making response-to- intervention (rti) work in your schools jim wright

30
www.interventionc entral.org Jim Wright Making Response- To- Intervention (RTI) Work in Your Schools Jim Wright www.interventioncentral.org

Upload: brook

Post on 25-Feb-2016

48 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in Your Schools Jim Wright www.interventioncentral.org. Any darn mule can kick a barn down, but it takes a carpenter to build one. --Lyndon Johnson. Changes to LD Definition in Part 200 (NYS Regs). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Making Response-To-Intervention (RTI) Work in

Your Schools

Jim Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org

Page 2: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Any darn mule can kick a barn down,

but it takes a carpenter to build

one.--Lyndon Johnson

Page 3: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Changes to LD Definition in Part 200 (NYS Regs)Learning disabilities. In determining whether a student has a learning disability …, the school district:

(i) may use a process that determines if the student responds to scientific, research-based intervention as part of the evaluation procedures [Response-to-Intervention Model] …;

and

(ii) is not required to consider whether a student has a severe discrepancy between achievement and intellectual ability in oral expression, listening comprehension, written expression, basic reading skill, reading comprehension, mathematical calculation or mathematical reasoning [Discrepancy Model].

Emergency Adoption of Amendment of Section 100.2 and Parts 101, 200 and 201 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education to Conform to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) of 2004 – Effective September 13, 2005

Page 4: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Dueling Models: Discrepancy vs. Response to Intervention

Page 5: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Discrepancy (‘Wait to Fail’) ModelLD identified by giving a battery of standardized tests and looking for significant gaps between students' achievement and intellectual ability. The tester infers that a profile of strengths and weaknesses revealed in cognitive and achievement tests have direct real-world application to the student’s classroom performance.

Page 6: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Inference as a Reasoning Tool

in·fer·ence

‘The act or process of deriving logical conclusions from premises known or assumed to be true.’-The American Heritage Dictionary

Page 7: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Learning Disabilities: Medical Model

“Traditionally, disability is viewed as a deficit that resides within the individual, the severity of which might be influenced, but not created, by contextual variables.” (Vaughn & Fuchs, 2003)

Page 8: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Learning Disabilities: Medical Model Underlying premise-that LD is a ‘medical’

condition:– LD is explained as a neurological condition that

impacts on learning. Because LD is a physical, within-child condition, it is unlikely that changes in classroom instruction will significantly improve academic performance

– A formal battery of tests can diagnose LD, largely in isolation from classroom information

– Based on the profile of needs uncovered by testing results, specific ‘treatments’ can be prescribed to help the student learn

– These treatments are highly likely to be effective, making it unnecessary to measure their impact

Page 9: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Discrepancy Model: Limitations

Some possible limitations to the 'discrepancy model‘:

– is built upon a high-inference assumption (that LD is best explained as a medical condition)

– requires chronic school failure before special education supports can be given

– fails to consider that outside factors such as poor or inconsistent instruction may contribute to a child's learning delays

Page 10: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Response-to-Intervention (RTI) Model LD identified as follows:

– Schools identify children experiencing significant academic delays,

– match them up with scientific, research-based interventions,

– and monitor these students' progress.

A child's failure to respond positively to several carefully selected, well-implemented interventions could then be viewed as evidence that the student has a learning disability and requires special education services.

Page 11: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Learning Disabilities: RTI Underlying premise-that LD is an interaction

between child and instructional environment:– Student academic deficits can best be gauged by

observing the child engage in tasks from classroom curriculum and reviewing work products

– Interventions are a quasi-experiment (no assurance a priori that the intervention will actually benefit the student)

– Ongoing progress-monitoring is required to document ‘response to intervention’

– LD is diagnosed when all competing external explanations for poor student performance (e.g., inadequate instruction) are ruled out

Page 12: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

RTI Model: Limitations

Some possible limitations to the ‘Response-To-Intervention Model‘ (Vaughn & Fuchs, 2003):

– Has ‘arbitrary cutpoint’ on a continuum of non-responding

– Interventions and monitoring procedures have not been fully validated across grade levels

– Lacks clear guidelines for when ‘enough is enough’ in intervention efforts

Page 13: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

‘Curriculum Train’

Page 14: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Instructional Variables: What Difference Does a Teacher Make?Statistician Dr. Richard Sanders analyzed longitudinal data from Tennessee state assessments—by teacher and by student…

Findings…

Page 15: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

“Three consecutive years of first quintile (least-effective) teachers in grades three-five yield math scores from the 35th to 45th percentile. Conversely, three straight years of fifth quintile (most-effective) teachers result in scores at the 85th to 95th percentile.”

--USA Today, 2001 (Publication of the Society for the Advancement of Education)

Page 16: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

1. Identify & Verify the Scope of the Problem

2. Select Interventions That Address ‘Root Cause’

3. Set Goals for Improvement

4. Monitor Student Progress & Evaluate Outcome

Solving Student Academic or Behavioral Problems: A Four-

Part Model

Page 17: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

RTI: “ …a process that determines if the student responds to scientific, research-based intervention…”

The devil is in the details!

Page 18: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Target Student

Skill Gap (Current Performance Level)

Avg Classroom Academic Performance Level

‘Dual-Discrepancy’: RTI Model of Learning Disability (Fuchs 2003)

Gap in Rate of Learning (‘Slope of Improvement’)

Page 19: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

RTI: School-Wide Three-Tier Framework (Kovaleski, 2003)

Tier IIITier III‘Long-Term Programming for Students Who Fail to Respond to Tier II Interventions’ (e.g., Special Education)

Tier ITier I

‘School-Wide Screening & Group Intervention’

Tier IITier II‘Non-Responders’ to Tier I Are Identified & Given ‘Individually Tailored’ Interventions (e.g., peer tutoring/fluency)

Page 20: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Tier II: ‘Non-Responders’ to Universally Available Instructional Support (Fuchs et al., 2003; Kovaleski, 2003)

Tier II assistance can be provided through: • Team-based support to the classroom teacher,

or• A “short-term course of pull-out intervention that

is based on a standard protocol of empirically validated instructional treatments” e.g., peer tutoring with fluency-building procedures (Kovaleski, 2003)

Page 21: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Curriculum-Based Measurement & RTI

Page 22: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Using Data for Intervention (RTI) Team Referrals

Teacher Referral

Initial Meeting Held

Follow-Up Meeting Held

Intervention Started & Monitored

Baseline Data (e.g. CBM) Collected

Progress-Monitoring Data (e.g. CBM) Collected

Page 23: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Formative Assessment to Monitor Response to Intervention

• Definition: “Ongoing assessment of progress toward a long-term or major objective.”

• Example: Curriculum-Based Measurement in Reading Fluency or Math Computation

Page 24: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Formative Assessment: Advantages

• Provides teacher with ‘pulse measures’: ongoing information about student progress

• Permits teacher to see direct impact of teaching strategies on student performance

• Allows teacher to create ‘local norms’ against which to compare the academic performance of a target student

• Prevents instructor from spending too much time, effort on strategies that are ineffective

Page 25: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Page 26: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Sample Peer Tutoring Chart

Page 27: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

Sample Peer Tutoring Charts

Page 28: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

• ‘Tests’ preselected objectives from local curriculum• Has standardized directions for administration• Is timed, yielding fluency, accuracy scores• Uses objective, standardized, ‘quick’ guidelines for

scoring• Permits charting and teacher feedback

Curriculum-Based Measurement : Defining Characteristics:

Page 29: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

• Reading fluency• Math computation• Writing• Spelling• Phonemic awareness skills

CBM Techniques have been developed to assess:

Page 30: Making Response-To- Intervention (RTI) Work in  Your Schools Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org

Jim Wright

www.interventioncentral.org