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RTI² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention Program Specialist Division of Student Support Services: Special Populations, 8/27/15

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Page 1: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

RTI² - Response to Instruction & Intervention:

Problems of PracticeJoann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist

Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention Program Specialist

Division of Student Support Services: Special Populations, 8/27/15

Page 2: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Success and Challenges

What is RTI2 ?• High quality core instruction• Prevention and early intervention• Intensive Intervention • A means to close achievement gaps• A means to meet AMOs• Grounded in thirty years of research

What RTI2 is Not?• It is not a replacement of core instruction• It is not just a special education initiative• Is not a new initiative that will go away• A Race to Identify students

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Page 3: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

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The Challenge

Currently, nearly 50% of all Americans reach their mid-20s without the skills or credentials essential for success in today’s

increasingly demanding workforce.

 If we fail to expand the ways in which we educate and prepare our students for postsecondary education and the workforce, their future quality of life will suffer, our communities will lose out on unrealized contributions, and the impact on our various

economies will be pronounced.

In Tennessee, 55% of existing and predicted jobs will require at least a technical certification or a two-year degree and relevant

workplace skills by 2025.

Page 4: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Why Focus on Long Term Success?

A student who can't read on grade level by 3rd grade is 4x’s less likely to graduate by age 19 than a child who does read proficiently in 3rd grade. Add poverty to the mix, and a student is 13x’s less likely to graduate on time than his or her proficient, wealthier peer.

(American Educational Research Association)

16% of students overall do not receive a diploma by age 19, but students who struggle with reading in the first few years of elementary school comprise 88% of those who do not receive a diploma.

(Bureau of Labor Statistics National Longitudinal Study of Youth)

http://www.readinghorizons.com/blog/post/2011/04/20/Poor-Reading-Skills-Are-Responsiblefor-More-Dropouts-Than-Poverty.aspx

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Page 5: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tennessee Promise An enormous opportunity for our children

• All Tennessee high school graduates provided two years of free education at a community college or Tennessee College of Applied Technology (TCAT)

• Participants also receive individual guidance through statewide network of volunteer mentors

• Tennessee needs an additional 494,000 to reach 55 percent by 2025, particularly from programs at TCATs and two-year schools.

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Page 6: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

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Tennessee is the first state to have a free, public K-14 education system

Page 7: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

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TDOE Goal

• By 2017, the RTI2 Framework will reduce the number of students scoring below basic on the NAEP.

Page 8: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Accountability System Two Overarching Objectives

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and

Growth for all students, every year

Faster growth for those students who are furthest behind

Page 9: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Beliefs

• Every student can learn, demonstrate growth, and has the right to actively participate in high quality, research-based education that maximizes their potential in the least restrictive environment.

• Specialized education is a continuum of services, not a place.

• Relationships with all stakeholders, based on respect and understanding will result in making decisions in the best interest of ALL students.

• Every staff member has the responsibility to teach, support and encourage ALL students.

• Strong leadership at every level is the foundation of a collaborative and inclusive environment that supports ALL students.

• High quality professional learning in conjunction with family and community support, empowers all stakeholders to collaboratively build capacity for the success of ALL students.

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Page 10: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Guiding Principles Leadership at all levels is essential for ensuring the success of all students throughout the RTI² Framework. (state, district, building level)

A culture of collaboration that is focused on student achievement, for all students, should include educators, families and communities.

RTI2 focuses on prevention and early intervention that uses assessment data for instruction, intervention and transitions between tiers. This is includes differentiation of instruction.

What does this all mean to me as a content specific teacher?

Page 11: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Continuum of Instructional Support

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•ALL students•Core Instruction•Differentiated to meet diverse needs

Tier I Instruction

•In addition to Tier I

•Skills focused•Targeted to student deficits

vTier II

Intervention

•In addition to Tier I

•Skills focused•Intensive to meet specific student needs

Tier III Intervention

•In addition to Tier I •Most Intensive support to meet individualized student needs

•Highest frequency of monitoring

Special Education

Intervention

Becomes more specific and intense

Page 12: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tennessee Standards

Tier I: Core Instruction

Page 13: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Core Instruction

• Classroom instruction for all - State Standards

• Research shows 80-85% of students will respond to Tier I

• Recommended Instructional Time• ELA: K-2/150 min; 3-5/90 min; 6-12/55 traditional 90 block• Math: K-1/60 min; 2/75min; 3-5/90 min; 6-12/55 traditional 90 block

• Ongoing Assessments (grade level checks, benchmarks)• Collect data points, determine patterns, track individuals and

groups,• Guide instruction (teach/assess/monitor/adjust)

• Fidelity Monitoring (Team, Student Data, etc…)

• Universal Screener (K-8, recommended 9-12)(students below 25% go to Tier II)

Page 14: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Differentiation and Scaffolding

• Students who have a skill deficit have that deficit all day.

• It is imperative that Tier I teachers understand a student’s area of deficit and differentiate and scaffold core instruction for each student accordingly.

Why is this important? I need to teach my grade level Tennessee State

Standards.

Page 15: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Differentiation vs. Scaffolding

Differentiation is a framework or philosophy for effective teaching that involves providing different students with different avenues to learning

Scaffolding is breaking up the learning into chunks and then providing a tool, or structure, with each chunk.

Page 16: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Re-teaching VS. Intervention

Tier I – Tennessee State Standards• Goal is to reteach standards that

students are struggling with rather than specific skill deficits. These are your students close to being identified as proficient on district standards based assessments.

Standards Based Assessment:• Benchmark Assessment • Summative Assessment• Formative Assessment

Re-teaching InterventionTier II/III/Special Education Intervention• Goal is to provide research based

interventions aligned to specific skill deficit(s) as identified by a universal screener. The universal screener will identify skill needs in basic reading, fluency, comprehension, written expression, math calculation and math reasoning.

Skills Based Assessment:• Skills based universal screener aligned to

area(s) of deficit• Skills based Progress Monitoring specific to

area(s) of deficit• Formative assessmentHow do I ensure that this is happening

in our building/district?

Page 17: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

What does your Universal Screener tell you?

• Intervene on a standard• Tells you what to

reteach/remediate (Tier 1)• Adaptive. Task changes based

on student performance• Does not consistently measure

the same skill over and over to determine if intervention is working

Standards based Skills based

• Intervene on skill deficit/need• Warning system for your most

at-risk students and identifies discrete skill deficit(s)

• Not adaptive. Task does not change based on student performance

• Consistently measures same skill

• Independent of grade level standard

What is the difference between the two?

Page 18: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Areas of Deficit for Intervention

• Basic reading skills (letters, letter sounds, phonological awareness, phonics)

• Reading comprehension• Reading fluency• Written expression• Math calculation (column addition, basic facts,

complex computation, decimals, fractions, conversions, percentages, etc.)

• Math reasoning/problem solving (number and operations, base ten, place value, measurement and length, fractions, geometry, algebra, expressions, linear equations etc.)

Page 19: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tier II, Tier III or Sped Intervention: Core Instruction plus a skill specific intervention

Core Instruction

Tier II

Tier IIISped

Intervention

Does a student have to have Tier II

and Tier III simultaneously?

Page 20: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tier II: Targeted Intervention

What if we have an overwhelming number of students falling into Tier II?

Page 21: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tier II Interventions

• A change in intervention will be considered within each tier before moving to the next tier of intervention.

• 8-10 data points (if progress monitoring every other week) OR 10-15 data points (if progress monitoring weekly) are needed to make a sound data based decision.

• Number of data points reflects empirical research required to make an informed data based decision.

• The intervention must have empirical evidence supporting its use in remediating the area of suspected disability (i.e., Basic Reading Skills).

• A skills based progress monitoring tool must be able to provide evidence that the student did not make a sufficient amount of progress in the area of deficit.

Do we solely look at data points when making a decision for a student?

Page 22: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tier II - Intervention

• Progress Monitor (every 1-2 weeks in area of deficit)• Collect data points, determine patterns, track individuals

• Fidelity Monitoring (3 times a marking period, at least 2 direct observation)

• Rate of Improvement

• Taught by highly trained personnel

What is “highly trained personnel?”

Page 23: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tier III: Targeted Intervention

What if we have an overwhelming number of students falling into Tier III?

Page 24: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Does the student NEED more Intensive Intervention(s)?• Students may immediately require Tier III intensive

intervention. – If students are below the 10th percentile or 1.5 to 2.0 grade

levels behind. – Your data team should make these decisions on an individual

basis.

• Students who are immediately placed in Tier III level intervention must receive the minimum number of recommended minutes of intervention.

• The purpose of immediately placing a student in Tier III intervention is to increase the intensity of the intervention, not to shorten the duration of the intervention period. How do we increase intensity?

Page 25: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tier III Interventions

• A change in intervention will be considered within each tier before moving to the next tier of intervention.

• 8-10 data points (if progress monitoring every other week) OR 10-15 data points (if progress monitoring weekly) are needed to make a sound data based decision.

• Number of data points reflects empirical research required to make an informed data based decision.

• The intervention must be more intense than the intervention provided at Tier II.

• A skills based progress monitoring tool must be able to provide evidence that the student did not make a sufficient amount of progress in the area of deficit.

Do we solely look at data points when making a decision for a student?

Page 26: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Tier III - Intervention

• Progress Monitor (every 1-2 weeks in area of deficit)• Collect data points, determine patterns, track individuals

• Fidelity Monitoring • 5 times a marking period• 3 direct observation (at least)• 2 must be a review of implementation data (student

attendance, lesson plans, progress monitoring results

• Rate of Improvement

• Taught by highly trained personnel

Page 27: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Progress Monitoring and Fidelity ChecksProgress Monitoring

To support a student’s skill growth

Fidelity Checks

To support a teacher’s

implementation

These two pieces of data provide a complete picture of student progress.

What exactly does fidelity checks/monitoring look like? Who is responsible for this?

Page 28: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Initial Evaluations• If data indicates a student’s progress is not sufficient,

then the team may obtain Notice and Consent for Initial Evaluation.

• The team must complete all evaluations and establish the student’s eligibility for service within the initial evaluation timeline.

• The student will remain in intervention and will continue to be progress monitored while the requested evaluations are being completed.

• All information collected including the student’s responsiveness to intervention will be a part of the student’s eligibility determination.

If a child qualifies for special education, how does the intervention become more intensive? Does this mean a

child can’t benefit from Tier II or Tier III now that they are identified?

Page 29: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

SLD Definition

Beginning July 1, 2014, RTI² became the framework used to identify students with a Specific Learning Disability.

Page 30: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Clarifications

• Elementary Clarifications– Universal screening– Data based decision making– Progress monitoring– Fidelity checks– Tier II configuration

• Secondary Clarifications– Universal screening– Data based decision making– Protocols for determining intervention– Staffing – Progress monitoring – Fidelity checks

Page 31: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Resources

• www.TNCore.org

• www.tnspdg.com

Page 32: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

References

Developing a Culturally and Linguistically Responsive Approach to Response to Instruction & Intervention (RtI²) for English Language Learnersfile:///C:/Users/ca18722/Downloads/WIDA_RtI2_forELLs%20(7).pdf

Dear Colleague Letter, English Learner Students and Limited English Proficient Parents, January 7, 2015.http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-el-201501.pdf

The Differentiated Classroom: Responding to the Needs of All Learners Tomlinson, C. A. (2014). The Differentiated Classroom: Responding to the Needs of All Learners(2nd ed.). Alexandria, Virginia: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD).

How to Differentiate Instruction in Mixed Ability Classrooms Tomlinson, C. A. (2001). How to Differentiate Instruction in Mixed-Ability Classrooms (2nd ed.). Alexandria, Virginia: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD).

Indiana Department of Education: English Learners http://www.doe.in.gov/elme

Page 33: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Special Populations Team

Tie Hodack Executive Director of Instructional

[email protected]

@HodackTie

Alison GauldBehavior and Low Incidence Disabilities

[email protected]

@AlisonAGauld

Jill OmerSpeech, Language, and Autism

[email protected]

@Jill_Omer

Blake ShearerSecondary Transition and Intervention

[email protected]

Suzanne KeefeExecutive Director of Special

Populations [email protected]

Ryan MathisMathematics Interventionist

[email protected]

@RyanMathIsCool

Joann Lucero Literacy Interventionist Specialist

[email protected] @JoannL_81

Theresa Nicholls Director of Special Education

[email protected]

Page 34: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

QuestionsFeedback

TASL Credit Keyword

Page 35: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Questions?

Page 36: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

Feedback Survey

• At the end of each day, please help us by providing feedback.

• Today, please use the survey link below.

– https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/2015-ESEA-Aug-27

Page 37: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

TASL Credit

• In order to receive 14 TASL credits for the 2015 ESEA Directors Institute, the participant must attend two full days, August 26 – 27.– Partial credit cannot be earned.– Use the form provided at the back of the agenda to collect

keywords throughout the conference. – After the conference, go online to https://

www.surveymonkey.com/r/2015-ESEA-TASL and enter your information.

• You will not receive credit if you do not complete the online form by September 4, 2015.

Page 38: RTI ² - Response to Instruction & Intervention: Problems of Practice Joann Lucero, Literacy Intervention Program Specialist Ryan Mathis, Mathematics Intervention

FRAUD, WASTE or ABUSE

Citizens and agencies are encouraged to report fraud, waste or abuse in State and Local government.

NOTICE: This agency is a recipient of taxpayer funding. If you observe an agency director or employee engaging in any

activity which you consider to be illegal, improper or wasteful, please call the state Comptroller’s toll-free Hotline:

1-800-232-5454

Notifications can also be submitted electronically at:

http://www.comptroller.tn.gov/hotline