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Explore contemporary research on Tier 2 interventions focusing on developing number sense in K-2 students, including core and advanced concepts, boosting strategies, instructional examples, implementation features, and intervention results. Learn about key content areas, fluency building, and skill development techniques, all designed to enhance mathematical abilities in young learners.
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Contemporary Research on Tier 2 Intervention: K-2 Number Sense Diane P. Bryant, Ph.D. The University of Texas at Austin © 2008 Meadows Center
Overview • Number Sense • 3-Tier Model: Tier 2 • Tier 2 Intervention Boosters © 2008 Meadows Center
Number Sense • . . . Core number sense developed informally prior to starting school: “an ability to immediately identify the numerical value associated with small quantities, a facility with basic counting skills, and a proficiency in approximating the magnitudes of small numbers of objects and simple numerical operations (NMAP, 2008, p. 27). • . . . More advanced type of number sense developed through formal instruction: “understanding of place value, of how whole numbers can be composed and decomposed, and the meaning of the basic arithmetic operations. . . .understanding the commutative, associative, and distributive properties . . .” (NMAP, 2008, p. 27) © 2008 Meadows Center
Number Sense • . . . involves representing numbers in many ways, recognizing numerical patterns [algebraic reasoning], and understanding numerical quantities • . . . includes abilities related to subitizing, counting, number knowledge [e.g., numerical sequences, numerical magnitude comparisons] arithmetic combinations, and story problems (Berch, 2005; Jordan et al., 2006). • . . . is highly correlated with first-grade mathematics achievement (Jordan, Kaplan, Locuniak, & Ramineni, 2007; Locuniak & Jordan, 2008). © 2008 Meadows Center
RTI: Tier 2: Intervention Secondary Prevention Focus For students identified with mathematics difficulties Instruction Standard research-validated intervention protocol Grouping Small group instruction (1:3, 1:4, or 1:5) 25 - 30 minutes per day/several days per week in addition to 60 - 90 minutes of mathematics instruction Time Assessment Ongoing progress monitoring during intervention Interventionist Personnel determined by the school (e.g., classroom teacher, mathematics interventionist) Fidelity Observations conducted on fidelity of implementation © 2008 Meadows Center
Instruction CR/VR/AR Tier 2 Types of Boosters Fluency Building AR • Concrete Representation • Visual/Pictorial Representation • Abstract/Numeric Representation Skill Building/ Practice PR/VR/AR T E K S Lower Proficiency Levels Higher © 2008 Meadows Center
Tier 2: Number Sense Instructional Content (Examples) Subitizing (dot patterns) Recognize number of dots quickly Number Knowledge and Relationships Count: Rote, Counting Up/Back, Skip (2, 5, 10) Read & write numbers: 0 - 20 (K); 0 – 99 (1st); 0 – 999 (2nd) Compare & order numbers Identify numbers that are one and two more than/less than Anchor Numbers to 5 & 10 frames © 2008 Meadows Center
Tier 2: Number Sense Instructional Content (Examples) Relationships to 10/Base 10/Place Value Use models to represent numbers: groups of tens and ones (1st grade); groups of hundreds, tens, and ones (2nd grade) Create equivalent representations of numbers Compose and decompose numbers - multi-digit numbers Solve addition & subtraction problems © 2008 Meadows Center
Tier 2: Number Sense Instructional Content (Examples) Addition & Subtraction Combinations Identify and apply properties (e.g., commutative, inverse relationship between addition and subtraction) Develop and apply strategies to solve facts (e.g., count on [+ 0, + 1, + 2], doubles, doubles +1, make 10 + more; count back [-0, -1, -2, -3] Word Problem Solving Solve different types of problems [part-part-whole, joining, separating, comparing, two step problems] Include extraneous information © 2008 Meadows Center
Features of Tier 2 Intervention • Instructional Routine: modeling, modeled practice, guided practice, independent practice (daily progress monitoring) • Lesson Design: mixed instructional content; scripted interventions; explicit, strategic, “think aloud” instruction; error correction; multiple opportunities to respond; pacing; timer • Daily components: warm-up (review), 2 lessons, cool down • Instructional Content: focuses on difficult numbers; vocabulary; (e.g., greater than/less than); procedural and conceptual knowledge; TEKS: number, operation, quantitative reasoning; patterns/relationships/algebraic thinking; problem solving; other TEKS incorporated into instructional design © 2008 Meadows Center
Features of Tier 2Intervention • Grouping: homogeneous grouping with 3 - 5 students per group • Duration: daily sessions for 30 minutes; PM 5th day • Representations: physical (concrete), visual (pictorial), • abstract (numbers/symbols) • Materials: number charts (100s), 5- and 10-frames, counters, cubes, number lines, base-ten materials, dot cards, fact cards, place value cards • Progress monitoring: daily checks (independent practice); aim checks • Stretch Your Skills Bubble answers option for WPS © 2008 Meadows Center
Results: Tier 2 Intervention • 2007-2008 [3-Tier Schools]: Based on Spring assessment results with below the 25th percentile as the cut score for Tier 2 • Kindergarten: • 41% qualified to exit Tier 2 • 25% qualified for Tier 2 • 34% qualified for Tier 3 (below the 10th percentile) • First Grade: • 52% qualified to exit Tier 2 • 24% qualified for Tier 2 • 24% qualified for Tier 3 • Second Grade: • 49% qualified to exit Tier 2 • 24% qualified for Tier 2 • 27% qualified for Tier 3 © 2008 Meadows Center
Results: 1st GradeExample Effect Sizes .51 TEMI-PM .20 TEMI-O .3 - .5 medium .0 - .2 small (Cohen, 1988) © 2008 Meadows Center