Title: MultiTiered Instruction
1Multi-Tiered Instruction
2Objectives
- Introduce participants to the
- multi-tiered model
- Highlight key information about early reading
research - Heighten participants sense of urgency about
early intervention
3 The best way to predict the future is to invent
it. John Sculley, 1987
4What is Multi-Tiered Instruction?
- Systematic, data driven organization
- Smart use of resources
- Differentiation more options
- EARLY INTERVENTION
- Accountability
- New ways for adults to work together
- A response to ever increasing diversity
5First, getting it straight
Multi-Tiered Instruction
Response to Intervention
- Is a system of organizing general education
curriculum and instruction to meet the needs of
all students - Integrates all supplementary support programs in
order use resources more efficiently - Applies to all students in a school
- Can exist without using Response to Intervention
- Is an evaluation procedure identified in the IDEA
for identifying children as having learning
disabilities - Is a special education procedure that is limited
to assessment - Applies only to children suspected of having LD
- Cannot be implemented without a system like MTI
in place
6Why?
- One size doesnt fit all
- We dont have enough resources to intervene one
by one - We miss kids
- We wait too long to intervene
7Differences Learning to ReadEstimates from NICHD
research (NC Dept. of Public Education)
8We cant intervene one by one. . .
- Overall, national longitudinal studies show that
more than 17.5 percent of the nation's
children--about 10 million children--will
encounter reading problems in the crucial first
three years of their schooling" - (National Reading Panel Progress Report, 2000).
- In a 500 student school
- 400 students will do fine with a good core
curriculum - 75 students will need systematic, ongoing
specialized instruction - 25 students will need intensive, individualized
intervention
9We miss kids. . .
- We over-identify some children
- Boys
- Language minority
- Economically disadvantaged students
- We under-identify some children
- Girls
- Economically privileged students
10We wait too long to intervene. . .and it really
matters because
- Reading makes you smarter
- Every week a child is not reading, the chance
there will be long term negative effects
increases - Cognitive
- Reading
- Motivation
- Mindset, Dr. Carol Dweck
11Reading skill forms self concept
- When kids are hesitant, disfluent,
inaccurate, slow and labored in reading, that is
very visible to their peers and remember the
peers, the other kids, again look at reading as a
proxy for intelligence. It doesnt matter if this
kid is already a genius and can do algebra in the
second grade, reading produces particular
perceptions. Better said, lousy reading produces
a perception of stupidity and dumbness to peers
and clearly to the youngster who is struggling.
That is the shame. There are very visible
differences between kids who are doing well with
print and youngsters who are struggling with
print. They feel like theyre failures they
tell us that . - Reid Lyon, Children of the Code, 2006
12We wait too long to intervene. . .and it matters
- If intervention does not occur before age 7
- 75 of children will continue to struggle
throughout school (Adams, 1990) - Approximately 75 of students identified with
reading problems in the third grade are still
reading disabled in the 9th grade. (Shaywitz, et
al., 1993 Francis et al., 1996)
13Reading makes children smarter
- This is a stunning finding because it means
that students who get off to a fast start in
reading are more likely to read more over the
years, and, furthermore, this very act of reading
can help children compensate for modest levels of
cognitive ability by building their vocabulary
and general knowledge. In other words, ability is
not the only variable that counts in the
development of intellectual functioning. Those
who read a lot will enhance their verbal
intelligence that is, reading will make them
smarter. - Cunningham and Stanovich, 1998
14What did he say?
- Those who read have more
- Vocabulary
- General Knowledge
- When you learn more, your brain and intellect
develops - Shaywitz, Fletcher, etc.
- This is more important for those with poor
backgrounds or less innate ability - Reading and the Brain
15The Matthew Effect
- The rich get richer and the poor get poorer.
In other words, good readers get smarter while
poor readers fall farther and farther behind.
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19Early reading can change a childs future
- Reading is a key to vocabulary development
- Vocabulary is the lynchpin of comprehension,
prior knowledge and many cognitive skills
20Implications for vocabulary development
- ESTABLISHED READERS Learn about 3000 words per
year by reading - POOR READERS Could learn 300-500 words per year
if provided explicit vocabulary instruction
21Implications for vocabulary development
- Independent Reading
- tile Minutes Per Day
Words Read Per Year - 98 65.0 4,358,000
- 90 21.1 1,823,000
- 80 14.2 1,146,000
- 70 9.6 622,000
- 60 6.5 432,000
- 50 4.6 282,000
- 40 3.2 200,000
- 30 1.3 106,000
- 20 0.7 21,000
- 10 0.1 8,000
- 2 0.0 0
- Adapted from Anderson,Wilson, and Fielding
(1988).
22What about developmental readiness?
- More on Reading and the Brain
23So What?
- How does this research about early learning and
the brain change your thinking about
Kindergarten? - What practices would change in your school in
grades K-3?
24So. . . we adopt a new way of thinking about
- Kids
- Curriculum
- Time
- Teamwork
25TIER III Intensive Intervention Progress
Monitoring
The Multi-Tiered Model
5
TIER II Strategic Intervention Progress
Monitoring
15
TIER I Research-Based Core Instruction
Screening for ALL students
80 of Students
3-Tiered Continuum (Walker, 1996)
26Moved to Tiers
Beyond Tiers
Ozone
Insensitive Level
Texas Tiers
? non-responders
Tier 17 Zoned in Zoned out
Tier 2 Passing Zone
Zone of Proximal Development
Tier 1 Severely and Profoundly OK a.k.a the
Bore level