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Responsiveness to
Instruction
Preparing Our Kids for a Future
Benefits of RTI
The Importance of
Reading
īƒ˛ Children who read well, read more
īƒ˛ They acquire knowledge in numerous domains
īƒ˛ Children with limited reading-related skills rarely catch-up to
their peers without intensive intervention
īƒ˛ Many continue to experience difficulties throughout their
school years and into adulthood

â€ĸ Christopher Lonligan (2004)
RtI is a set of
systematic,
increasingly
intensive
educational
interventions
designed to
target an
individual
student‘s
learning
challenges to
provide
supplementary
interventions
as necessary.

Traditional RtI
Tier 3
Individual
Intervention
(5%)
Tier 2
Small-Group
Intervention (15%)
Tier 1
General Education Activities
(80%)
Tier1
Effective Core Instruction for All
Students
Interventions Led by
Schoolwide Teams
Tiers 1 & 2
ī‚ŸStudents with
motivational issues
ī‚ŸStudents with
attendance issues
ī‚ŸStudents with behavior
issues
Tier 3
ī‚ŸStudents in need of
intensive remedial
support in universal
skills:
Reading, writing, number
sense, English language,

Tier 2
Supplemental
Interventions for
Some Identified
Students
Tier 3
Intensive
Interventions for
Individual
Students

Interventions
Led by
Collaborative
Teacher Teams

Tiers 1 & 2
ī‚ŸStudents in need
of supplemental
support in
learning essential
core standards
and English
Austen Buffum, Mike Mattos and Chris Weber, 2012
What about PSRC
Students?
īƒ˛ Often, students walk in with developmental delays
īƒ˛ How does this display in language, cognitive, and
behavior?

īƒ˛ And over time, learning deficits compound and result
in more students demonstrating increasing deficits in
the higher grade levels; thus the percentages
presented in the original RtI pyramid might be
underestimates (Bender, 2012).
īƒ˛ Dropout Nation – Frontline PBS
īƒ˛ Activity– Describe students and
external factors that impact our
students
YOUTUBE
Pyramid Response to Intervention: How to Respond When Kids Don't Learn
The Florida Center for Reading
Research Student Center
Activities
www.fcrr.org/curriculum/SCAindex.shtm
Problem-Solving Process
Essential RTI Components

īƒ˛ Screening

īƒ˛ Schoolwide, multi-level instructional prevention system:
īƒ˛Primary (Level I)
īƒ˛Secondary (Level II)
īƒ˛Tertiary (Level III)
īƒ˛ Progress monitoring

īƒ˛ Data-based decision making for:
īƒ˛ Instructional decision making
īƒ˛ Movement within the multi-level system

īƒ˛ Disability identification (in accordance with state law)
īƒ˛ Evaluating the effectiveness of the intervention
Process of RtI
1. Screening – a system for identifying students at risk for poor learning
outcomes.
2. Multi-level prevention system – at least three increasingly intense levels of
instructional support.
a)Primary, which is the core instruction and curriculum.
b)Secondary, which is in addition to the primary level and provides supports
targeted to students‘ needs.
c)Tertiary, also supplemental to primary, but more intense than secondary.
3. Progress monitoring – a system for monitoring the effectiveness of the
supports provided to students.
4. Data-based decision making for
a)Instruction – determining who needs assistance, what type of instruction
or assistance is needed, whether the duration and intensity are sufficient.
b)Movement within the multi-level system – when to move students to
something more or less intense, who is responding and/or not responding.
c)Disability identification – when to refer for special education evaluation,
how the student compares to his or her peers, did he or she receive
appropriate instruction. This, of course, is in accordance with the state
law.
d)Evaluating the effectiveness of the intervention
Process of RtI
Timely, Directive, System, Flexible Support-1) timely interventions at the
first indication that they need more time and support, 2) directive rather
than
invitational, so that students get the extra help they need 3) extra
support is not dependent upon which teacher the student has, but
implemented
systematically.
Shared Instructional Goals- 1) RtI will not be effective, if educators have
not first collaborated to identify common instructional goals. 2) PLCs rely
on frequent, timely common formative assessment data to determine
which students need additional time and support, not last year‘s
summative assessment data.
Buffum, Mattos, Weber (2009)
P21—Wiki Space
Process of RtI
Universal Screening- in both academics and behavior even before the school year
has begun to identify who need additional time and support.
1)Apply universal screening in a broader context that includes behavior as as
literacy and numeracy skills, and 2) to explicitly base decisions upon highly
specific
data. 3)We commonly refer to ―universal screening‖ as the
process that
schools use to identify students who are at risk for poor learning
outcomes.
Frequent Progress Monitoring-1)measure the effectiveness of an intervention
overall and for individual students. 2) Monitoring student progress as often as
twice each week, using very short, specific probes to detect small changes in
student learning.
Research-Based Interventions- ‗research that involves the application of rigorous,
systematic, and objective procedures to obtain reliable and valid knowledge
relevant to education activities and programs.
Implementing Tier I
īƒ˛ Powerful classroom instruction begins with the
adoption and use of an evidence-based
curriculum, but effective teachers do not simply
teach such a program page-by-page in the same
way for all students. Rather, they differentiate
instruction, providing instruction designed to
meet the specific needs of students in the class.
Differentiating Instruction
īƒ˛ http://si2013planning.ncdpi.wikispaces.net/P21+Fram
ework
īƒ˛ Overview of the P21 Rainbow
YouTube
a visit to a differentiated classroom
īƒ˛ http://www.fcrr.org/curriculum/PDF/G45/45TRGPartOne.pdf
īƒ˛ Researchers strong recommend differentiated
instruction as the essential basis for RtI.—Factually,
scholars now consider differentiated instruction the
most effective basis for all instruction.
Tools for Differentiation

http://www.greenwichschools.org/
4 ----P21

http://www.greenwichschools.org/page.cfm?p=9426
Middle School Practices for
Primary Prevention
īƒ˛ Improving the primary level of prevention (core
instruction)
īƒ˛ This practice is pivotal to RTI implementation success.

īƒ˛ Engaging students in their learning
īƒ˛ Every student knows the learning goals.

īƒ˛ Using a standardized curriculum
īƒ˛ Mr. X‘s 6th-grade math is the same as Ms. Y‘s 6thgrade math.
27
Snapshotâ€Ļ
īƒ˛ Data: good assessments—benchmark
and normative—and expert use of the
data
īƒ˛ Increased direct instructional time;
additional time for those behind
īƒ˛ Quality instruction in small, fluid, skill
groups
īƒ˛ Targeted accelerated growth;
knowledgeable reading specialists
Fielding, Kerr, Rosier, 2007
Creating a Positive Learning
Environment
īƒ˛ Behavior and academic achievement are inextricably
linked. A student‘s academic success in school is
directly related to the student‘s attention, engagement,
and behavior. The higher the expectation for scholarly
behaviors and the better the supports for students
experiencing difficulties—whether mild, moderate, or
severe—the more academic success can be
achieved.
â€ĸ Austin Buffum, Mike Mattos, and
Chric Weber (2011)
Using Dataâ€Ļ.
īƒ˛ http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/practice_guides/dddm_pg_092909.
pdf
īƒ˛ Collect and prepare a variety of data about student learning. -To
gain a robust understanding of students‘ learning needs, teachers
need to collect data from a variety of sources.
īƒ˛ Interpret data and develop hypotheses about how to improve
student learning.-Working independently or in teams, teachers
should interpret the data they have collected and prepared.

īƒ˛ Modify instruction to test hypotheses and increase student
learning. -After forming hypotheses about students‘ learning
needs, teachers must test their hypotheses by carrying out the
instructional changes that they believe are likely to raise student
achievement.
īƒ˛ Page 17 on document for Action Plan
Using Dataâ€Ļ..
īƒ˛ Teach students to examine their own data and set
learning goals--Students are best prepared to learn
from their own achievement data when they
understand the learning objectives and when they
receive data in a user-friendly format. Tools such as
rubrics provide students with a clear sense of learning
objectives, and data presented in an accessible and
descriptive format can illuminate students‘ strengths
and weaknesses
Personalized Learner
Assessment
Problem-Solving Process
Thinking and Learning
Styles
Multiple Intelligences
Multiple Intelligences
(continued)
Examples of Screening
Indicators and Tools
Examples of Measurable
Academic Skills and
Diagnostic Assessments
Progress Monitoring
Progress Monitoring
īƒ˛ Conducted frequently – at least monthly
īƒ˛ Designed to:
īƒ˛ Estimate rates of improvement
īƒ˛ Identify students who are not
demonstrating adequate progress
īƒ˛ Compare the efficacy of different forms of
instruction
īƒ˛ Thereby design more effective,
individualized instructional programs
for struggling learners

43
What is the Difference Between Traditional
Assessments and PM?

īƒ˛ Traditional assessments:
īƒ˛ Lengthy tests
īƒ˛ Not administered on a regular basis
īƒ˛ Teachers do not receive immediate
feedback
īƒ˛ Student scores are based on
national scores and averages
44
What About When It Isn‘t
Enough?
Movement from
Tier I to Tier II
Tier II
īƒ˛ After gathering accurate screening data on all
students, schools must analyze the data, validate
student needs, and match students that need support
with an effective intervention. In other words, schools
need the right interventions in place, the interventions
must be intensive enough to accelerate student
learning, and each intervention must be implemented
with fidelity.
Culture:“RTI = All Staff +
All Kids”
īƒ˛ Schools reported a cultural shift in language and thinking.
īƒ˛ Teachers think less about teaching content and more about
ensuring that students learn.

īƒ˛ “We [staff] all believe that all students can learn.”
īƒ˛ All staff own all students; no more “my student” or “his
student.”
īƒ˛ All teachers can teach reading and mathematics.
48
http://www.studentprogress.org/
CBM in Relation to RTI
There is no single, widely accepted ―model‖ of the RTI process.
In general, a school organizes its model into tiers. Each stage
represents a continuum of increasing intensity of support.
Tier 1:
Universal
screening

Screen all students. Students are identified “atrisk” early in the school year by reviewing
progress (e.g., state tests, benchmarks). Given
classroom support.

Tier 2:
Target
intervention

Additional support is given to students not
making adequate progress and is provided in
individual or small group settings.

Tier 3:
Intensive
intervention

Students whose needs are greater than general
education can meet receive individualized,
intensive support that targets the student’s skill
deficits (e.g., special education).
Tier II—Purposeful
Grouping
īƒ˛ Purposeful Grouping allows you to provide
personalized instruction in the general education
setting. It can help you design lesson plans that set
up all students for success, including those struggling
with particular skills from the curriculum.
īƒ˛ Small-group instruction that relies on evidence-based
interventions that specify the instructional procedures,
duration, and frequency of instruction
CBM in Relation to RTI
Key Terms
Curriculum-based assessment (CBA):
refers to a wide range of informal assessment
procedures within the classroom to monitor student
progress. The focus is on the instructional level of
students.
Requirements of CBA:

52

īƒ˛ Measurement materials are aligned with school
curriculum.
īƒ˛ Measurement is frequent.
īƒ˛ Assessment information is used in instructional
decision-making.
Progress Monitoring
īƒ˛ Teachers assess students‘ academic
performance, using brief measures, on a
frequent basis

īƒ˛ The major purposes are
īƒ˛ To describe rate of response to instruction
īƒ˛ To build more effective programs
55
CBM in Relation to RTI
Question:
Can assessments be valid and reliable if teachers grade tests

differently?

Answer:
Assessments for the purpose of progress monitoring can be valid and
reliable at the teacher level if teachers use a consistent manner in
grading. However, comparisons between teachers may not be valid
and reliable if different grading procedures are used.
CBM in Relation to RTI
Key Terms
Role of curriculum-based assessment

Planning
Assessment

Instruction

Informal
57

Formal
CBM in Relation to RTI
Key Terms
Curriculum-based measurement (CBM):

refers to a specific method of monitoring student progress
through direct, continuous assessment of academic skills toward
long-term goals. Typically schools use standardized assessments
to monitor student progress.

Technically, CBM is a form of CBA because it meets all the
requirements of CBA.

CBM is used to address the question:
―Is the student making progress towards a
58

grade-level expectation or long-term goal?‖
CBM in Relation to RTI
Informal:

Answer:

used to determine how well student performs compared to criteria for
mastery, self, and classmates. Seeks to identify the strengths and
needs of individual students without regard to grade or age norms.
Formal:
used to compare performance to others of the same age or grade.
Have standardized procedures for administering, timing, and scoring.

Assessments

Informal

Formal

Classroom assignments,

State testing, WJ-III,

journals, essays, reports,

WRAT, CTBS, WIAT,

59

discussion groups, reading logs

benchmarks
CBM Research
īƒ˛ CBM research has been conducted over the
past 30 years
īƒ˛ Research has demonstrated that when teachers
use CBM for instructional decision making:

īƒ˛ Students learn more
īƒ˛ Teacher decision making improves
īƒ˛ Students are more aware of their
performance
60
Progress Monitoring
īƒ˛ Evaluate effectiveness of instruction

īƒ˛ Individual students
īƒ˛ Entire class
īƒ˛ Identify goals, measure goals, adjust teaching as
needed
īƒ˛ Accelerated learning
īƒ˛ Targeted instruction
īƒ˛ Faster attainment of state standards
61
Movement from
Tier II to Tier III
Tier III
Steps to applying what you‘ve learned:
1.Analyze Curriculum
2.Prepare Probes
3.Probe Frequently
4.Graph the Data
5.Yield to the Results

64
Demonstrate Data Management
Techniques
Understanding the Steps
1. Analyze Curriculum:
Identify realistic, measurable instructional objectives.
Ask, ―What do I want the students to learn?‖

2. Prepare Probes to match curriculum:
A probe is a structured assessment tool used to monitor a
skill related to the objective. Probes must match learning
objectives. A variety of probes should be used.
Ask, ―How will I measure student learning?‖

3. Probe Frequently:
The more information you have, the more
accurate your instructional decisions will be.
65
Compare and Contrast Current
Assessment Practices
Using CBM for instructional decision-making:
īƒ˛

Pre Instruction (before instruction)

Do learners possess pre-requisite knowledge/skills to achieve goal?

īƒ˛

Formative (during instruction)
Are learners progressing?
If yes, are they being adequately challenged?
If no, why not? Is it the pacing? The content? The instructional strategies?

â€ĸ

Summative (upon completion of instruction)

Did learners achieve desired instructional goal?

īƒ˛

Diagnostic
66

(during or upon completion)

Why aren‘t/didn‘t students achieving the goal?
Demonstrate Data Management
Techniques
Understanding the Steps
4. Graph the Data:
Most dreaded, yet powerful, component of CBA.
a. Record and establish baseline for each student.
b. Construct the aimline to judge student progress.

c. Enter results of each probe as it is administered and scored.

5. Yield to the Results:
Look for trends in student performance. Ask, ―What are the
data telling me?‖ and ―How should instruction change
based on the data?‖

67

Let’s get started with a demonstrationâ€Ļ.
Demonstrate Data Management Techniques
Sample of CBM module
Title of Graph

Students‘ goal

90

% Correct

80

70

60

50

40

Aimline

30

20

68
10
Demonstrate Data Management Techniques
Sample of CBA module
Title of Graph

Students‘ goal

90

% Correct

80

70

Student 1

60

Student 2

50

40

Aimline

30

20

10

69
Demonstrate Data Management
Techniques
Step 3: Analyze data: aimlines and
trendlines
Now what? How do I know what it means? How do I
know when to revise instruction?

You can make decisions based on:
īƒ˛

Recent consecutive scores or

īƒ˛

The trendlines

70
Demonstrate Data Management
Techniques
Step 3: Analyze data: aimlines and
trendlines
Decision rules based on recent scores:
Question: Are the 4 most recent scores above
the aimline?

Yes

71

Increase student‘s goal
program

No

Revise instructional
Primary prevention is crucial because it supports the majority of your student
population.

All middle schools indicated that their most important RTI focus was solidifying their core
instruction and that improving their core instruction was pivotal to RTI
implementation success—to have at least 80% of their students meeting proficiency
standards. In middle school, the primary prevention is all content area instruction.
Ways that the staff in our study suggested improving their primary instruction include—
ī‚§ Engaging students in their learning – While important in every classroom, at every
level of instruction, many middle schools emphasized their efforts to engage their
students in the primary level of instruction. Some of the techniques were to review each
section and lesson‘s objectives with the class, write out the day‘s objectives on the
board, quickly review past lessons, and generalize information to the next objectives.
Many of these techniques helped the students understand and generalize their learning
goals.
â€ĸEvery student knows the learning goals.
ī‚§ Some schools invested heavily in a research-based core curriculum that aligned with
their state standards and focused on fidelity of implementation to ensure that the
curriculum was implemented with high quality. Implementing a standardized
curriculum ensured that all students in all classes received the same lessons.
Once a school‘s staff thought that their primary level (core instruction) was solid, they
http://www.rti4success.org/
Movement from
Tier III to Tier II or I
Additional Resources
http://www.rti4success.org
īƒ˛ RTI Implementation Processes for Middle Schools (June
2011)
http://www.rti4success.org/pdf/0644MS_RTI_Implementation_Brief_d3.pdf

īƒ˛ RTI Scheduling Processes for Middle Schools (July 2011)
http://www.rti4success.org/pdf/0681MS_RTI_Rescheduling_Brief_d2.pdf

īƒ˛ RTI in Middle Schools: Frequently Asked Questions (August
2011)
http://www.rti4success.org/pdf/0572%20MS%20RTI%20FAQs%20d5[1].pdf

īƒ˛ Middle School Essential Components report (Fall 2012)
80

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RTI Fall 2013 C & I Meeting

  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 5. The Importance of Reading īƒ˛ Children who read well, read more īƒ˛ They acquire knowledge in numerous domains īƒ˛ Children with limited reading-related skills rarely catch-up to their peers without intensive intervention īƒ˛ Many continue to experience difficulties throughout their school years and into adulthood â€ĸ Christopher Lonligan (2004)
  • 6. RtI is a set of systematic, increasingly intensive educational interventions designed to target an individual student‘s learning challenges to provide supplementary interventions as necessary. Traditional RtI Tier 3 Individual Intervention (5%) Tier 2 Small-Group Intervention (15%) Tier 1 General Education Activities (80%)
  • 7. Tier1 Effective Core Instruction for All Students Interventions Led by Schoolwide Teams Tiers 1 & 2 ī‚ŸStudents with motivational issues ī‚ŸStudents with attendance issues ī‚ŸStudents with behavior issues Tier 3 ī‚ŸStudents in need of intensive remedial support in universal skills: Reading, writing, number sense, English language, Tier 2 Supplemental Interventions for Some Identified Students Tier 3 Intensive Interventions for Individual Students Interventions Led by Collaborative Teacher Teams Tiers 1 & 2 ī‚ŸStudents in need of supplemental support in learning essential core standards and English Austen Buffum, Mike Mattos and Chris Weber, 2012
  • 8. What about PSRC Students? īƒ˛ Often, students walk in with developmental delays īƒ˛ How does this display in language, cognitive, and behavior? īƒ˛ And over time, learning deficits compound and result in more students demonstrating increasing deficits in the higher grade levels; thus the percentages presented in the original RtI pyramid might be underestimates (Bender, 2012).
  • 9. īƒ˛ Dropout Nation – Frontline PBS īƒ˛ Activity– Describe students and external factors that impact our students
  • 10. YOUTUBE Pyramid Response to Intervention: How to Respond When Kids Don't Learn
  • 11. The Florida Center for Reading Research Student Center Activities www.fcrr.org/curriculum/SCAindex.shtm
  • 13. Essential RTI Components īƒ˛ Screening īƒ˛ Schoolwide, multi-level instructional prevention system: īƒ˛Primary (Level I) īƒ˛Secondary (Level II) īƒ˛Tertiary (Level III) īƒ˛ Progress monitoring īƒ˛ Data-based decision making for: īƒ˛ Instructional decision making īƒ˛ Movement within the multi-level system īƒ˛ Disability identification (in accordance with state law) īƒ˛ Evaluating the effectiveness of the intervention
  • 14. Process of RtI 1. Screening – a system for identifying students at risk for poor learning outcomes. 2. Multi-level prevention system – at least three increasingly intense levels of instructional support. a)Primary, which is the core instruction and curriculum. b)Secondary, which is in addition to the primary level and provides supports targeted to students‘ needs. c)Tertiary, also supplemental to primary, but more intense than secondary. 3. Progress monitoring – a system for monitoring the effectiveness of the supports provided to students. 4. Data-based decision making for a)Instruction – determining who needs assistance, what type of instruction or assistance is needed, whether the duration and intensity are sufficient. b)Movement within the multi-level system – when to move students to something more or less intense, who is responding and/or not responding. c)Disability identification – when to refer for special education evaluation, how the student compares to his or her peers, did he or she receive appropriate instruction. This, of course, is in accordance with the state law. d)Evaluating the effectiveness of the intervention
  • 15. Process of RtI Timely, Directive, System, Flexible Support-1) timely interventions at the first indication that they need more time and support, 2) directive rather than invitational, so that students get the extra help they need 3) extra support is not dependent upon which teacher the student has, but implemented systematically. Shared Instructional Goals- 1) RtI will not be effective, if educators have not first collaborated to identify common instructional goals. 2) PLCs rely on frequent, timely common formative assessment data to determine which students need additional time and support, not last year‘s summative assessment data. Buffum, Mattos, Weber (2009) P21—Wiki Space
  • 16. Process of RtI Universal Screening- in both academics and behavior even before the school year has begun to identify who need additional time and support. 1)Apply universal screening in a broader context that includes behavior as as literacy and numeracy skills, and 2) to explicitly base decisions upon highly specific data. 3)We commonly refer to ―universal screening‖ as the process that schools use to identify students who are at risk for poor learning outcomes. Frequent Progress Monitoring-1)measure the effectiveness of an intervention overall and for individual students. 2) Monitoring student progress as often as twice each week, using very short, specific probes to detect small changes in student learning. Research-Based Interventions- ‗research that involves the application of rigorous, systematic, and objective procedures to obtain reliable and valid knowledge relevant to education activities and programs.
  • 17.
  • 18.
  • 19. Implementing Tier I īƒ˛ Powerful classroom instruction begins with the adoption and use of an evidence-based curriculum, but effective teachers do not simply teach such a program page-by-page in the same way for all students. Rather, they differentiate instruction, providing instruction designed to meet the specific needs of students in the class.
  • 21.
  • 22. YouTube a visit to a differentiated classroom
  • 23. īƒ˛ http://www.fcrr.org/curriculum/PDF/G45/45TRGPartOne.pdf īƒ˛ Researchers strong recommend differentiated instruction as the essential basis for RtI.—Factually, scholars now consider differentiated instruction the most effective basis for all instruction.
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26. Tools for Differentiation http://www.greenwichschools.org/ 4 ----P21 http://www.greenwichschools.org/page.cfm?p=9426
  • 27. Middle School Practices for Primary Prevention īƒ˛ Improving the primary level of prevention (core instruction) īƒ˛ This practice is pivotal to RTI implementation success. īƒ˛ Engaging students in their learning īƒ˛ Every student knows the learning goals. īƒ˛ Using a standardized curriculum īƒ˛ Mr. X‘s 6th-grade math is the same as Ms. Y‘s 6thgrade math. 27
  • 28.
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31. Snapshotâ€Ļ īƒ˛ Data: good assessments—benchmark and normative—and expert use of the data īƒ˛ Increased direct instructional time; additional time for those behind īƒ˛ Quality instruction in small, fluid, skill groups īƒ˛ Targeted accelerated growth; knowledgeable reading specialists Fielding, Kerr, Rosier, 2007
  • 32. Creating a Positive Learning Environment īƒ˛ Behavior and academic achievement are inextricably linked. A student‘s academic success in school is directly related to the student‘s attention, engagement, and behavior. The higher the expectation for scholarly behaviors and the better the supports for students experiencing difficulties—whether mild, moderate, or severe—the more academic success can be achieved. â€ĸ Austin Buffum, Mike Mattos, and Chric Weber (2011)
  • 33. Using Dataâ€Ļ. īƒ˛ http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/practice_guides/dddm_pg_092909. pdf īƒ˛ Collect and prepare a variety of data about student learning. -To gain a robust understanding of students‘ learning needs, teachers need to collect data from a variety of sources. īƒ˛ Interpret data and develop hypotheses about how to improve student learning.-Working independently or in teams, teachers should interpret the data they have collected and prepared. īƒ˛ Modify instruction to test hypotheses and increase student learning. -After forming hypotheses about students‘ learning needs, teachers must test their hypotheses by carrying out the instructional changes that they believe are likely to raise student achievement. īƒ˛ Page 17 on document for Action Plan
  • 34. Using Dataâ€Ļ.. īƒ˛ Teach students to examine their own data and set learning goals--Students are best prepared to learn from their own achievement data when they understand the learning objectives and when they receive data in a user-friendly format. Tools such as rubrics provide students with a clear sense of learning objectives, and data presented in an accessible and descriptive format can illuminate students‘ strengths and weaknesses
  • 41. Examples of Measurable Academic Skills and Diagnostic Assessments
  • 43. Progress Monitoring īƒ˛ Conducted frequently – at least monthly īƒ˛ Designed to: īƒ˛ Estimate rates of improvement īƒ˛ Identify students who are not demonstrating adequate progress īƒ˛ Compare the efficacy of different forms of instruction īƒ˛ Thereby design more effective, individualized instructional programs for struggling learners 43
  • 44. What is the Difference Between Traditional Assessments and PM? īƒ˛ Traditional assessments: īƒ˛ Lengthy tests īƒ˛ Not administered on a regular basis īƒ˛ Teachers do not receive immediate feedback īƒ˛ Student scores are based on national scores and averages 44
  • 45. What About When It Isn‘t Enough?
  • 46. Movement from Tier I to Tier II
  • 47. Tier II īƒ˛ After gathering accurate screening data on all students, schools must analyze the data, validate student needs, and match students that need support with an effective intervention. In other words, schools need the right interventions in place, the interventions must be intensive enough to accelerate student learning, and each intervention must be implemented with fidelity.
  • 48. Culture:“RTI = All Staff + All Kids” īƒ˛ Schools reported a cultural shift in language and thinking. īƒ˛ Teachers think less about teaching content and more about ensuring that students learn. īƒ˛ “We [staff] all believe that all students can learn.” īƒ˛ All staff own all students; no more “my student” or “his student.” īƒ˛ All teachers can teach reading and mathematics. 48
  • 50. CBM in Relation to RTI There is no single, widely accepted ―model‖ of the RTI process. In general, a school organizes its model into tiers. Each stage represents a continuum of increasing intensity of support. Tier 1: Universal screening Screen all students. Students are identified “atrisk” early in the school year by reviewing progress (e.g., state tests, benchmarks). Given classroom support. Tier 2: Target intervention Additional support is given to students not making adequate progress and is provided in individual or small group settings. Tier 3: Intensive intervention Students whose needs are greater than general education can meet receive individualized, intensive support that targets the student’s skill deficits (e.g., special education).
  • 51. Tier II—Purposeful Grouping īƒ˛ Purposeful Grouping allows you to provide personalized instruction in the general education setting. It can help you design lesson plans that set up all students for success, including those struggling with particular skills from the curriculum. īƒ˛ Small-group instruction that relies on evidence-based interventions that specify the instructional procedures, duration, and frequency of instruction
  • 52. CBM in Relation to RTI Key Terms Curriculum-based assessment (CBA): refers to a wide range of informal assessment procedures within the classroom to monitor student progress. The focus is on the instructional level of students. Requirements of CBA: 52 īƒ˛ Measurement materials are aligned with school curriculum. īƒ˛ Measurement is frequent. īƒ˛ Assessment information is used in instructional decision-making.
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 55. Progress Monitoring īƒ˛ Teachers assess students‘ academic performance, using brief measures, on a frequent basis īƒ˛ The major purposes are īƒ˛ To describe rate of response to instruction īƒ˛ To build more effective programs 55
  • 56. CBM in Relation to RTI Question: Can assessments be valid and reliable if teachers grade tests differently? Answer: Assessments for the purpose of progress monitoring can be valid and reliable at the teacher level if teachers use a consistent manner in grading. However, comparisons between teachers may not be valid and reliable if different grading procedures are used.
  • 57. CBM in Relation to RTI Key Terms Role of curriculum-based assessment Planning Assessment Instruction Informal 57 Formal
  • 58. CBM in Relation to RTI Key Terms Curriculum-based measurement (CBM): refers to a specific method of monitoring student progress through direct, continuous assessment of academic skills toward long-term goals. Typically schools use standardized assessments to monitor student progress. Technically, CBM is a form of CBA because it meets all the requirements of CBA. CBM is used to address the question: ―Is the student making progress towards a 58 grade-level expectation or long-term goal?‖
  • 59. CBM in Relation to RTI Informal: Answer: used to determine how well student performs compared to criteria for mastery, self, and classmates. Seeks to identify the strengths and needs of individual students without regard to grade or age norms. Formal: used to compare performance to others of the same age or grade. Have standardized procedures for administering, timing, and scoring. Assessments Informal Formal Classroom assignments, State testing, WJ-III, journals, essays, reports, WRAT, CTBS, WIAT, 59 discussion groups, reading logs benchmarks
  • 60. CBM Research īƒ˛ CBM research has been conducted over the past 30 years īƒ˛ Research has demonstrated that when teachers use CBM for instructional decision making: īƒ˛ Students learn more īƒ˛ Teacher decision making improves īƒ˛ Students are more aware of their performance 60
  • 61. Progress Monitoring īƒ˛ Evaluate effectiveness of instruction īƒ˛ Individual students īƒ˛ Entire class īƒ˛ Identify goals, measure goals, adjust teaching as needed īƒ˛ Accelerated learning īƒ˛ Targeted instruction īƒ˛ Faster attainment of state standards 61
  • 62. Movement from Tier II to Tier III
  • 64. Steps to applying what you‘ve learned: 1.Analyze Curriculum 2.Prepare Probes 3.Probe Frequently 4.Graph the Data 5.Yield to the Results 64
  • 65. Demonstrate Data Management Techniques Understanding the Steps 1. Analyze Curriculum: Identify realistic, measurable instructional objectives. Ask, ―What do I want the students to learn?‖ 2. Prepare Probes to match curriculum: A probe is a structured assessment tool used to monitor a skill related to the objective. Probes must match learning objectives. A variety of probes should be used. Ask, ―How will I measure student learning?‖ 3. Probe Frequently: The more information you have, the more accurate your instructional decisions will be. 65
  • 66. Compare and Contrast Current Assessment Practices Using CBM for instructional decision-making: īƒ˛ Pre Instruction (before instruction) Do learners possess pre-requisite knowledge/skills to achieve goal? īƒ˛ Formative (during instruction) Are learners progressing? If yes, are they being adequately challenged? If no, why not? Is it the pacing? The content? The instructional strategies? â€ĸ Summative (upon completion of instruction) Did learners achieve desired instructional goal? īƒ˛ Diagnostic 66 (during or upon completion) Why aren‘t/didn‘t students achieving the goal?
  • 67. Demonstrate Data Management Techniques Understanding the Steps 4. Graph the Data: Most dreaded, yet powerful, component of CBA. a. Record and establish baseline for each student. b. Construct the aimline to judge student progress. c. Enter results of each probe as it is administered and scored. 5. Yield to the Results: Look for trends in student performance. Ask, ―What are the data telling me?‖ and ―How should instruction change based on the data?‖ 67 Let’s get started with a demonstrationâ€Ļ.
  • 68. Demonstrate Data Management Techniques Sample of CBM module Title of Graph Students‘ goal 90 % Correct 80 70 60 50 40 Aimline 30 20 68 10
  • 69. Demonstrate Data Management Techniques Sample of CBA module Title of Graph Students‘ goal 90 % Correct 80 70 Student 1 60 Student 2 50 40 Aimline 30 20 10 69
  • 70. Demonstrate Data Management Techniques Step 3: Analyze data: aimlines and trendlines Now what? How do I know what it means? How do I know when to revise instruction? You can make decisions based on: īƒ˛ Recent consecutive scores or īƒ˛ The trendlines 70
  • 71. Demonstrate Data Management Techniques Step 3: Analyze data: aimlines and trendlines Decision rules based on recent scores: Question: Are the 4 most recent scores above the aimline? Yes 71 Increase student‘s goal program No Revise instructional
  • 72. Primary prevention is crucial because it supports the majority of your student population. All middle schools indicated that their most important RTI focus was solidifying their core instruction and that improving their core instruction was pivotal to RTI implementation success—to have at least 80% of their students meeting proficiency standards. In middle school, the primary prevention is all content area instruction. Ways that the staff in our study suggested improving their primary instruction include— ī‚§ Engaging students in their learning – While important in every classroom, at every level of instruction, many middle schools emphasized their efforts to engage their students in the primary level of instruction. Some of the techniques were to review each section and lesson‘s objectives with the class, write out the day‘s objectives on the board, quickly review past lessons, and generalize information to the next objectives. Many of these techniques helped the students understand and generalize their learning goals. â€ĸEvery student knows the learning goals. ī‚§ Some schools invested heavily in a research-based core curriculum that aligned with their state standards and focused on fidelity of implementation to ensure that the curriculum was implemented with high quality. Implementing a standardized curriculum ensured that all students in all classes received the same lessons. Once a school‘s staff thought that their primary level (core instruction) was solid, they
  • 73.
  • 74.
  • 75.
  • 77.
  • 78. Movement from Tier III to Tier II or I
  • 79.
  • 80. Additional Resources http://www.rti4success.org īƒ˛ RTI Implementation Processes for Middle Schools (June 2011) http://www.rti4success.org/pdf/0644MS_RTI_Implementation_Brief_d3.pdf īƒ˛ RTI Scheduling Processes for Middle Schools (July 2011) http://www.rti4success.org/pdf/0681MS_RTI_Rescheduling_Brief_d2.pdf īƒ˛ RTI in Middle Schools: Frequently Asked Questions (August 2011) http://www.rti4success.org/pdf/0572%20MS%20RTI%20FAQs%20d5[1].pdf īƒ˛ Middle School Essential Components report (Fall 2012) 80

Editor's Notes

  1. Primary prevention is crucial because it supports the majority of your student population. All middle schools indicated that their most important RTI focus was solidifying their core instruction and that improving their core instruction was pivotal to RTI implementation success—to have at least 80% of their students meeting proficiency standards. In middle school, the primary prevention is all content area instruction. Ways that the staff in our study suggested improving their primary instruction include— Engaging students in their learning – While important in every classroom, at every level of instruction, many middle schools emphasized their efforts to engage their students in the primary level of instruction. Some of the techniques were to review each section and lesson’s objectives with the class, write out the day’s objectives on the board, quickly review past lessons, and generalize information to the next objectives. Many of these techniques helped the students understand and generalize their learning goals. Every student knows the learning goals. Some schools invested heavily in a research-based core curriculum that aligned with their state standards and focused on fidelity of implementation to ensure that the curriculum was implemented with high quality. Implementing a districtwide standardized curriculum ensured that all students in all classes received the same lessons. Obviously, the school district has a role in providing a standardized curriculum and ensures that staff have the resources to provide schools with the support and scientifically research-based curriculum that is aligned to state standards. Schools also ensured that all their staff members received appropriate professional development in differentiated instruction and other instructional strategies. Many schools supported recently trained staff by providing modeling, coaching, and feedback until the staff members could successfully and independently use the instructional method. Once a school’s staff thought that their primary level (core instruction) was solid, they began putting more emphasis on the secondary level of intervention.
  2. Shaping the school culture often began with administrators setting clear expectations that RTI was pivotal and necessary for meeting the needs of their students.Culture changes progressed throughout implementation activities. For example, several schools’ practitioners (administrators and staff) reported that cultural change began as the staff worked together during team meetings and collaboration sessions and progressed and spread through the whole teaching staff during implementation activities. School staff reported perceptual changes. Some of the cultural shifts included developing a common knowledge around RTI, data collection, and student achievement. For example, some of the common sentiments across schools were that “every student can learn” and “all staff can teach all students.”For many schools, this shift in roles and responsibilities was a significant, difficult challenge to current practices. Staff saw that RTI implementation activities took focused attention, planning, and extra time and required change in everyday practices; but frequently, once the implementation practices began producing attributable student outcomes, the teaching staff was so enthusiastic and excited about what they were doing, and the changes they saw in the students, that they couldn’t imagine going back to their traditional teaching methods.
  3. On our website, we have several documents to provide more in-depth information and tools to further facilitate your implementation efforts. If possible, it might be useful to have these documents handy, or link to the PDFs and illustrate the documents’ contents.