180 likes | 333 Views
Energizing Teachers About Your School’s RTI Team Jim Wright www.interventioncentral.org . Teachers may be reluctant to refer students to your RTI Team because they…. believe referring to the RTI Team is a sign of failure
E N D
Energizing Teachers About Your School’s RTI TeamJim Wrightwww.interventioncentral.org
Teachers may be reluctant to refer students to your RTI Team because they… • believe referring to the RTI Team is a sign of failure • do not think that your team has any ideas that they haven’t already tried • believe that an RTI referral will mean a lot more work for them (vs. referring directly to Special Education) • don’t want to ‘waste time’ on kids with poor motivation or behavior problems when ‘more deserving’ learners go unnoticed and unrewarded • don’t want to put effort into learning a new initiative that may just fade away in a couple of years
Teachers may be motivated to refer students to your RTI Team because they… • can engage in collegial conversations about better ways to help struggling learners • learn instructional and behavior-management strategies that they can use with similar students in the future • increase their teaching time • are able to access more intervention resources and supports in the building than if they work alone • feel less isolated when dealing with challenging kids • have help in documenting their intervention efforts
“Never believe that a few caring people can’t change the world. For, indeed, that’s all who ever have.” --Margaret Mead
RTI Team Strategies to Win Over Reluctant Teachers(from Cialdini, 1984)
Reciprocation When people are given a gift or have a service performed for them, they feel obligated to pay it back.
Reciprocation: Team Tips • Stuff teacher mailboxes with intervention tips • Sponsor teacher workshops with handouts & refreshments • Accommodate a teacher’s schedule to hold RTI Team meetings • Offer to collect ‘baseline’ information on a student—share results with teacher • Compile list of RTI Team members’ services– invite teacher to select 1 or 2
Consistency People strive, often unconsciously, to maintain consistency between their opinions or attitudes and their actions.
Consistency: Team Tips • Invite a reluctant teacher to an RTI Team meeting to ‘support’ a colleague • Sign up teachers as ‘consultant members’ of the RTI Team • Ask a teacher to keep RTI Team referral forms or other RTI Team resources in classroom to share with colleagues • Set up contest for ‘best intervention ideas’ • Showcase ideas from reluctant teachers
Social Proof People are influenced to take an action when they see that others like them are also doing it.
Social Proof: Team Tips • Encourage teachers to give RTI Team testimonials at faculty meetings • Make sure that all grade levelsare represented on the RTI Team • Share successful RTI Team intervention ideas with other members of a referring teacher’s team • Bring in RTI Team speakers from another school who resemble underrepresented groups • Share general RTI Team statistics with staff
Liking People are motivated to carry out the requests of those whom they like or with whom they feel ‘connected’.
Liking: Team Tips • Ask satisfied teachers to invite afriend to refer to the RTI Team • Assign RTI Team members to invitefriends, acquaintances to an RTI Team meeting • Encourage referring teachers to bring friends, teaching partners to an RTI Team meeting • Praise teachers at an RTI Team meeting for positive teaching, management qualities • Seek out popular, respected staff to serve on the RTI Team
Authority People respect and follow those with authority (organizational, experiential, professional).
Authority: Team Tips • Have principal encourage newteachers to refer to the RTI Team • Invite building- or district-level administrators to make positive comments about the RTI Team to faculty • Have teachers with experiential, professional authority to give positive testimonials about the RTI Team • Send ‘Thank You’ cards signed by principal • Ask outside presenters to ‘plug’ the RTI Team
Scarcity When items, resources or opportunities are in short supply, people value them more (especially when competing for them).
Scarcity: Team Tips • Establish a cut-off date foraccepting RTI Team referrals • Limit the number of RTI Team referralsthat your team will accept in a year • Publicize the limited slots available at key referral times (e.g., end of marking period) • Give away limited-edition packets of intervention resources at RTI Team meetings • Sign up ‘consultant member’ to the RTI Team but limit the number of meetings that he or she attends
References • Cialdini, R.B. (1984). Influence: How and why people agree to things. New York: William Morrow & Company, Inc.