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Zen and the Art of RTI

Zen and the Art of RTI. Objectives:. Participants will be familiar with the “Big Picture” of RTI Participants will develop a common understanding of terms related to RTI Participants will know OrRTI Project expectations. Oregon RTI team. Oregon RTI districts. Assumptions in RTI-land.

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Zen and the Art of RTI

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  1. Zen and the Art of RTI

  2. Objectives: • Participants will be familiar with the “Big Picture” of RTI • Participants will develop a common understanding of terms related to RTI • Participants will know OrRTI Project expectations

  3. Oregon RTI team

  4. Oregon RTI districts

  5. Assumptions in RTI-land • Every child can and will learn • IQ and intelligence are not the same thing • People are first • Flexible skill grouping changes (frequently) based on data (about skills) • “Ability” grouping implies tracking, tracking = bad news

  6. So what is this RTI business all about? • Write down what you told your partner, children or colleagues about what you were learning about today. • Share with a team member.

  7. A Tale of Two Teams Does the child find the system, or does the system find the child?

  8. Daisy participates in the general curriculum Daisy’s teacher does his best to differentiate instruction and keeps anecdotal data Daisy isn’t doing well Teacher tries again Daisy doesn’t improve Daisy improves The pre referral/discrepancy approach Pre-referral team (CARES) reviews what teacher has tried Resumes regular program Teacher’s effort is deemed sufficient Teacher is told to try again Special Education referral is initiated by the teacher Daisy is tested, usually by special education personnel, using IQ, achievement, and other tests

  9. Daisy participates in the general curriculum EBIS Team reviews screening data and places Daisy in group intervention Daisy isn’t doing well Second Group Intervention Daisy doesn’t improve Daisy improves How RTI Works from a Student’s Perspective EBIS Team designs individualized intervention Resumes general program Daisy improves Daisy doesn’t improve Improvement is good and other factors are suspected as cause Intervention is intense and LD is suspected Special Education referral is initiated Parents Notified

  10. Discussion Does the child find the system, or does the system find the child?

  11. Assumptions Writing Math Behavior Reading Data based teaming Leadership Professional Development

  12. System Requirements • Leadership • Teaming • Universal Screening • Decision Rules • Research based core reading • Progress Monitoring • Research based interventions • Procedures for LD evaluation & eligibility • Professional development & Fidelity

  13. Leadership • Grade level • School • District

  14. Teaming: District & School • Classroom teachers & Specialists (representing different levels and schools) • District office leaders • Principals • Principal • Classroom Teachers • Specialists • Counselor • Psychologist

  15. Monitoring the Team Process • Review the Assessing and Planning EBIS Team Process document. • Discuss the value of developing and utilizing a similar tool with your team.

  16. Universal Screening • 3 times per year for ALL students K-5 • Brief • Valid • Reliable • Over-identifies • Screening is used as a key measure to determine: • The health of the core • Which students need additional intervention

  17. Decision Rules • Provide the “now what” after teams have analyzed student data • Guide decisions for all tiers • Ensure equity across schools

  18. Research- Based Core Reading • Delivered as designed • State standards • Instruction is as important as curriculum • 90 minutes Phonics Phonemic Awareness Comp r hens i on F luency Vocabulary

  19. Differences in Learning to ReadEstimates from NICHHD research

  20. Differences in Learning to Read-Discussion • How does this research match up with your own experience of learning to read? Your children’s? Your students’?

  21. More about the core Important Facts: • Students cannot be identified as LD if their difficulty is due to lack of instruction in the BIG 5. • Research-based program must be implemented as designed (fidelity)

  22. Progress Monitoring Which students: • All receiving intervention • Borderline scores or performance-as resources allow • Tools Must Be: • Brief • Valid • Reliable • Frequency: • Every 2 weeks (minimum) • Every week (ideal)

  23. Interventions • Research-based • In addition to 90 min. core • Interventionist receives ongoing training and feedback • Increase the intensity of instruction • Small skill groups • Explicit and systematic

  24. Districts must adopt common procedures for doing this work: Decision Rules Evaluation Guidelines Special Education Policies Think of RTI as a test Students should be identified similarly from school to school LD Evaluation & Eligibility

  25. PD & Fidelity • Delivery: • Ongoing • Sufficient time to collaborate and plan • Incorporates fidelity checks Content: • Core curriculum & instruction • Assessment • Interventions • Teaming • Data-based decision making • Sped procedures

  26. System Requirements • Leadership • Teaming • Universal Screening • Decision Rules • Research based core reading • Progress Monitoring • Research based interventions • Procedures for LD evaluation & eligibility • Professional development & Fidelity

  27. Expectations Of Us Of You Participation Frequent meetings Communication with your schools and community Critical thinking/consuming • Support • Ideas • Resources • Honest Feedback • Humor • ???

  28. Objectives: • Participants will be familiar with the “Big Picture” of RTI • Participants will develop a common understanding of terms related to RTI • Participants will know OrRTI Project expectations

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