered ‘core instruction’. High-quality instruction is essential and forms the foundation of RTI academic support. NOTE: While it is important to verify that good core instructional practices are in place for a struggling student, those routine practices do not ‘count’ as individual student interventions.

  30. Core Instruction, Interventions, Accommodations & Modifications: Sorting Them Out • Intervention. An academic intervention is a strategy used to teach a new skill, build fluency in a skill, or encourage a child to apply an existing skill to new situations or settings. An intervention can be thought of as “a set of actions that, when taken, have demonstrated ability to change a fixed educational trajectory” (Methe & Riley-Tillman, 2008; p. 37).

  31. Core Instruction,Interventions, Accommodations & Modifications: Sorting Them Out • Accommodation. An accommodation is intended to help the student to fully access and participate in the general-education curriculum without changing the instructional content and without reducing the student’s rate of learning (Skinner, Pappas & Davis, 2005). An accommodation is intended to remove barriers to learning while still expecting that students will master the same instructional content as their typical peers. • Accommodation example 1: Students are allowed to supplement silent reading of a novel by listening to the book on tape. • Accommodation example 2: For unmotivated students, the instructor breaks larger assignments into smaller ‘chunks’ and providing students with performance feedback and praise for each completed ‘chunk’ of assigned work (Skinner, Pappas & Davis, 2005).

  32. Core Instruction,Interventions, Accommodations & Modifications: Sorting Them Out • Modification. A modification changes the expectations of what a student is expected to know or do—typically by lowering the academic standards against which the student is to be evaluated. Examples of modifications: • Giving a student five math computation problems for practice instead of the 20 problems assigned to the rest of the class • Letting the student consult course notes during a test when peers are not permitted to do so • Allowing a student to select a much easier book for a book report than would be allowed to his or her classmates.

  33. Engaging the Reluctant Teacher: Seven Reasons Why Middle & High School Instructors May Be Reluctant to Implement Classroom RTI Literacy InterventionsJim Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org

  34. ‘Teacher Tolerance’ as an Indicator of RTI Intervention Capacity “I call the range of students whom [teachers] come to view as adequately responsive – i.e., teachable – as the tolerance; those who are perceived to be outside the tolerance are those for whom teachers seek additional resources. The term “tolerance” is used to indicate that teachers form a permissible boundary on their measurement (judgments) in the same sense as a confidence interval. In this case, the teacher actively measures the distribution of responsiveness in her class by processing information from a series of teaching trials and perceives some range of students as within the tolerance.” (Gerber, 2002) Source: Gerber, M. M. (2003). Teachers are still the test: Limitations of response to instruction strategies for identifying children with learning disabilities. Paper presented at the National Research Center on Learning Disabilities Responsiveness-to-Intervention Symposium, Kansas City, MO.

  35. Engaging the Reluctant Teacher: Seven Reasons Why Instructors May Resist Implementing Classroom RTI Literacy Interventions • Teachers believe that their ‘job’ is to provide content-area instruction, not to teach vocabulary and reading-comprehension strategies (Kamil et al., 2008). • Teachers believe that they lack the skills to implement classroom vocabulary-building and reading-comprehension strategies. (Fisher, 2007; Kamil et al., 2008). • Teachers feel that they don’t have adequate time to implement vocabulary-building and reading-comprehension strategies in the classroom. (Kamil et al., 2008; Walker, 2004).

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