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Importance of Intensive Interventions:
Definitions and Illustrations
Sharon Vaughn
The University of Texas at Austin
Recognition Goes to…
• Jack Fletcher and David Francis, University of Houston
• Greg Roberts, Elizabeth Swanson, and Stephanie
Stillman, The University of Texas at Austin
• Jeanne Wanzek, Florida State University
• Jade Wexler, University of Maryland
• Carolyn Denton, The University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston
NAEP Grade 4 National Results
NAEP Grade 8 National Results
Percentage of Students Ages 6–21 Served Under
Individuals With Disabilities Education Act
SOURCE: Office of Special Education Programs, Annual Report to Congress on the
Implementation of IDEA, 1990–2010; IDEA database, www.ideadata.org/PartBdata.asp
What Is So Disturbing?
• In 2011, 68% of fourth-grade students and 62% of
eighth-grade students with disabilities scored below
basic on NAEP Reading.
• In 2011, 29% of fourth-grade students and 20% of
eighth-grade students without disabilities scored
below basic on NAEP Reading.
• From 2009 to 2011, reading results for students with
disabilities declined.
Synthesis of Intensive Interventions:
Grades 4 Through 12
• More than 75 sessions
• No studies for grades 10–12
• 11 experimental or quasi-experimental studies for
secondary, 19 for elementary
Wanzek, J., & Vaughn, S. (2007). Research-based implications from extensive early
reading interventions. School Psychology Review, 36(4), 541–561.
Wanzek, J., Vaughn, S., Scammacca, N. K., Metz, K. L., Murray, C. S., Roberts, G., &
Danielson, L. (in press). Extensive reading intervention for struggling readers in grades
4 through 12: Implications from research. Review of Educational Research.
Mean Effect Sizes
Elementary (K–3)
• Comprehension
.46 (25 effects)
• Reading Fluency
.34 (11 effects)
• Word Reading
.56 (53 effects)
• Spelling
.40 (24 effects)
Secondary (4–12)
• Comprehension
.09 (37 effects)
• Reading Fluency
.12 (8 effects)
• Word Reading
.20 (22 effects)
• Spelling
.20 (5 effects)
Why Larger Effects in Elementary?
It may be that the interventions are not less
effective but that we have fewer false positives
than with secondary students.
OR…
It may be that older students have more
intractable reading problems.
OR…
Minimal Responders Over Time:
3 Years of Treatment Within
an RTI Framework
Grades 6–7 students (fall
2006)
Random assignment
Sufficient progress
Insufficient progress
Random assignment
Insufficient progress
Grades 6–7 on-track readers
Typical instruction
Grades 7–8
Typical instruction
Grade 8
Typical instruction
(Tier I only)
Grades 6–7
Grades 6–7 struggling readers
Tier III intervention
Grades 7–8
Tier IV
Individualized protocol 1:3
Grade 8
Standardized
protocol 1:5
Individualized
protocol 1:5
Exit intervention
Follow-up assessment
Exit intervention
Sufficient
progress
Sufficient
progress
Tier II intervention
1:15
Grades 6–7
Figure 1. Participant movement across years per initial assignment.
IND = individualized; STD = standardized.
Years 1 and 2: A Summary
Tier I Intervention
All students in both treatment and comparison conditions
received enhanced Tier I treatment:
• Comprehension instruction within content areas
• Academic vocabulary within content areas
• Text as a source of evidence
Vaughn, S., Cirino, P. T., Wanzek, J., Wexler, J., Fletcher, J. M., Denton, C. A., . . . Francis,
D. J. (2010). Response to intervention for middle school students with reading difficulties:
Effects of a primary and secondary intervention. School Psychology Review, 39(1), 3–21.
Vaughn, S., Wanzek, J., Wexler, J., Barth, A., Cirino, P. T., Fletcher, J., . . . Francis, D. J.
(2010). The relative effects of group size on reading progress of older students with reading
difficulties. Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal 23(8), 931–956.
Year 1 Findings
Year 1 addressed two primary questions:
1. Overall, how effective was the treatment in
enhancing students’ outcomes in reading?
2. Do students who are assigned to small-group
instruction outperform students in large-group
instruction?
Question 1: Efficacy of Tier II
Tier II treatment in addition to the enhanced classroom
instruction (Tier I) was associated with gains in decoding,
reading fluency, and comprehension (d = 0.16) over
students with reading difficulties who received from the
research team only the enhanced classroom instruction
(Tier I)—although many of the Tier I-only students also
received interventions from their schools.
Question 2: Effects of Group Size
• Both treatment groups outperformed comparison.
• There were no between-group treatment differences.
What Happened to High vs. Low
Responders?
• Students who met threshold: No more treatment
• Students who did not meet threshold: Additional
intervention in Year 2
Year 2 Research Question
Do students with significant reading disabilities (low
response to previous year treatment) make significantly
better gains in standardized versus individualized
treatments?
Vaughn, S., Wexler, J., Roberts, G., Barth, A. E., Cirino, P. T., Romain, M., . . . Denton,
C. A. (2011). Effects of individualized and standardized interventions on middle school
students with reading disabilities. Exceptional Children, 77(4), 391–407.
Systematic
and explicit
Fast-paced
instruction
Ongoing progress
monitoring
Instruction in same
components of
reading (word
study,
comprehension,
vocabulary, fluency)
Specified use of
time (3 phases of
intervention)
High control of
curriculum and
materials
Modifications made
at the group level
Motivation through
success only
Standardized
Intervention
Individualized
Intervention
Flexibility in
use of time
Low control of
curriculum and
materials
Modifications in
response to individual
student need
Motivation through
text selection,
conferences, goal setting,
positive calls home
Year 2: Tier III Intervention
Conceptual Framework:
Lesson Focus
• Group 1, 50-minute periods (weekly):
• Vocabulary/morphology: 35–45 minutes
• Comprehension/text reading: 170–180 minutes
• Attitude/motivation: 15–25 minutes
• Group 2, 50-minute periods (weekly):
• Word study/text reading: 100–110 minutes
• Vocabulary/morphology: 35–45 minutes
• Comprehension/text reading: 70–80 minutes
• Attitude/motivation: 15–25 minutes
To view sample lessons, visit: www.texasldcenter.org
Findings, Year 2 (Tier III):
Standardized/Individualized
70
72
74
76
78
80
82
84
86
Tier I (C) Tier III (Std) Tier III (Ind)
Standard
score
WJPC
GRADE
TOSRE
Comprehension/Fluency Cluster
Posttest results: Median d = 0.23
80
82
84
86
88
90
92
94
96
Tier I (C) Tier III (Std) Tier III (Ind)
Standard
score
LWID
Word Attack
TOWRE
Spelling
Word Reading Cluster
Posttest results
Findings, Year 2 (Tier III):
Standardized/Individualized
Findings, Year 3: How Did They Do?
Determine long-term effects of intensive interventions on
outcomes for students with persistent reading disabilities
within a response to intervention (RTI) framework
Vaughn, S., Wexler, J., Leroux, A. J., Roberts, G., Denton, C. A., Barth, A. E., &
Fletcher, J. (2011). Effects of intensive reading intervention for eighth-grade students
with persistently inadequate response to intervention. Journal of Learning Disabilities,
45(3), 515–525.
Year 3 Aim
Findings, Year 3: 3-Year Treatment
Comprehension Cluster
• Gates-MacGinitie Passage Comprehension subtest:
ES = 1.20
• Woodcock-Johnson Letter-Word Identification subtest:
ES = 0.49
When Is an ES of 1.20 on a
Standardized Comprehension
Test Inadequate?
Gates-MacGinitie Passage
Comprehension
85.98
74.48
83.37 82.63
70
75
80
85
90
95
Pretest Posttest
Tier I
Tier IV
Mean
Efficacy of RTI for T vs. C Students
• What is the efficacy of a 3-year, response-based, tiered
model for allocating reading interventions across sixth
through eighth grades?
• Does the 3-year, response-based, tiered model for
struggling readers close the gap with typically achieving
peers?
Roberts, G., Vaughn, S., Fletcher, J. M., Stuebing, K. K., & Barth, A. E. (in press).
Effects of a response-based, tiered framework for intervening with struggling readers
in middle school. Reading Research Quarterly.
Results
• Data multivariate normal
• 3-year trajectories fit for the originally sampled group
(T and C)
Treatment outperformed comparison (ES = 0.26).
• Based on a multi-indicator, multilevel model
• Based on a rather robust comparison condition
Results
• Considering slope over time
• Treated students outperformed typical readers
Note. Solid line represents comparison group; dashed line represents
treatment group; dotted line represents typical readers. Reading ability
reflects the metric derived from the multiple-indicator, multilevel model.
0
3.3
6.6
9.91
-1.11
3.82
8.14
11.84
9.67
13.21
16.25
18.8
-2
2
6
10
14
18
22
Fall 6th Spring 6th Spring 7th Spring 8th
Reading
ability
factor
scores
Using the same 3-year sample of students, we examined
effects for teacher ratings of attention:
1. Does reading intervention affect behavioral
attention?
2. What is the causal sequence of the effect of
intervention?
Roberts, G., Rane, S., Fall, A.-M., Fletcher, J. M., & Vaughn, S. (in review). The impact
of a longitudinal intervention for reading on level of attention in middle school
students. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
Impact of Treatment on Attention
Reading Intervention Associated With
Behavioral Attention Improvement
Growth Trajectory of Reading for Tier I and Tier II Groups
Note. Values are latent estimates of average reading. Time 1 in Tier I reading fixed at 0. All other
estimates (across time within Tier I and for all time points in Tier II) are relative to that baseline.
Intervention
Comparison
Test for Mediation
• Reading treatment had a direct effect on reading ability,
and reading ability over time predicted behavioral attention.
• Finding: Improved reading (causal order) to improved attention
Growth Trajectory of Attention for Tier I and Tier II Groups
Note. Values are latent estimates of average reading. Time 1 in Tier I attention fixed at 0. All other
estimates (across time within Tier I and for all time points in Tier II) are relative to that baseline.
Effects are stronger if interventions do the following:
• Use explicit instruction
• Increase time on task
• Provide opportunities to respond with feedback
• Reduce size of instructional groups
• Are comprehensive (multicomponent) and include a
self-regulation component
• Differentiate according to instructional needs
• Teach in the context of academic content
What Is Special About
Special Education Instruction?
Sample Inference Instruction
Follow along as the teacher reads this paragraph. Try to picture the
scene in your head. Where does it take place? Who is talking?
"Immigrant families were crowded everywhere, along with boxes and barrels of supplies.
Everything smelled badly. Everywhere you turned, you bumped into someone or fell over a bundle.
It was pure havoc. One or another of the boys was bawling most of the time, especially George. It
took a lot of impatience for me to hit a child, but one night I had had it. In anger, I got up, struck a
match, and lit the kerosene lamp on the wall. My eyes focused on the ceiling quite accidentally and
I saw a mass of crawlers squirming and creeping into crevices. I examined George's body and found
bedbugs crawling about, his body covered with red blotches, and then I knew why he was crying…"
(Hoobbler, p. 101)
1. What do you think this paragraph is about?
2. Does this take place in the past or in the present?
3. How do you know?
4. What is an "immigrant"?
5. What does "havoc" mean?
• Essential Words
• Daily instruction of
overarching concepts.
• Simplified definitions, visuals,
sentence use, think-pair-share
question.
• Word Study and
Fluency
• Build reading speed, accuracy
and expression.
• Begins with word reading and
moves to sentence, paragraph,
and whole passages.
• Individualized materials and
instruction based on student
need.
Vocabulary Close Reading
In 1867, a boy found a large, glassy stone near
Kimberley. When it proved to be a
_______________________, fortune hunters
came from all around the world. From that
unexpected beginning, both gold and diamonds
became a major source of revenue for South
Africa.
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
Text-based Reading
Text: Close Reading Vocabulary
All around the world, fall is a time to
harvest. It is the result of many months of
work. In spring before anything is planted,
the fields are bare. Farmers plant their
seeds. As the little plants grow, the farmers
care for them. They water them during the
sweltering heat of summer. They pull
weeds and protect the plants from bugs.
Close Text Reading: Teaching
Vocabulary
1. Select text at sentence level for younger
students or less proficient readers and
paragraph level for more proficient readers.
(See Slide 3)
2. Underline key vocabulary words.
3. Make text available to students.
4. Read text aloud together (teachers and
students)
Cont.
•5. Ask students to work in pairs or small groups
and to read the text multiple times using the text as
a source for determining the meaning of the
underline word.
•6. Students then report out their understanding of
work meaning to class as a whole.
Vocabulary Maps
Components
1. Word Recognition
2. Definitions
3. Illustrations
4. Context
5. Vocabulary Associations
6. Vocabulary Building
7. Application
Vocabulary Map for the Indian
Wars
Conflict
7. Provide: an example phrase, sentence,
or definition.
3. Illustration
A disagreement.
2. Definition: Underline the key
words.
5. Word Associations: Choose two
related words.
A. Disagreement
B. Thump
C. Skip
D. Argument
The conflict
between the two tribes
started when both
tribes wanted to settle
In the same area by
the lake.
The conflict broke
out of prison last night
after the guards went
to sleep.
4. Context: Circle the correct sentence.
6. Word Building: Choose a real word
and then write another word.
A. Conflicting
B. Conflictment
_______________
Text-based Reading
Stretch Text – teacher
procedure
1. Explorers had been landing in America for some time
before English settlers arrived in what is now
Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. But it was in that spot on
the James River that English colonization began and
with it, the history of America. James the First was king
of England at that time, and he had granted approval for
a group of businesspeople to settle in this new land. They
were part of the Virginia Company, and they got the go-
ahead in 1606. By December of that year, the expedition
was ready.
Question: Tell me what this part of the story is about.
Possible answer: example: This was about some of the
first settlers who came from England and started to
colonize America in the early 1600’s.
Student Material
Jamestown: The First English
Colony in America
Explorers had been landing in
America for some time before
English settlers arrived in what is
now Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607.
But it was in that spot on the James
River that English colonization
began and with it, the history of
America. James the First was king
of England at that time, and he had
granted approval for a group of
businesspeople to settle in this new
land. They were part of the Virginia
Company, and they got the go-
ahead in 1606. By December of
that year, the expedition was ready.
Text-based Reading
Instructor provides appropriate scaffolds to restrict the
amount of text the student has to address in order to
find the answer. Instructors start with a section of text.
Example
How did the Native Americans help the Pilgrims?
No answer.
Look at the second paragraph to find out how the Native Americans helped the Pilgrims.
No Answer.
Look at the last sentence of the second paragraph to find out how the Native Americans helped
the Pilgrims.
No Answer.
In the last sentence, there is a key word: showed. It tells me the Native Americans showed the
Pilgrims something. What did the Native Americans show the Pilgrims?
They showed them how to grow enough food to last the whole year.
Correct.
The Native Americans helped the Pilgrims by showing them how to grow enough food to feed
themselves all year.
Text-based Instructional Routine
Word Work
Word Work
• Model and teach (I do it.)
Show students the correct way.
• Guided practice (We do it.)
Students do it with teacher support.
• Independent practice (You do it.)
Students practice alone.
• Cumulative practice (built into lessons)
Students practice new items along with items
already learned.
www.meadowscenter.org

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reading intervention Sharon Vaughn Powerpoint.pptx

  • 1. Importance of Intensive Interventions: Definitions and Illustrations Sharon Vaughn The University of Texas at Austin
  • 2. Recognition Goes to… • Jack Fletcher and David Francis, University of Houston • Greg Roberts, Elizabeth Swanson, and Stephanie Stillman, The University of Texas at Austin • Jeanne Wanzek, Florida State University • Jade Wexler, University of Maryland • Carolyn Denton, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
  • 3. NAEP Grade 4 National Results
  • 4. NAEP Grade 8 National Results
  • 5. Percentage of Students Ages 6–21 Served Under Individuals With Disabilities Education Act SOURCE: Office of Special Education Programs, Annual Report to Congress on the Implementation of IDEA, 1990–2010; IDEA database, www.ideadata.org/PartBdata.asp
  • 6. What Is So Disturbing? • In 2011, 68% of fourth-grade students and 62% of eighth-grade students with disabilities scored below basic on NAEP Reading. • In 2011, 29% of fourth-grade students and 20% of eighth-grade students without disabilities scored below basic on NAEP Reading. • From 2009 to 2011, reading results for students with disabilities declined.
  • 7. Synthesis of Intensive Interventions: Grades 4 Through 12 • More than 75 sessions • No studies for grades 10–12 • 11 experimental or quasi-experimental studies for secondary, 19 for elementary Wanzek, J., & Vaughn, S. (2007). Research-based implications from extensive early reading interventions. School Psychology Review, 36(4), 541–561. Wanzek, J., Vaughn, S., Scammacca, N. K., Metz, K. L., Murray, C. S., Roberts, G., & Danielson, L. (in press). Extensive reading intervention for struggling readers in grades 4 through 12: Implications from research. Review of Educational Research.
  • 8. Mean Effect Sizes Elementary (K–3) • Comprehension .46 (25 effects) • Reading Fluency .34 (11 effects) • Word Reading .56 (53 effects) • Spelling .40 (24 effects) Secondary (4–12) • Comprehension .09 (37 effects) • Reading Fluency .12 (8 effects) • Word Reading .20 (22 effects) • Spelling .20 (5 effects)
  • 9. Why Larger Effects in Elementary? It may be that the interventions are not less effective but that we have fewer false positives than with secondary students. OR… It may be that older students have more intractable reading problems. OR…
  • 10. Minimal Responders Over Time: 3 Years of Treatment Within an RTI Framework
  • 11. Grades 6–7 students (fall 2006) Random assignment Sufficient progress Insufficient progress Random assignment Insufficient progress Grades 6–7 on-track readers Typical instruction Grades 7–8 Typical instruction Grade 8 Typical instruction (Tier I only) Grades 6–7 Grades 6–7 struggling readers Tier III intervention Grades 7–8 Tier IV Individualized protocol 1:3 Grade 8 Standardized protocol 1:5 Individualized protocol 1:5 Exit intervention Follow-up assessment Exit intervention Sufficient progress Sufficient progress Tier II intervention 1:15 Grades 6–7
  • 12. Figure 1. Participant movement across years per initial assignment. IND = individualized; STD = standardized.
  • 13. Years 1 and 2: A Summary
  • 14. Tier I Intervention All students in both treatment and comparison conditions received enhanced Tier I treatment: • Comprehension instruction within content areas • Academic vocabulary within content areas • Text as a source of evidence Vaughn, S., Cirino, P. T., Wanzek, J., Wexler, J., Fletcher, J. M., Denton, C. A., . . . Francis, D. J. (2010). Response to intervention for middle school students with reading difficulties: Effects of a primary and secondary intervention. School Psychology Review, 39(1), 3–21. Vaughn, S., Wanzek, J., Wexler, J., Barth, A., Cirino, P. T., Fletcher, J., . . . Francis, D. J. (2010). The relative effects of group size on reading progress of older students with reading difficulties. Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal 23(8), 931–956.
  • 15. Year 1 Findings Year 1 addressed two primary questions: 1. Overall, how effective was the treatment in enhancing students’ outcomes in reading? 2. Do students who are assigned to small-group instruction outperform students in large-group instruction?
  • 16. Question 1: Efficacy of Tier II Tier II treatment in addition to the enhanced classroom instruction (Tier I) was associated with gains in decoding, reading fluency, and comprehension (d = 0.16) over students with reading difficulties who received from the research team only the enhanced classroom instruction (Tier I)—although many of the Tier I-only students also received interventions from their schools.
  • 17. Question 2: Effects of Group Size • Both treatment groups outperformed comparison. • There were no between-group treatment differences.
  • 18. What Happened to High vs. Low Responders? • Students who met threshold: No more treatment • Students who did not meet threshold: Additional intervention in Year 2
  • 19. Year 2 Research Question Do students with significant reading disabilities (low response to previous year treatment) make significantly better gains in standardized versus individualized treatments? Vaughn, S., Wexler, J., Roberts, G., Barth, A. E., Cirino, P. T., Romain, M., . . . Denton, C. A. (2011). Effects of individualized and standardized interventions on middle school students with reading disabilities. Exceptional Children, 77(4), 391–407.
  • 20. Systematic and explicit Fast-paced instruction Ongoing progress monitoring Instruction in same components of reading (word study, comprehension, vocabulary, fluency) Specified use of time (3 phases of intervention) High control of curriculum and materials Modifications made at the group level Motivation through success only Standardized Intervention Individualized Intervention Flexibility in use of time Low control of curriculum and materials Modifications in response to individual student need Motivation through text selection, conferences, goal setting, positive calls home Year 2: Tier III Intervention
  • 21. Conceptual Framework: Lesson Focus • Group 1, 50-minute periods (weekly): • Vocabulary/morphology: 35–45 minutes • Comprehension/text reading: 170–180 minutes • Attitude/motivation: 15–25 minutes • Group 2, 50-minute periods (weekly): • Word study/text reading: 100–110 minutes • Vocabulary/morphology: 35–45 minutes • Comprehension/text reading: 70–80 minutes • Attitude/motivation: 15–25 minutes To view sample lessons, visit: www.texasldcenter.org
  • 22. Findings, Year 2 (Tier III): Standardized/Individualized 70 72 74 76 78 80 82 84 86 Tier I (C) Tier III (Std) Tier III (Ind) Standard score WJPC GRADE TOSRE Comprehension/Fluency Cluster Posttest results: Median d = 0.23
  • 23. 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 Tier I (C) Tier III (Std) Tier III (Ind) Standard score LWID Word Attack TOWRE Spelling Word Reading Cluster Posttest results Findings, Year 2 (Tier III): Standardized/Individualized
  • 24. Findings, Year 3: How Did They Do?
  • 25. Determine long-term effects of intensive interventions on outcomes for students with persistent reading disabilities within a response to intervention (RTI) framework Vaughn, S., Wexler, J., Leroux, A. J., Roberts, G., Denton, C. A., Barth, A. E., & Fletcher, J. (2011). Effects of intensive reading intervention for eighth-grade students with persistently inadequate response to intervention. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 45(3), 515–525. Year 3 Aim
  • 26. Findings, Year 3: 3-Year Treatment Comprehension Cluster • Gates-MacGinitie Passage Comprehension subtest: ES = 1.20 • Woodcock-Johnson Letter-Word Identification subtest: ES = 0.49
  • 27. When Is an ES of 1.20 on a Standardized Comprehension Test Inadequate?
  • 29. Efficacy of RTI for T vs. C Students • What is the efficacy of a 3-year, response-based, tiered model for allocating reading interventions across sixth through eighth grades? • Does the 3-year, response-based, tiered model for struggling readers close the gap with typically achieving peers? Roberts, G., Vaughn, S., Fletcher, J. M., Stuebing, K. K., & Barth, A. E. (in press). Effects of a response-based, tiered framework for intervening with struggling readers in middle school. Reading Research Quarterly.
  • 30. Results • Data multivariate normal • 3-year trajectories fit for the originally sampled group (T and C) Treatment outperformed comparison (ES = 0.26). • Based on a multi-indicator, multilevel model • Based on a rather robust comparison condition
  • 31. Results • Considering slope over time • Treated students outperformed typical readers Note. Solid line represents comparison group; dashed line represents treatment group; dotted line represents typical readers. Reading ability reflects the metric derived from the multiple-indicator, multilevel model. 0 3.3 6.6 9.91 -1.11 3.82 8.14 11.84 9.67 13.21 16.25 18.8 -2 2 6 10 14 18 22 Fall 6th Spring 6th Spring 7th Spring 8th Reading ability factor scores
  • 32. Using the same 3-year sample of students, we examined effects for teacher ratings of attention: 1. Does reading intervention affect behavioral attention? 2. What is the causal sequence of the effect of intervention? Roberts, G., Rane, S., Fall, A.-M., Fletcher, J. M., & Vaughn, S. (in review). The impact of a longitudinal intervention for reading on level of attention in middle school students. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. Impact of Treatment on Attention
  • 33. Reading Intervention Associated With Behavioral Attention Improvement Growth Trajectory of Reading for Tier I and Tier II Groups Note. Values are latent estimates of average reading. Time 1 in Tier I reading fixed at 0. All other estimates (across time within Tier I and for all time points in Tier II) are relative to that baseline. Intervention Comparison
  • 34. Test for Mediation • Reading treatment had a direct effect on reading ability, and reading ability over time predicted behavioral attention. • Finding: Improved reading (causal order) to improved attention Growth Trajectory of Attention for Tier I and Tier II Groups Note. Values are latent estimates of average reading. Time 1 in Tier I attention fixed at 0. All other estimates (across time within Tier I and for all time points in Tier II) are relative to that baseline.
  • 35. Effects are stronger if interventions do the following: • Use explicit instruction • Increase time on task • Provide opportunities to respond with feedback • Reduce size of instructional groups • Are comprehensive (multicomponent) and include a self-regulation component • Differentiate according to instructional needs • Teach in the context of academic content What Is Special About Special Education Instruction?
  • 36. Sample Inference Instruction Follow along as the teacher reads this paragraph. Try to picture the scene in your head. Where does it take place? Who is talking? "Immigrant families were crowded everywhere, along with boxes and barrels of supplies. Everything smelled badly. Everywhere you turned, you bumped into someone or fell over a bundle. It was pure havoc. One or another of the boys was bawling most of the time, especially George. It took a lot of impatience for me to hit a child, but one night I had had it. In anger, I got up, struck a match, and lit the kerosene lamp on the wall. My eyes focused on the ceiling quite accidentally and I saw a mass of crawlers squirming and creeping into crevices. I examined George's body and found bedbugs crawling about, his body covered with red blotches, and then I knew why he was crying…" (Hoobbler, p. 101) 1. What do you think this paragraph is about? 2. Does this take place in the past or in the present? 3. How do you know? 4. What is an "immigrant"? 5. What does "havoc" mean?
  • 37. • Essential Words • Daily instruction of overarching concepts. • Simplified definitions, visuals, sentence use, think-pair-share question. • Word Study and Fluency • Build reading speed, accuracy and expression. • Begins with word reading and moves to sentence, paragraph, and whole passages. • Individualized materials and instruction based on student need.
  • 38. Vocabulary Close Reading In 1867, a boy found a large, glassy stone near Kimberley. When it proved to be a _______________________, fortune hunters came from all around the world. From that unexpected beginning, both gold and diamonds became a major source of revenue for South Africa.
  • 42. Text: Close Reading Vocabulary All around the world, fall is a time to harvest. It is the result of many months of work. In spring before anything is planted, the fields are bare. Farmers plant their seeds. As the little plants grow, the farmers care for them. They water them during the sweltering heat of summer. They pull weeds and protect the plants from bugs.
  • 43. Close Text Reading: Teaching Vocabulary 1. Select text at sentence level for younger students or less proficient readers and paragraph level for more proficient readers. (See Slide 3) 2. Underline key vocabulary words. 3. Make text available to students. 4. Read text aloud together (teachers and students)
  • 44. Cont. •5. Ask students to work in pairs or small groups and to read the text multiple times using the text as a source for determining the meaning of the underline word. •6. Students then report out their understanding of work meaning to class as a whole.
  • 45. Vocabulary Maps Components 1. Word Recognition 2. Definitions 3. Illustrations 4. Context 5. Vocabulary Associations 6. Vocabulary Building 7. Application
  • 46. Vocabulary Map for the Indian Wars Conflict 7. Provide: an example phrase, sentence, or definition. 3. Illustration A disagreement. 2. Definition: Underline the key words. 5. Word Associations: Choose two related words. A. Disagreement B. Thump C. Skip D. Argument The conflict between the two tribes started when both tribes wanted to settle In the same area by the lake. The conflict broke out of prison last night after the guards went to sleep. 4. Context: Circle the correct sentence. 6. Word Building: Choose a real word and then write another word. A. Conflicting B. Conflictment _______________
  • 48. Stretch Text – teacher procedure 1. Explorers had been landing in America for some time before English settlers arrived in what is now Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. But it was in that spot on the James River that English colonization began and with it, the history of America. James the First was king of England at that time, and he had granted approval for a group of businesspeople to settle in this new land. They were part of the Virginia Company, and they got the go- ahead in 1606. By December of that year, the expedition was ready. Question: Tell me what this part of the story is about. Possible answer: example: This was about some of the first settlers who came from England and started to colonize America in the early 1600’s. Student Material Jamestown: The First English Colony in America Explorers had been landing in America for some time before English settlers arrived in what is now Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. But it was in that spot on the James River that English colonization began and with it, the history of America. James the First was king of England at that time, and he had granted approval for a group of businesspeople to settle in this new land. They were part of the Virginia Company, and they got the go- ahead in 1606. By December of that year, the expedition was ready. Text-based Reading
  • 49. Instructor provides appropriate scaffolds to restrict the amount of text the student has to address in order to find the answer. Instructors start with a section of text. Example How did the Native Americans help the Pilgrims? No answer. Look at the second paragraph to find out how the Native Americans helped the Pilgrims. No Answer. Look at the last sentence of the second paragraph to find out how the Native Americans helped the Pilgrims. No Answer. In the last sentence, there is a key word: showed. It tells me the Native Americans showed the Pilgrims something. What did the Native Americans show the Pilgrims? They showed them how to grow enough food to last the whole year. Correct. The Native Americans helped the Pilgrims by showing them how to grow enough food to feed themselves all year. Text-based Instructional Routine
  • 51. Word Work • Model and teach (I do it.) Show students the correct way. • Guided practice (We do it.) Students do it with teacher support. • Independent practice (You do it.) Students practice alone. • Cumulative practice (built into lessons) Students practice new items along with items already learned.