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Responsiveness to Instruction (RtI)

Responsiveness to Instruction (RtI). Problem-Solving Model Tier III North Carolina Department of Public Instruction 2011. 1. Four Tiers of Support. Continue Tier I and Tier II Support. 2. Resources. Student Needs. Identify Area(s) of Need. Evaluate. Implement Plan.

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Responsiveness to Instruction (RtI)

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  1. Responsiveness to Instruction(RtI) Problem-Solving Model Tier III North Carolina Department of Public Instruction 2011 1

  2. Four Tiers of Support Continue Tier I and Tier II Support 2

  3. Resources Student Needs Identify Area(s) of Need Evaluate Implement Plan Develop a Plan The NC Problem- Solving Model Tier IV Consideration for EC referral Tier III Consultation with the Problem Solving Team Tier II Consultation With Other Resources Tier I Consultation Between Teachers-Parents 3

  4. Progress Monitoring 1-2x per month Progress Monitoring 1-2x per week Universal Screening for ALL students 3x per year Diagnostic Assessment Student Needs Tier II Tier IV Tier III Assessment Tier I

  5. Tier III - PSM • Repeat steps of cyclical problem-solving model • Student need drives problem solving team members • Parent • Teacher • Teaching peer, counselor, school psychologist, curriculum specialist, data/assessment specialist administrator, social worker, nurse, etc. 5 40

  6. Tier III - PSM • Small percentage of students • Formalized, systematic process • Intervention and assessment increases in intensity/frequency • Individual goals- short and long term 6

  7. Layered Support 7

  8. 7 1 Step 1 Define the Problem Develop a behavioral (observable) definition of problem 2 6 TEAM FIRST MEETS TO DEFINE PROBLEM 3 5 4 8

  9. Step 1: Define the Problem • Essential step • Develop a behavioral/academic definition • Concrete, Observable and Measurable • Stranger test? • Most difficult step! 9 13

  10. 7 1 Step 1 Define the Problem Develop a behavioral (observable) definition of problem 2 Step 2 Develop an Assessment Plan Generate a hypothesis and assessment questions related to the problem 6 HOW DO WE ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS? 3 5 4 10

  11. Step 2: Develop an Assessment Plan Instruction Curriculum Environment Leaner • We must ask questions to form a hypothesis regarding “What is the problem? Why is it occurring?” • We ask questions across four domains: 11

  12. Instruction Instruction Possible Questions • Has the instruction been consistent? • Has the student received instruction in constituent skill areas? • Does the student respond more effectively to a different pace? • Has the student received descriptive feedback? 12

  13. Curriculum Curriculum Possible Questions • Are the deficits in the core? • Does the curriculum include the needed skills? • Has the student had enough time in the curriculum skill areas? 13

  14. Environment Environment Possible Questions • Is the student “on-task” during instruction? • How is his/her behavior in class and out of class? • Home and school environment? (past and present) 14

  15. Learner Leaner Possible Questions • Any Medical issues? • Background information in the cumulative record? • Language issues? 15

  16. Step 2: Develop an Assessment Plan Instruction Environment Leaner Review Interview Observe Test Curriculum Review Interview Observe Test Review Interview Observe Test Review Interview Observe Test

  17. Review Examples • Review records • Review grades • Review teachers’ anecdotal records/instructional artifacts/work samples 17

  18. Interview Examples • Teacher interview • Parent interview • Interview past teachers/previous school • Student interview (older grades) 18

  19. Observe Examples • Student observation • Student/teacher interaction observation • Instructional observation • Core • Intervention 19

  20. Test Examples • CBM in area of concern • Survey level • Grade level • CBM in other areas • Common Assessments • Diagnostic – informal or formal 20

  21. Diagnostic Assessment • Further investigation to help determine which intervention is most appropriate • Can be CBM or other common assessments Examples Running Record, CBM, Informal reading assessments, Single skill math computation tests, Writing samples, Student interviews 21

  22. Diagnostic Assessment: Myths • Comes in a box • Used to identify the presence of a reading disorder • Must be administered by specialists • Are formal • Time consuming and impractical. 22

  23. Resources for Free Diagnostic Assessments • http://www.fcrr.org/FAIR/index.shtm- diagnostic reading assessments for pre-K through high school • http://www.thephonicspage.org/On%20Reading/readinggradeleve.html - diagnostic phonics assessments for all grade levels • Math- Intervention Central has the ability to make up single skill probes of math skills 23

  24. Case Study – Tier III 24

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  26. Case Study - Page 1 • Student Name: Chris • Date: 9/6/XX • Areas targeted for instruction/intervention: Reading • Specific Problem: Reading Fluency

  27. Case Study: Tier III Background Information Record Review • Vision/Hearing - pass • Retentions - none • Absences/tardies - no concerns • Transferred schools - midyear first grade (VA) • Prior interventions – Tier I and II in second grade (see data) 27 3

  28. Case Study: Tier III Background Information Record Review (cont’) • Universal screening data • R-CBM - 34, MAZE - 3 (Fall-current school year) • math - on grade level • DRA2 = 20 28 3

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  30. Case Study: Tier III Background Information Tier I (during second grade) • Define the problem - “Chris’ R-CBM score of 29 (Winter- universal screening) is below the 10th percentile when compared to national norms.” • Error analysis (teacher) indicates several decoding weaknesses, including multisyllabic words, diagraphs, blends • Chris’ low score on R-CBM is because of his weakness in decoding, specifically multisyllabic words. 3

  31. Tier III - Case Study:Background Information Tier I (cont’) • 8 weeks intervention (2/01/xx - 3/28/xx) • Syllable pattern activities from FCRR - 2x/week, 15 min./session • Progress monitoring data R-CBM • 28, 30, 36, 30 3

  32. Tier I Interventions 50 45 40 35 36 30 30 30 29 28 25 20 15 10 3 1 6 4 2 5 7 8 32

  33. Case Study: Tier III Background Information Tier II • Chris’ low score on R-CBM is because of his weaknesses in decoding, including multisyllabic words and diagraphs. • 8 weeks intervention (3/28/xx -5/30/xx) • Syllable pattern activities from FCRR - 2x/week, 15 min./session • Letter sound correspondence activities from FCRR - 2x/week, 10 min./session 3

  34. Case Study: Tier III Background Information Tier II (cont’) • Progress monitoring data R-CBM • 35, 40, 42, 43 3

  35. Tier II Interventions 55 50 52 45 42 43 40 40 35 36 35 30 25 20 15 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 35

  36. Case Study - Page 1 Create a hypothesis statement for each domain Why do you think the problem is occurring? Instruction Curriculum Environment Learner What information do you need? Review Interview Observe Test 36

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  39. 7 1 Step 1 Define the Problem Develop a behavioral (observable) definition of problem 2 Step 2 Develop an Assessment Plan Generate a hypothesis and assessment questions related to the problem 6 WHAT DID WE FIND? 3 Step 3 Analysis of the Assessment Plan Determine if problem is correctly defined 5 4 39

  40. Tier III - Analyze the Assessment Plan Team reconvenes (within 2 weeks) to discuss results of assessment results • Is our problem correctly defined? • What is our hypothesis (based on the data we gathered) and how will we “test” it? 40

  41. Tier III - Analyze the Assessment Plan Environment • Structured observation results • Attention to task was age appropriate compared to peers in classroom • Hypothesis rejected 41

  42. Tier III - Analyze the Assessment Plan Curriculum • CBM error analysis - confirms multisyllabic words, diagraphs, blends • Review DRA2 - Score of 18 • Interview Instructional specialist from previous school • Previous utilized different materials and instructional methods • Hypothesis accepted 42

  43. Tier III – Analyze the Assessment Plan Instruction • Teacher Interview • Determined review of early literacy skills is not an intentional component of reading instruction • Instructional observation • Review of early literacy skills was not observed • Review instructional materials • 3rd grade materials do not include a review of early literacy skills • Hypothesis accepted 43

  44. Tier III - Analyze the Assessment Plan Leaner • Speech Language Screening • Passed • Social/Developmental History • Uneventful social/medical development • Hypothesis rejected 44

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  46. 7 1 Step 1 Define the Problem Develop a behavioral (observable) definition of problem 2 Step 2 Develop an Assessment Plan Generate a hypothesis and assessment questions related to the problem 6 WHERE DO WE WANT THEM TO BE? 3 Step 3 Analysis of the Assessment Plan Determine if problem is correctly defined 5 4 Step 4 Generate a Goal Statement Specific Description of the changes expected in student behavior 46

  47. Doran, George T. "There's a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management's goals and objectives." Management Review, Nov 1981, Volume 70 Issue 11. 47

  48. Tier III – Goal Setting • Short Term Goal • Length determined by intervention period • Example: 8-10 weeks from intervention start date • Set goal based on baseline data • Long Term • Length determined by grade level expectations • Example: end of school year • Set goal based on baseline data 48

  49. Tier III - Goal Setting • Norm Referenced Goal • Rate of Improvement (ROI)/Growth Rate • Percentile Rank 49

  50. Tier III – Goal Setting: Norm Referenced • A standard, model or pattern regarded as typical • Typical performance of peers? • Classroom • Grade • District • State • Nation 50

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