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Workshop Agenda…

RTI: General Academic Interventions for Difficult-to-Teach Students Jim Wright www.interventioncentral.org. Download PowerPoints and Handouts from this workshop at: http://www.interventioncentral.org/ schoolhouse08.php. RTI & Academic Interventions: 4 Big Ideas.

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Workshop Agenda…

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  1. RTI: General Academic Interventions for Difficult-to-Teach StudentsJim Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org

  2. Download PowerPoints and Handouts from this workshop at:http://www.interventioncentral.org/schoolhouse08.php

  3. RTI & Academic Interventions: 4 Big Ideas Selecting & Implementing ‘Research-Based’ Interventions: Considerations Best Practices: Math Interventions Best Practices: Writing Interventions Best Practices: Reading Interventions Best Practices: Motivating Students Intervention Resources: Free Stuff on the Internet Workshop Agenda…

  4. Trivia Question: What job is Jim Wright, school psychologist and school administrator, MOST often mistaken as having?

  5. Discussion: Read the quote below: “The quality of a school as a learning community can be measured by how effectively it addresses the needs of struggling students.”--Wright (2005) Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Why? Source: Wright, J. (2005, Summer). Five interventions that work. NAESP Leadership Compass, 2(4) pp.1,6.

  6. ‘RTI Logic’: The Power of Working Smarter… -You're a pretty smart fella.-Not that smart.-How'd you figure it out?-I imagined someone smarter than me. Then I tried to think,"What would he do?”From HEIST (2001)Written by David Mamet

  7. Essential Elements of RTI (Fairbanks, Sugai, Guardino, & Lathrop, 2007) • A “continuum of evidence-based services available to all students" that range from universal to highly individualized & intensive • “Decision points to determine if students are performing significantly below the level of their peers in academic and social behavior domains" • “Ongoing monitoring of student progress" • “Employment of more intensive or different interventions when students do not improve in response" to lesser interventions • “Evaluation for special education services if students do not respond to intervention instruction" Source: Fairbanks, S., Sugai, G., Guardino, S., & Lathrop, M. (2007). Response to intervention: Examining classroom behavior support in second grade. Exceptional Children, 73, p. 289.

  8. How can a school restructure to support RTI? The school can organize its intervention efforts into 3 levels, or Tiers, that represent a continuum of increasing intensity of support. (Kovaleski, 2003; Vaughn, 2003). Tier I is the lowest level of intervention and Tier III is the most intensive intervention level. Universal intervention: Available to all students Example: Additional classroom literacy instruction Tier I Individualized Intervention: Students who need additional support than peers are given individual intervention plans. Example: Supplemental peer tutoring in reading to increase reading fluency Tier II Intensive Intervention: Students whose intervention needs are greater than general education can meet may be referred for more intensive services. Example: Special Education Tier III

  9. Hic sunt dracones. [Latin for “Here be dragons…”] Phrase appearing on the Lenox Globe circa 1503, denoting unknown dangers on the unexplored east coast of Asia. This term now is used to describe any instance in which decision-making or action is difficult because the situation is so complex or because so many variables are unknown. Source: Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Here_be_dragons#Dragons_on_maps

  10. Two Ways to Solve Problems: Algorithm vs. Heuristic • Algorithm. An explicit step-by-step procedure for producing a solution to a given problem. Example: Multiplying 6 x 2 • Heuristic. A rule of thumb or approach which may help in solving a problem, but is not guaranteed to find a solution. Heuristics are exploratory in nature. Example: Using a map to find an appropriate route to a location.

  11. MODERN DARYOLS RECIPE (ALGORITHM):INGREDIENTS 2 (9 inch) unbaked pie crusts 1/2 cup blanched almonds 1 1/4 cups cold water 1 cup half-and-half cream 1 pinch saffron powder 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon 5 eggs 3/4 cup white sugar 1 teaspoon rose water DIRECTIONS Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Press pie crusts into the bottom and up the sides of two 9 inch pie pans. Prick with a fork all over to keep them from bubbling up. Bake pie crusts for about 10 minutes in the preheated oven, until set but not browned. Set aside to cool. Make an almond milk by placing almonds in the container of a food processor. Process until finely ground, then add water, and pulse just to blend. Let the mixture sit for 10 minutes, then strain through a cheesecloth. Measure out 1 cup of the almond milk, and mix with half and half. Stir in the saffron and cinnamon, and set aside. Place the eggs and sugar in a saucepan, and mix until well blended. Place the pan over low heat, and gradually stir in the almond milk mixture and cinnamon. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly until the mixture begins to thicken. When the mixture is thick enough to evenly coat the back of a metal spoon, stir in rose water and remove from heat. Pour into the cooled pie shells…. Bake for 40 minutes in the preheated oven, or until the center is set, but the top is not browned. Cool to room temperature, then refrigerate until serving. As Knowledge Base Grows, Heuristic Approaches (Exploratory, Open-Ended Guidelines to Solving a Problem) Can Sometimes Turn into Algorithms (Fixed Rules for Solving a Problem )Example: Recipes Through History DARYOLS: ORIGINAL14th CENTURY ENGLISH RECIPE (HEURISTIC):Take cream of cow milk, or of almonds; do there-to eggs with sugar, saffron and salt. Mix it fair. Do it in a pie shell of 2 inch deep; bake it well and serve it forth.

  12. RTI is a Work in Progress: Some I\Areas Can Be Managed Like an Algorithm While Others Require a Heuristic Approch • Reading Fluency. Can be approached as a fixed algorithm. • DIBELS allows universal screening and progress-monitoring • DIBELS benchmarks give indication of student risk status • Classroom-friendly research-based fluency building interventions have been validated • Study Skills. A complex set of skills whose problem-solving approach resembles a heuristic. • Student’s basic set of study skills must be analyzed • The intervention selected will be highly dependent on the hypothesized reason(s) for the student’s study difficulties • The quality of the research on study-skills interventions varies and is still in development

  13. “The perfect is the enemy of the good.”--Voltaire

  14. RTI: Listening to the ‘Teacher’s Voice’…

  15. 1. What are the likely reason(s) for the student’s academic skill or performance deficit(s)? 7.How can we assess the quality of the intervention ‘follow-through’? 6.What are ways we can motivate students so that they will be motivated to engage in the intervention plan? 2.What research-based interventions best match the student’s needs? 3.Where can we find the resources necessary to implement the intervention plan? 4.How can the intervention best be ‘packaged’ to increase the likelihood that it will be done right? 5.How can we support teachers as they implement the plan in the classroom? Key Questions About Implementing Classroom Interventions

  16. Big Ideas: Student Social & Academic Behaviors Are Strongly Influenced by the Instructional Setting (Lentz & Shapiro, 1986) • Students with learning problems do not exist in isolation. Rather, their instructional environment plays an enormously important role in these students’ eventual success or failure Source: Lentz, F. E. & Shapiro, E. S. (1986). Functional assessment of the academic environment. School Psychology Review, 15, 346-57.

  17. Big Ideas: Learn Unit (Heward, 1996) The three essential elements of effective student learning include: • Academic Opportunity to Respond. The student is presented with a meaningful opportunity to respond to an academic task. A question posed by the teacher, a math word problem, and a spelling item on an educational computer ‘Word Gobbler’ game could all be considered academic opportunities to respond. • Active Student Response. The student answers the item, solves the problem presented, or completes the academic task. Answering the teacher’s question, computing the answer to a math word problem (and showing all work), and typing in the correct spelling of an item when playing an educational computer game are all examples of active student responding. • Performance Feedback. The student receives timely feedback about whether his or her response is correct—often with praise and encouragement. A teacher exclaiming ‘Right! Good job!’ when a student gives an response in class, a student using an answer key to check her answer to a math word problem, and a computer message that says ‘Congratulations! You get 2 points for correctly spelling this word!” are all examples of performance feedback. Source: Heward, W.L. (1996). Three low-tech strategies for increasing the frequency of active student response during group instruction. In R. Gardner, D. M.S ainato, J. O. Cooper, T. E. Heron, W. L. Heward, J. W. Eshleman,& T. A. Grossi (Eds.), Behavior analysis in education: Focus on measurably superior instruction (pp.283-320). Pacific Grove, CA:Brooks/Cole.

  18. Big Ideas: The Four Stages of Learning Can Be Summed Up in the ‘Instructional Hierarchy’ pp. 92, 103 (Haring et al., 1978) Student learning can be thought of as a multi-stage process. The universal stages of learning include: • Acquisition: The student is just acquiring the skill. • Fluency: The student can perform the skill but must make that skill ‘automatic’. • Generalization: The student must perform the skill across situations or settings. • Adaptation: The student confronts novel task demands that require that the student adapt a current skill to meet new requirements. Source: Haring, N.G., Lovitt, T.C., Eaton, M.D., & Hansen, C.L. (1978). The fourth R: Research in the classroom. Columbus, OH: Charles E. Merrill Publishing Co.

  19. Instructional Hierarchy: Stages of Learning Acquisition: Effective Intervention Ideas • Teacher actively demonstrates target skill • Teacher uses ‘think-aloud’ strategy-- especially for thinking skills that are otherwise covert • Student has models of correct performance to consult as needed (e.g., correctly completed math problems on board) • Student gets feedback about correct performance • Student receives praise, encouragement for effort

  20. Instructional Hierarchy: Stages of Learning Fluency: Effective Intervention Ideas • Teacher structures learning activities to give student opportunity for active (observable) responding • Student has frequent opportunities to drill (direct repetition of target skill) and practice (blending target skill with other skills to solve problems) • Student gets feedback on fluency and accuracy of performance • Student receives praise, encouragement for increased fluency

  21. Instructional Hierarchy: Stages of Learning Generalization: Effective Intervention Ideas • Teacher structures academic tasks to require that the student use the target skill regularly in assignments. • Student receives encouragement, praise, reinforcers for using skill in new settings, situations • If student confuses target skill with similar skill(s), the student is given practice items that force him/her to correctly discriminate between similar skills • Teacher works with parents to identify tasks that the student can do outside of school to practice target skill • Student gets periodic opportunities to review, practice target skill to ensure maintenance

  22. Instructional Building Blocks… Adaption: Effective Intervention Ideas • Teacher helps student to articulate the ‘big ideas’ or core element(s) of target skill that the student can modify to face novel tasks, situations (e.g., fractions, ratios, and percentages link to the ‘big idea’ of the part in relation to the whole; ‘Thank you’ is part of a larger class of polite speech) • Train for adaptation: Student gets opportunities to practice the target skill with modest modifications in new situations, settings with encouragement, corrective feedback, praise, other reinforcers. • Encourage student to set own goals for adapting skill to new and challenging situations

  23. Big Ideas: Academic Delays Can Be a Potent Cause of Behavior Problems (Witt, Daly, & Noell, 2000) Student academic problems cause many school behavior problems. “Whether [a student’s] problem is a behavior problem or an academic one, we recommend starting with a functional academic assessment, since often behavior problems occur when students cannot or will not do required academic work.” Source: Witt, J. C., Daly, E. M., & Moell, G. (2000). Functional assessments: A step-by-step guide to solving academic and behavior problems. Longmont, CO: Sopris West, p. 13

  24. ‘Elbow Group’ Activity: What Are Your School’s Top Academic Intervention Needs? • In your group: • Discuss the top 3 academic intervention concerns that you each have about students in your building or district. • Note any common themes of intervention needs identified by multiple members of your group.

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