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Response to Intervention in Illinois

Today’s presentation slides will be available at www.isbe.net/RtI_plan/default.htm under the Resources Section Thanks for supporting ISBE’s quest to Go Green. Response to Intervention in Illinois. Bilingual Conference 2009 Oak Brook, Illinois Presented by: Marica Cullen

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Response to Intervention in Illinois

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  1. Today’s presentation slides will be available at www.isbe.net/RtI_plan/default.htm under the Resources Section Thanks for supporting ISBE’s quest to Go Green

  2. Response to Intervention in Illinois Bilingual Conference 2009 Oak Brook, Illinois Presented by: Marica Cullen Illinois State Board of Education

  3. Legislation, Rules and State Plans

  4. IDEA Regulations - October 2006 The State • must not require the use of a severe discrepancy between intellectual ability and achievement for determining whether a child has a specific learning disability • must permit the use of a process based on the child’s response to scientific, research-based intervention

  5. IDEA Regulations - October 2006 • The Team • must document how the child responds to scientific, research-based interventions • must document that the child does not achieve adequately or make sufficient progress in state-approved grade-level standards • must consider data that demonstrates appropriate instruction delivered by qualified personnel and documentation of repeated assessments of achievement at reasonable intervals

  6. Illinois Part 226.130 Rule • “By the 2010-2011 school year, documentation of the RtI process shall be a part of the evaluation process for students when a specific learning disability (SLD) is suspected. After implementing an RtI process, a district may use a severe discrepancy between intellectual ability and achievement as part of the evaluation process for determining whether a child has a specific learning disability.” • “It is important to note that RtI within a three-tier intervention model is also a part of special education eligibility decision-making required by 34 CFR 300.309 and 23 IAC 226.130.”

  7. Illinois Part 226.130 Rule (SLD Eligibility) Requires: • Use of a process that determines how the child responds to scientific, research-based interventions as part of the evaluation procedure described in 34 CFR 300.309 • Development and distribution of a State RtI Plan by January 1, 2008 by the State Superintendent in collaboration with professional organizations outlining the professional development that is necessary and other activities and resources that are essential for implementation

  8. Illinois Part 226.130 Rule Requires: • Illinois districts to complete a plan for transition to the use of a process that determines how the child responds to scientific, research-based intervention as part of the evaluation procedure by January 1, 2009 • Illinois districts to implement RtI as part of their evaluation procedure for making SLD determinations by the 2010-2011 academic year

  9. Illinois Part 226.130 Rule Important • Illinois Rule 226.130 does not prevent the parent request for an evaluation already in Rule 226.110

  10. State RtI Plan

  11. Participating Stakeholder Groups • Illinois Education Association • Illinois Federation of Teachers • Illinois State Advisory Council on the Education of Children with Disabilities • Illinois Alliance of Administrators of Special Education • Illinois Association of School Administrators • Regional Offices of Education • Parent Initiative Centers • Higher Education • Illinois State Board of Education (Bilingual, Professional Certification, Accountability, Curriculum and Instruction, Special Education, Federal Grants and Programs)

  12. State RtI Plan Components • Introduction/Belief Statements for RtI • Definition of RtI and Problem Solving • Link between RtI and SLD Eligibility Determination • Process for Implementation • Implementation Timelines • Funding Considerations • ISBE Evaluation Plan • Supporting Resources

  13. District RtI Plan

  14. Access the District Improvement Plan • http://iirc.niu.edu/

  15. Goal for 2010 – Integrated Planning From this. . . To this. . .

  16. District is in Status District is not in Status District AYP Status Must Complete All DIP Sections Must Complete RtI Components

  17. Required District Plan Components

  18. District Improvement Plan – Components to Consider • Consensus Building and Collaboration • Standards-Based Curriculum and Research-Based Instruction • Research-Based Assessment Practices • Student Intervention/Problem Solving Team Process • Intervention Strategy Identification • Resources Allocation • Ongoing Professional Development for Effective RtI

  19. District Improvement Plan – Section I • B – Local Assessment Data (universal screeners/progress monitoring) • C – Item 1 Other Data Attributes and Challenges (curriculum and instructional approaches) • C – Item 3 Other Data Parent Involvement • D – Key Factors (curriculum, analyze impact of RtI on curriculum and instruction)

  20. District Improvement Plan – Section II • A – Action Plan RtI Objective • B – Student Strategies and Activities for RtI • C – Professional Development Strategies and Activities for RtI • D – Parent Involvement Strategies and Activities for RtI • E – Monitoring Process for RtI

  21. District Improvement Plan – Section III • A – Development, Review and Implementation Stakeholder Involvement

  22. Defining Response to Intervention (RtI)

  23. Response to Instruction = RtI Approach for redesigning and establishing teaching and learning environments that are effective, efficient, relevant and durable for allstudents, families and educators • NOT a program, curriculum, strategy, intervention • NOT limited to special education • NOT new

  24. Essential Components Response to Intervention (RtI) consists of Three Essential Components: • High quality, research-based instruction/ intervention matched to student needs • Frequent use of data to determine learning rate and student performance level • Educational decisions based upon the student’s response to instruction/ intervention

  25. Quality Education for All Students In an RtI Model educators will: • Use assessments for screening, diagnostics and progress monitoring • Use data from those assessments to inform instructional decisions • Use a multi-tier model of instruction to respond to student needs • Collaborate among teachers, school support personnel, administrators and parents

  26. Quality Education for All Students In an RtI Model educators will • Use scientific, research-based instructional interventions when data show students are not successful • Intervene early rather than adopt a “wait to fail” approach to education • Effectively teach all children

  27. RtI is the Foundation of Instructional Improvement

  28. Meeting the Needs of ALL Students RtI IS School Improvement An EVERY EDUCATION Initiative Three Tier Model of School Supports Problem Solving Method of Decision-Making Integrated Data Collection that Informs Instruction

  29. The Illinois Model

  30. Academic Systems Behavioral Systems Tier 3 Individual Students/Very Small Group Assessment-based High Intensity Tier 3 Individual Students/ Very Small Group Assessment-based Intense, durable procedures Tier 2 Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response Tier 2 Some students (at-risk) High efficiency Rapid response Tier 1 All students Preventive, proactive Tier 1 All settings, all students Preventive, proactive Multi-Tier Model

  31. Defining the Tiers • Tier 1: Core curriculum meets the needs of 80%* or more of the students • Tier 2: 20%* of the students may be identified as at-risk and require supplemental instruction/intervention in addition to the core curriculum • Tier 3: 5%* of those students may be identified as needing more intensive, small group or individual interventions to supplement the core curriculum *Percentages will vary by district/school

  32. Benefits of RtI for ELL Students • Increased accountability for all learners • Greater collaboration and shared responsibility of school staff for all learners • Elimination of “wait to fail” approach • Reduced disproportionate representation of students from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds • Improved classroom assessment and subsequent instructional modifications

  33. Concerns Regarding RtI and ELLs • Lack of teacher preparation and experience • Limited research base on effective instructional practices • Needed research and development of CBMs to screen and progress monitor • Need for strong administrative vision and leadership

  34. Reasons to Push Ahead. . . “First, the universal screening and progress monitoring. . .allow for comparison of students to other similar or ‘true’ peers in their local cohort rather than to national norms. Second, an effective RTI model requires collaboration among all educators. . . providing increased opportunities for professional dialogue, peer coaching, and the creation of instructional models integrating the best practices of the various fields of education and related services. . . .”

  35. Reasons to Push Ahead. . . “Third, students who are struggling can be identified early and supported before falling too far behind to ever catch up.” - Brown & Doolittle, 2008

  36. Additional Resources

  37. ISBE Web Resources General Illinois RtI Information www.isbe.net/RtI_plan/default.htm The RtI Self-Assessment Template www.isbe.net/RtI_plan/default.htm e-Plan Writing Guides www.isbe.net/sos/htmls/improvement_process.htm

  38. Other Web-Based Resources Center on Instruction - provides research and information on reading, math and science K-12 instruction as well as special education and English language learning www.centeroninstruction.org National Center for Culturally Responsive Educational Systems (NCCRESt) – provides technical assistance and professional development in Culturally Responsive Response to Intervention www.nccrest.org National Center on Response to Intervention – provides resources and research on broad list of topics including RtI and cultural and linguistic diversity www.rti4success.org

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