Title: Problem Solving: An essential component of RtI
1Problem SolvingAn essential component of RtI
- Ann Casey, Ph.D.
- Director
- MN Response to Intervention Center
- St. Croix River Ed. District
- acasey_at_scred.k12.mn.us. 651-303-5806
2What are the Big Ideas?
- What is Response to Intervention?
- What are the foundations of RtI?
- What is Problem Solving in a Response to
Intervention model? - How do we begin to implement a Problem Solving
process in my school?
3Fundamental Assumptions
- All the students are all our responsibility
- All students can make progress when given the
amount and kind of support needed - Teaching to the middle doesnt meet all students
needs. - Therefore, we must use our resources in new,
different and collaborative ways to ensure each
student is as successful as possible!
4One final assumption
- Schools and teachers have not been given all the
tools and/or training needed to implement such a
model where all resources are organized around
ensuring each student is as successful as possible
5RtI and Problem Solving
- School Improvement is the outcome of using
Problem Solving to implement a Response to
Intervention model.
6What is RtI?
- Response to Intervention is a 3 tiered model of
instructional support for all students - RtI is a process comprised of 3 main components
- Evidenced Based Instructional practices
- System of Universal Screening and Progress
Monitoring - Problem Solving as a decision making system to
determine who gets what interventions, when and
by whom
7Whats a 3-tiered system?
8(No Transcript)
9Why a pyramid?
Another way to view the model - an aerial
view The main point is - that all students
deserve a strong instructional foundation
Tier 1
Tier 2
Tier 3
10Why does my school need a 3 tiered system?
- Many schools have had few options for struggling
students - Title I services or special education - Those have not been ideal methods in preventing
failure - In fact, special education has really been a
wait to fail model, and Title I is a funding
source and whether those resources resulted in
student improvement varies greatly from school to
school
11What is Problem Solving in a Response to
Intervention Model? Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â
              Â
- One necessary but not sufficient component - must
have Evidenced Based instructional practices as
well as a frequent measurement system in place
12Problem Solving
RtI an Integrated System
Measurement
Instruction
13Building PS team IEP consideration
Grade Level teams
Resources for Problem Solving
Teacher Parent
Intensity of the problem
Adapted from Tilly, 2002
14Origins of Problem Solving
- Bergan (1977) Kratochwill Bergan (1990)
Behavioral Consultation - Heartland AEA (IA) started training teams in
Problem Solving in the late 80s - SCRED started training teams in a problem solving
process in the early 90s - MPS Problem Solving Model - mid 90s as an
alternative process to identify students with
mild academic disabilities
15Problem Solving is used in each part of the
pyramid
- Grade level teams problem-solve regarding core
instruction as well as deciding who are
candidates for tier 2 interventions - A building problem solving team may decide who
needs more intensive, tier 3 support, including
special education.
16Old Problem Solving compared to RtI Problem
Solving
- Old
- Student referred
- One student at a time
- Decisions not necessarily data-based
- RtI
- Teaching teams review data of all students in the
team - Students not at benchmark are targeted for Tier 2
support in addition to strong core instruction
17Collaborative Problem Solving
- Grade level teaching teams meet together on a
regular basis to review student data and student
progress toward important goals - Students not making adequate progress receive
additional targeted or intensive support
18Problem Solving A 5 step process
- Problem Identification
- Problem Analysis
- Plan Development
- Plan Implementation
- Plan Evaluation
19Problem Identification
- This step is about clearly defining the problem
in terms of alterable variables - Lets start with student data.
- Cant wait until 3rd grade to see who is not
successful - We need a measure that is easy to use and highly
predictive - Something we can use much earlier when
intervention can change the trajectory
20Problem Identification
- An example The second grade team has identified
10 students out of 75 students who are not at
benchmark.
21What is the problem?
- If the benchmark in fall for 2nd graders is 32
cwpm, the problem is that we have 10 students
below benchmark. - What other data might you need to determine more
specifically why these students are not reading
at benchmark?
22(No Transcript)
23Problem Analysis
- Why is the problem happening?
- This step helps us look at data to make
hypotheses about why students arent being
successful - Those hypotheses then help us choose
interventions that best fit the identified
problem
24Problem Analysis - is about the why
- Is the problem due to
- Curriculum - what is taught
- Instruction - how its taught
- Educational Environment - where the instruction
takes place - variables unique to the Learner - who is being
taught prior knowledge - caution - try not to focus on fixed or
unalterable variables.
25Use RIOT procedures to analyze those 4 areas
- Review - existing data, records
- Interview - teachers, student, parents
- Observe - student engagement, other relevant
variables - Test - pattern of errors, prosody, fluency,
comprehension
26Problem Analysis 2nd grade example
- Curriculum is HM the Nations Choice - found to
be a core program that is evidenced based - The teacher was interviewed and also observed by
a coach and it was determined that the curriculum
was being implemented with fidelity
27P.A. continued
- Lets say we did running records (test/observe)
on the 10 students below benchmark - We find that 7 of the 10 students did not have
strong sound/symbol relationships - 3 students read with 3 or fewer errors, but were
word-by-word readers - If 1 student read considerably well when tested
one/one - what hypothesis would you make? - What kind of instruction will they need?
28Plan Development
- What should we do about the problem?
- What do we know that will help with developing a
plan? - What other information might we need?
29Plan Implementation
- We need at least 2 groups - tier 2 supports.
Does a student who does not demonstrate a skill
deficit need a tier 2 intervention? - What measurable goals could you write for these 2
groups
30Sample Goal statements
- Given 44 sounds, the students will demonstrate 95
accuracy within 3 weeks on isolated letter
sound probes - Given 1st grade decodable text, the students will
read 30 cwpm with 5 or fewer errors in 6 weeks. - Given late 1st grade text, students will read 50
cwpm with fluency and expression and 3 or fewer
errors.
31Maria S. Goal read 55 cwpm in late 1st grade
decodable text
70
60
50
Goal line
Words Read Correctly/min.
40
30
20
10
0
9/14
9/21
9/28
10/5
10/12
32What interventions shall we use?
- Write down some ideas you have for each of the 2
groups.
33How do we find targeted curriculum/instruction
that is evidenced based?
- What Works Clearing House - www.whatworks.ed.gov
- Oregon Reading First-oregonreadingfirst.uoregon.ed
u/ - curriculum_review.php
- Promising Practices - www.promisingpractices.net
34Plan continued
- Teaching team generates some ideas, and then
selects one for each group that is matched to
student needs - Then the team must identify who is going to
provide the interventions and when it will
happen. - This should not supplant the core instruction
35Instructional Plan
T Sharon G M-F 1015-1045 WCPM weekly on
F Review Date 10-12-07 Intervention RM Fast
Cycle Students Joan Brandon H Ava Quentin Jorge J
ackson Maria E
T Joyce M-F 1045 - 1115 WCPM weekly on
F. Review Date 10-12-07 Intervention Read
Naturally Students John Samantha Maria S
36Intervention Integrity
- Interventions may not be successful for 3 general
reasons - (1) not a good match (fit) to student needs or
- (2) it might be a good fit but not of sufficient
strength (amount/dosage) - (3) the intervention design was not followed as
it was designed (integrity)
37Potential Implementation Issues
- Consider time efficiency
- Complexity - interventions need to be easily
understood - Resources needed
- Teacher motivation - efficacy data are the best
motivators
38Key Features of accuracy of implementation
- Adhere to established procedures/protocols
- Implement for the intended length of time
(dosage) - Can use intervention scripts this helps the
intervener as well as the person observing for
adherence
39Plan Evaluation
- Did our plan work?
- Which students met the goal? What should we do to
maintain that progress? - Which students did not meet the goal?
- Decide whether students need to continue longer
in the intervention to show progress - Or whether to alter the intervention
- Or to discontinue and try a different evidenced
based practice
40Maria S. Goal read 55 cwpm in late 1st grade
decodable text
70
60
50
Goal line
Words Read Correctly/min.
40
30
20
10
0
9/14
9/21
9/28
10/5
10/12
41Cycle back to Problem Analysis
- Further analysis of the concerns is warranted
when students are not making the expected
progress - When a more intensive intervention is recommended
(more time, smaller group) and considered a Tier
3 support, more individualized problem-solving
records should be kept
42Tier 3
- Some students will respond to more intensive
interventions, and return to Tier 2 or 1 support
levels. - Other students will demonstrate a need for
ongoing intensive intervention, and may be
considered for special education services. - The problem solving records will become integral
components of the referral and special education
evaluation process in an RtI Model
43Tier 3 planning form
1. Define behavior (providing specifics from Tier
2) - data, intervention, what worked, what didnt
work
2. Current vs. expected performance - frequency,
level, rate, accuracy
3. State specific goal
4. List possible interventions and rate the
likelihood of success- create hypotheses about
why the student is not progressing and try to
address those
5. Write the intervention plan with integrity
check indicating who is responsible, when it
will occur, for how long, and date of follow-up
44Tier 3 continued concern
- For those students who continue to be far from
the goal, and the data indicate that the student
may need ongoing, intensive instruction, then
staff may consider referring for special
education services - Intensive services are generally defined as those
that can not be maintained over time by the
general ed. teacher
45RtI and Special Education
- In MN, districts have a choice between using a
Response to Intervention approach or the
traditional Ability-Achievement discrepancy
formula for identifying students with learning
problems.
46Selected References
- Jimerson, S., Burns, M., VanDerHeyden. A.
2007. Handbook of Response to Intervention