Title: Responsiveness to Instruction RtI
1Responsiveness to Instruction(RtI)
-
- Sherry H. Abernethy
- Consultant for LD
- Program Improvement and Professional Development
- Exceptional Children Division
- 2009
2What is Your Educational Philosophy?
- Team activity
- Characteristics or qualities of a great school
- Discuss among your school team
- Write or draw your response on the paper
3Time To Share
4Lets Discuss
- Common Characteristics
- Whats in place?
- What can be added?
- How can we facilitate changes?
5Clarify the Terms
- National Model Response to Intervention
- North Carolina Model Responsiveness to
Instruction - Why the difference?
- Intervention sounds like Special Ed
- Instruction ties the initiative to student
achievement and away from Special Ed
6If we really believe that all children can learn,
then
- it is not acceptable for
- any child to fail to learn
7How Do We Do This?
- Educate all students regardless of prior
knowledge or experience - Address a wide range of experience and skill
levels
8The Challenge
- Provide instruction at the appropriate
instructional level -
9In Other Words
- focus on an intervention rather than on what is
wrong with the student
10In Other Words
- focus on the solution rather than the problem
11In Other Words
- focus on addressing the
- needs of ALL students having
- difficulty, not just those
- with labels
12In Other Words
- focus on ALL educators being responsible for ALL
students
13NC DPI Definition
- The practice of providing high quality
instruction matched to student need, monitoring
progress frequently to make decisions about
changes in instruction or goals and applying
child response data to important educational
decisions. - Response to Intervention Policy
Considerations and Implementation, - National Association of State Directors of
Special Education, Inc. - i
14Responsiveness to Instruction
- Born out of
- Reauthorization of Special Ed Law (IDEA 2004)
-
- Data supports instructional decisions made about
individual students, classes, and school-wide
services
15Responsiveness to Instruction
- The NC Problem-Solving Model addresses this
provision in IDEA - It operationally defines the alignment between
regular education (NCLB) and special education
(IDEA) legislation
16What is Needed?
- Early intervention
- Appropriate, targeted instruction
- Accurate assessment with valid, reliable data
- Informed instructional decisions
- Researched-based teaching strategies
17How is This Different?
- Creates a shift in focus
- Eliminates Wait to Fail
- Early intervening to prevent
- failure
- More efficient use of resources
18In Other Words.
- RtI is
- a change in emphasis toward assessing risk and
providing targeted intervention and away from
determining failure. - Allan Lloyd-Jones
- Special Education Division
- California Department of Education
19RtI is Not.
- A packaged program
- A curriculum
- Special Ed
- Just for eligibility identification
- A place in the building
RtI
20RtI is.
- Process that uses all resources within a school
- Well-integrated system of instruction and
interventions - Guided by student outcome data
- Early intervention
- Prevention of academic and
- behavioral problems
RtI
21RtI is.
- Whole school working together
- Using resources and expertise to help all
students - Regular monitoring of success/needs
- Data driven instruction !
RtI
22RtI is.
- Multi-step process
- High-quality, research-based instruction and
interventions - Varying levels of intensity
- Match interventions to
- students needs
RtI
23Implementation of RtI
- Three Components
- Prevention
- Intervention
- Part of SLD determination
24Prevention
- Universal screening
- Screen all students on basic skills in reading,
math, writing - Review data
- Compare performance to peers at grade level in
the same school - Intervene
- Use Research-based intervention
- Help before failure
- Chance to catch up
25Intervention
- Weekly/Daily Probes
- Progress is frequently monitored
- Compare norms
- Peers/LEA/State achievement appropriate for
grade - Make changes
- Intervention/delivery/frequency
26Component of SLD Eligibility
- RtI
- Only one component
- Law requirement
- Documented research-based interventions
- Monitoring
- NC Policies require progress monitoring of
interventions - Quality instruction
- Policies require evidence of appropriate
instruction in content areas
27Dual-Discrepancy RTI Model of Learning
Disability (Fuchs 2003)
28So How Does Leadership Fit in?
29Leadership results from
- Having a mission and relentlessly pursuing it.
- (Tilly
Grimes, 2008)
30- Effective leadership is about
- Unwavering resolve to do
- what must be done. Jim Collis
31Strong Leaders
- Set goals for the school
- Communicate clear expectations
- Unify staff share ownership
- Align and integrate resources to address needs of
all students - Provide flexibility with personnel duties and
scheduling -
-
- Adapted from Tilly Grimes 2008
32Hows Our Team Work ?
33Individually, we are one drop. Together we are
an ocean. Ryunosuke Satoro
34Effective Schools
- Address Achievement
- Address behavioral / emotional health of students
- Have parental involvement
- Are proactive rather than reactive
- Utilize data to make instructional decisions
35RtI is About School Improvement
- Coming together is a beginning.
- Keeping together is progress.
- Working together is success.
- Henry Ford
36RtIConnection to Student Achievement
- Identify performance level and pinpoint specific
areas - Assess core curriculum
- Develop / implement appropriate instructional
plans - Progress Monitoring through Frequent Assessment
- Data-based decision making for instruction and
goals
37- North Carolina
- RtI Model
- Problem-Solving Model
38Fundamentals of a Problem-Solving Model (PSM)
- Identify
- What the student knows
- What they should know
- Areas to target for instruction
- Develop an intervention plan
- Implement the plan
- Monitor student progress
- Evaluate, review, and revise the plan
39The NC Problem-Solving Model
Tier IV IEP Consideration
Tier III Consultation with the Problem Solving
Action Team
Tier II Consultation With Other Resources
Tier I Consultation Between Teachers-Parents
Amount of Resources Required to Address Need(s)
Significance of Need(s)
40School-Wide system of support for student
achievement should look like this
Intensive Intervention 5
Strategic Interventions 15
Core Curriculum 80
41Tier IV Entitlement Consideration
Tier III Consultation with the Problem
Solving Action Team
Tier II Consultation With Other Resources
Tier I Consultation Between Teachers-Parents
Intensive
Amount of Resources Required to Address Need(s)
Strategic
Benchmark
Significance of Need(s)
42Collaboration of Initiatives in NC
- RtI
- Positive Behavior Support (PBS)
- Instructional Consultation Training (ICT)
- State Improvement Project (SIP) Grants
- Reading
- Math
43RtI Positive Behavior Support (PBS)
- Both are problem-solving models
- Both can address behavior
- Both can run together in the same school
- Difference PBS does not move to eligibility and
addresses school-wide behavior
44School Improvement
45RtI and Instructional Consultation (ICT)
- Both are problem-solving models
- Both can address academic concerns
- Both can run together in the same school
- Difference ICT does not move to eligibility
46RtI and SIP Grants
- Math Foundations
- 5 day training in fundamentals of math
- Based on National Math Panel
- Reading Foundations
- 5 day training in fundamentals of reading
- Based on National Reading Panel
47How Do We Measure Progress?
48Progress Monitoring with Curriculum Based
Measurement (CBM)
- Curriculum based
- Impacts students on various skill levels and with
different abilities - Improves communication
- Has a higher level of sensitivity
- Can be administered frequently
49Progress Monitoring with CBM (contd)
- Allows for visual representation-graph results
- Data used to inform instruction
- Type of Formative Assessment
50Location of Five Original Pilot LEAs in NC-2004
Bertie County, Burke County, Guilford County,
Harnett County, New Hanover County
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52New Hanover Data
- African American Students
- In 2004-05 1.70 times more likely to be
referred - In 2006-07 1.02 times more likely to be referred
53New Hanover Data
- In 2004-05 13.1 of students with IEP
- In 2006-07 12.1 of students with IEP
- (12 elementary schools)
54New Hanover Data
- In 2006-07
- 53 of students found eligible were in grades
K-2 - In 2006-07
- 80 of students found eligible were in grades K-3
55New Hanover Data
- Disproportionality in 2006-07
- 15 of students eligible were African American
males - Equivalent to incidence of AA male in membership
56New Hanover Data
- Referral to Special Education
- Compared to 2004-05, 83 fewer students
- Served with Intervention Plan
- Compared to 2004-05, 28 fewer students
57Burke County Data
- Mull Elementary
- 05-06 Students to SST 26 Students
Entitled 6 - 06-07 Students to SST 35
Students Entitled 5 - 07-08 Students to SST 36 Students
Entitled 3
- W.A. Young Elementary
- 05-06 Students to SST 59
- Students Entitled 4
- 06-07 Students to SST 55
- Students Entitled 3
58Guilford County DataNorthwood Elementary
- 2003-04
- Summary of Initial EC Referrals 2003-04 by Grade
Level - Gr Level Referrals Did Not Qualify
Qualified for EC - K 4 1 4
- 1 5 1 5
- 2 2 1 1
- 3 5 2 3
- 4 1 0 1
- 5 4 2 2
59Guilford County DataNorthwood Elementary
- 2006-07--Year 2 of PSM Implementation
60Summary RtI
- Adequate Yearly Progress is tied to individual
student progress - Individual student progress can be positively
impacted through - high quality instruction
- frequent assessment
- use of data to inform instruction
- All this GOOD TEACHING
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83RESPONSIVENESS TO INSTRUCTION FOUNDATIONS
TRAINING
- RtI Overview (1/2 day)
- Procedure
- Guidelines
- Best Practice
- Module I Introduction to Problem Solving (1
day) - Research
- Legislation
- Steps in the Problem Solving Process
84- Module II Functional Assessment (1 1/2 days)
- Fundamentals of assessment
- Types of Assessment
- RIOT
- CBA
- CBM
- Progress monitoring
- Analyzing data and decision making
- Case Studies
- Module III Reading Overview / Interventions
- (1 day)
- Components of reading
- What the research says
- Using data to make decisions
- Reading interventions
85- Module IV Positive Behavioral Support Overview
/ Interventions (1 day) - What the research says
- Components of effective behavior practices
- Classroom interventions
- Module V Mathematics Overview / Interventions
(1 day) - What the research says
- Using data to make decisions
- Mathematics interventions
86- Module VI Case Studies / Q and A (1 day)
- Instructional Consultation Overview
- Problem Solving Case Studies
- Small Group Activities
- Review of Problem Solving and Functional
Assessment - Module VII Next Steps / Resources (1 day)
- Selecting a Team
- Developing a schedule for training and long range
plan for training and implementation - Conducting a School Audit
- Developing a Plan based on audit findings
- Resources
87RtI is an EDUCATION INITIATIVE
88- Additional information and resources
89Resources and Special Thanks
- The Special Edge (Autumn 2007,Volume 20)
- www.interventioncentral.org
- Dr. Dan Reschly
- Dr. Tom Jenkins
- John Gann, Burke County Schools
- Additional Resource
- http//www.nasdse.org/
90More Information
- www.ncpublicschools.org/ec/development/learning/re
sponsiveness/rtimaterials - Sherry H. Abernethy
- sabernethy_at_dpi.state.nc.us
- 919-807-3994