Title: Adapted for Geneva County Schools
1RTI Implementation Steps for Classroom Teachers
STUDENT SUCCESS
PST
RtI
- Adapted for Geneva County Schools
2Session outcomes.
- Today, you will
- Discuss essential elements of Tier 1 core
instruction in 4-12 - Discuss essential elements of Tier 2 classroom
support and intervention in 4-12 - Recognize how the steps you take will play a
central role in the successful implementation of
the RTI framework at your school - Answer questions about how RTI works in a high
school setting
3Think-Pair-Share
- On a post-in write a quick summary of what you
know about Response to Instruction (2 min) - When directed, share your response with a partner
- Share out in the group
4RtI Guidance Document from the ALSDE
- Response to Instruction (RtI) Alabamas Core
Support for All Students Standards, Resources,
Support - Alabamas Tier I expectations-pages 5-6
- Alabamas Tier II expectations-pages 7-10
- Alabamas Tier III expectations-pages 11-13
- Problem solving process-page 15
- Goal setting-pages 16-17
- Alabamas six-step RtI protocol-page 18
- Download from www.alsde.edu
5Secondary Model
- Tier IIIIntensive Intervention classes
- Tier IIDifferentiated strategic teaching
embedded in all content classes small
group-intentional groupings - Tier ICore instructionStrategic teaching
embedded in all content classes whole and small
group
6Tier 1 Core Instruction
7Best Practices for Grades 4-12 Tier 1
- Grade-level standards-based instruction
- Students learn how to learn
- Strategic teaching or content literacy
instruction provided in ALL classes - Some time for students to work with peers daily
in ALL classes - Encourages student engagement
- Students become active participants in the
learning process - Students make their own meaning
8HOW WE LEARN 1 10 20 30 50 70 8
0 95 98
Learning Pyramid
Fill out worksheet
Reading Assignment
Lecture
Using only visuals
Lecture with visuals
Discussion with others
Having a personal experience Making connections
(hands on)
Teaching someone else
Use art, drama, music, movement Integrated
curriculum with content
9T-Chart
- Make a T-Chart using the blank paper at your
table - Label the first column Principles/Strategies I
use now - Label the second column Principles/Strategies I
need to use - Read the handout on Effective Teaching Principles
and High Impact Strategies - Fill in your T-Chart
- Share with a partner at your table
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13Tier 2 Intervention
14About Grades 4-12 Tier 2
- Differentiated strategic teaching to support
grade-level standards instruction in all content
subjects - Teacher explicitly models strategies with
students and scaffolds as needed - Opportunities for peer-tutors and heterogeneous
grouping - stripe day (weaker with stronger and
teacher rotates among groups) - Opportunities for homogeneous grouping solid
day (skill-level groups and teacher works with
low group and provides differentiated challenges
for other groups to complete independently)
15About Grades 4-12 Tier 2
- Most tier 2 students in grades 4-12 are likely
to be receiving both tier 2 and tier 3 support. - When students are in both tier 2 and tier 3
interventions, your district may decide that
progress monitoring will be completed as part of
the tier 3 activities. - Documentation of tier 2 implementation
integrity could include - Student grouping lists
- Walkthroughs
- Outcomes
16Compare/Contrast
- Using the chart paper at your table, compare and
contrast homogeneous grouping and heterogeneous
grouping - Make sure to include the pros and cons of each
type of grouping - Share with the group
17Teachers work in RTI Implementation
18Teachers Work in RTI Implementation (These apply
for K-12 teachers)
- Deliver Tier 1 scientific, research-based
instruction with consistency - Know which of your students are to participate in
Tier 2 and Tier 3 interventions for math and for
reading (and for behavior). - Designate time for Tier 2 interventions and
deliver Tier 2 intervention consistently and with
fidelity - Collect informal progress monitoring data (work
samples, observations, etc)
19Teachers Work in RTI Implementation
- Facilitate your students participation in Tier 3
when needed (if pull-out is used). - Participate in Team discussions regarding student
outcomes. - Collect formal progress monitoring data for tier
2 only students (whose progress is not being
monitored in tier 3 intervention classes).
20(2) Know which students need Tier 2 support
- Results of screening should be noted for each
student. - Color-coded or numerically-coded lists of
students may be provided as types of reports
generated via commercially available screening
tools. - Using a color-coding system of dots in the grade
book may be useful. - Coding Tier 2 and Tier 3 students with a 2 and/or
a 3 may be useful.
21(3) Designate time for Tier 2 interventions 4-12
- Tier 2 intervention consists of classroom support
for students in all content areas. - Some portion of the instructional time in content
classes should be devoted to collaborative group
learning experiences for all students. - Using data to construct groups will allow you to
use both a peer-assisted learning environment and
a leveled groups environment. - You can work closely with students who need
support providing explicit instruction and
scaffolding as needed to ensure student success.
22(4) Collecting informal assessment data
- Work samples including graphic organizers and
writing samples completed by tier 2 and tier 3
intervention students can become important
sources of data to be used in data-based decision
making. - Random samples as well as specifically selected
samples may provide useful information regarding
the students response to intervention.
23(6) PST meeting discussions
- Data obtained from both formal progress
monitoring and informal progress monitoring
should frame PST discussions. - Graphs of formal progress monitoring should be
viewed in the context of work samples and other
classroom-generated data.
24(7) Collecting formal progress monitoring data
- Formal progress monitoring data should be
collected for each student participating in
interventions. - Minimum progress monitoring frequency should be a
district-wide decision - Generally, the classroom teacher should conduct
formal Tier 2 progress monitoring for students
who are not also in Tier 3 interventions. - The Tier 3 intervention teacher should conduct
formal progress monitoring for students receiving
Tier 3 intervention - Data from formal progress monitoring should be
recorded on the SID form and brought to the PST
meetings.
25(7) Some documentation shortcuts!
- If student is in tier 2 and tier 3 interventions,
progress monitor (PM) and do SID form in tier 3
only? - Explain system policy that all tier 3 students
automatically receive tier 2 support in all
classes. - Teachers turn in data-based groups for each
period. - Document provision of Tier 2 through walkthroughs
- If student is in tier 2 only, PM and do SID form
only 1 time each day (second period)?
26Questions From High School Teachers
- What do I do after teaching the lesson the first
time? I dont know how to teach it differently. - How do you differentiate with 35 students in one
room? - What assessments can I use other than end of
chapter test? - What interventions can I provide in my content
area? I dont teach reading. - How do you manage the classroom when you are
teaching everybody different things?
27Questions From High School Teachers
Differentiated Instruction
- How do you manage the classroom when you are
teaching everybody different things?
2. How do you differentiate with 35 students in
one room?
3. What do I do after teaching the lesson the
first time? I dont know how to teach it
differently.
Formative Assessments
4. What assessments can I use other than end of
chapter test?
Interventions
5. What interventions can I provide in my content
area? I dont teach reading.
28How do you manage the classroom when you are
teaching everybody different things?
- Concentrate first on establishing procedures and
routines for the whole group that allow you to
make the most of instructional time. - Explicitly teach the procedures and routines
during the first days of school (or semester if
on the block). - Connect management practice to college and career
readiness. - Bring students into the know about their
instruction. Share the research behind your
teaching with your students. - Explain that your class time WILL have a
different look, feel, and set of expectations. - Practice makes permanent in a positive way!
29How do you differentiate with 35 students in one
room?
- Understand that you build up to differentiation.
- Teach ALL students a handful of simple strategies
in the whole group that they can begin to use
independently. - Practice, practice, practice!!!
- Try differentiating within the whole group before
trying collaborative learning. Do this by
differentiating the content. - Teach students how to discuss with partners.
30What will my method be for getting around to all
of the students?
- Hear, read, and see
- Pretest
- Dividing students by week days
- Focusing on highlighted students
- Send a peer ambassador
31How do you structure a classroom for small
groups?
- Purposefully
- Tier I
- Tier II
- Desks and book bags
- The dot, the line, and all over
- Equipping students to work
- independently
32Can we use peers sometimes when differentiating?
- Giving students a voice
- Wait time and plenty of dialogue
- Getting the gist
- Self-reflection
- Identifying points of confusion
- Justifying and challenging
33Anecdotal notes are very important.
- Trends over time
- Aim for key instructional goals
- Connecting to your target students
- Rubrics
34By sorting assessment information quickly, you
get timely feedback on student learning and
teacher delivery.
- Quick sort
- What do you know?
- Preparation and planning
35Is it me or is it them? If it didnt work for
the child, do I do something different or do
they?
- Teaching preceded learning
- Making adjustments helps me
- Ask students outright
- Look at the majority
- Use student engagement, motivation,
- and participation as a measure
36What assessments can I use other than the normal
end of chapter test?
- When strategies are well planned and integrated
into each lesson, they provide the daily data
teachers need to make on the spot and next day
instructional decisions. - Teachers can know immediately if there is a
breakdown in content understanding/knowledge or
difficulty in expression (oral or written). - Very short writing assessments such as exit slips
allow teachers to see growth in student thinking
and writing over time. - When using chapter tests, be sure to use ALL of
the test to include the open-ended items. The
open-ended items reach the higher levels of
Blooms Taxonomy.
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38What interventions can I provide in my content
area? I dont teach reading.
- Preparing for Tier 2 intervention
- Make sure all students targeted for intervention
are highlighted in teacher grade books. - Establish solid groups-the teacher is providing
instruction to a small group. - Establish striped group-targeted students are
divided among collaborative groups. - Use instructional strategies and assessment like
those mentioned earlier to guide what the Tier 2
intervention will look like. - Take anecdotal notes every day on the targeted
students.
39What interventions can I provide in my content
area? I dont teach reading.
- Providing Tier 2 Intervention
- Build background knowledge through alternate
texts, visuals, and manipulatives. - Clarify learning breakdowns by talking with
students. - Model by showing students how you do things.
- Provide plenty of guided and independent practice
with immediate feedback. -
40What are the implications for collaboration with
colleagues?
- Talk it out, then walk it out
- Reflect on teacher practice
- Reflect on strategies
- Common assessments
- Common lesson planning
41What data do I collect during the lesson and how
do I use it to inform my next days instruction?
- Having an end in mind
- What is average performance?
- What strategies did high performing
- and successful students use
- Rework your lesson based on the
- key instructional goals
42Tools to facilitate instruction and intervention
43Some VERY Useful Websites for INDEPENDENT Reviews!
- What Works Clearinghouse (WWC)
- http//ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/
- Best Evidence Encyclopedia (BEE)
- http//www.bestevidence.org
- Promising Practices Network (PPN)
- http//www.promisingpractices.net/default.asp
- National Center on Response to Intervention
- www.rti4success.org
44Scientific Research-Based Mathematics Instruction
and Intervention
45National Mathematics Advisory Panel Report(2008)
- In mastering whole numbers, fractions and
geometry and measurement students need to gain - Conceptual understanding
- Computational fluency
- Problem solving
46Some WOW math websites!
- http//www.matti.usu.edu/ma/nav/bb_dlib.jsp
- Interactive online activities
- http//www.oci-sems.com
- Otter Creek math products Mastering Math Facts
and Word Problems Made Easy !!!!! - Can download free directions for program
implementation!!! - http//www.dadsworksheets.com
- Materials needed for Mastering Math Facts and
Word Problems Made Easy
47Some WOW math websites!
- http//www.learner.org/courses/learningmath/
- Awesome PD site for teachers!
- http//www.pballew.net/etyindex.html
- Math vocabulary
- http//illuminations.nctm.org/Lessons.aspx
- NCTM amazing standards-based lessons and
materials!
48Tier 2 StrategyBased Interventions Grades 4-12
49 Grades 4-12 Tier 2 Strategies
- Strategies which are utilized in both Tier 1 and
Tier 2 for grades 4-12 must be grounded in
research. - Research provides clear evidence of what works
- Marzanos High Impact Strategies
- Get everyone to use the Magnificent Seven
strategies while they are reading.
50Magnificent Seven (Pearson, et al., 1992)
- Making connections to prior knowledge
- Inferring and predicting
- Asking questions
- Determining important ideas and summarizing
- Visualizing
- Synthesizing and retelling
- Monitoring and clarifying understanding of text
and vocabulary
51Specific Examples of Learning Strategies
52Think Aloud Powerful for differentiating!
- 1. Read a selection aloud to the class (or to a
small group in the class) - Orally describe the thinking going on in your
head as you make sense of the text. - As you prepare to do this, you might use sticky
notes as prompts. - Can teach students how to do this also.
53Cooperative and Partnered Learning Tools(Rozzell
Scearce, 2009)
- Jigsaw Modified
- Divide text (or math problems) into 4 segments
and have 4 students in each group (Home team) - Students number off 1-4 and then regroup by those
numbers (expert team). - 1s discuss/work segment 1, 2s discuss segment
2, etc. - Home team group reconstitutes and each segment is
then discussed - Design an assessment to see how well the groups
acquired the information from the various sections
54Vocabulary Strategies
- Marzanos Six steps
- Introduce the term authentically
- Have student restate the meaning in their own
words - Use / create visuals
- Get to a deeper understanding (associations,
connections, etc) - Vocabulary discussions
- Word play
- Vocabulary Visual Word Association (VVWA)
55Reading Comprehension Active Reading Strategies
- Before strategies
- Set the stage
- Assess and build content knowledge
- During strategies
- Metacognition
- Support and monitor comprehension
- After strategies
- Review, organize
- Evaluate, extend, and transfer content knowledge
56- ABC Graffiti (Rozzelle Searce, 2009)
- Present the topic of the brainstorm to the
students. - Students list all the letters of the alphabet
down a sheet of paper, leaving room beside each
letter to write out the rest of a word or phrase. - Students work individually thinking of as many
words as they can that are associated with the
topic and write the words beside the appropriate
letters. - After a few minutes, let the students pair up or
work in small groups to fill in blank letters
they have not yet completed. - Allow students to share with the entire class
possible terms for the different letters of the
alphabet.
57- Cornell Note-Taking (Allen, 2004)
- Provide Cornell Note-Taking form or folded paper
- Read text and model for students the notes you
would take while reading that text - Develop questions that the notes would answer
- Use notes and questions to summarize the main
ideas in 2-3 sentences.
58Free Graphic Organizers
- http//wrhs.pasco.k12.fl.us/wordpop/WordPOP
- http//www.dinah.com/manipulatives.php
- http//foldables.wikispaces.com/Foldables
- http//pages.sbcglobal.net/cdefreese/foldables/
- http//www.readingquest.org/strat/home.html
- http//go.solution-tree.com/literacy/
59Content Literacy Strategy Resources
- Power Tools for Adolescent Literacy (2009) by Jan
Rozzelle Carol Scearce - Strategies for engaging students
- Comprehension strategies (before, during, and
after) - Vocabulary strategies
- Strategic learning
- Website with free downloadables
- Go.solutions-tree.com/literacy
60Content Literacy Strategy Resources
- Inside Words Tools for Teaching Academic
Vocabulary Grades 4-12 (2007) by Janet Allen - 22 vocabulary strategies with examples for use in
secondary content classes - Includes a CD with graphic organizers.
61Content Literacy Strategy Resources
- Tools for Teaching Content Literacy (2004) by
Janet Allen - 15 before, during, and after strategies for use
in content classes (with examples)
62Content Literacy Strategy Resources
- More Tools for Teaching Content Literacy (2008)
by Janet Allen - More than 20 additional strategies with graphic
organizers for easy implementation.