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DIBELS Data

DIBELS Data. Rosemarie Dugi , PhD MSU Billings rdugi@msubillings.edu. No Child Left Behind (NCLB). President Bush January 8, 2002 Increase student achievement Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) Highly Qualified Teacher (HQT). NCLB required states to….

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DIBELS Data

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  1. DIBELS Data Rosemarie Dugi, PhD MSU Billings rdugi@msubillings.edu

  2. No Child Left Behind (NCLB) • President Bush • January 8, 2002 • Increase student achievement • Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) • Highly Qualified Teacher (HQT)

  3. NCLB required states to… • Ensure that highly qualified teachers are in every classroom • Use researched-based practices as the foundation of instruction. • Develop tests to assess students so that data-driven decision become an integral part of the educational system. • Hold schools accountable for the performance of all students.

  4. NCLB • Every public school student will be up to state standards in Reading and Math. • Closing the achievement gap • Including students of SES and cultural, racial and ethnic backgrounds. • As well as students with disabilities.

  5. Highly Qualified Teachers (HQT) • Montana OPI • Highly Qualified defined in the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act of 2001 that any teacher teaching in a public elementary school or secondary school must meet these three characteristics: • 1) possession of a bachelor's degree; • 2) holds a teaching license • 3) has demonstrated content knowledge in each subject taught.

  6. Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) • Develop academic standards for all students in Reading, Math, and Science. • Demonstrate proficiency on state standards by the end of 2013-2014 SY. • Measure student progress. • Federal Money to assist. • States required to submit accountability plans and assessments.

  7. State AYP • Annual statewide assessments • Must be based on the state’s academic standards, statewide assessments, and other indicators (graduations, attendance). • Achievement of all public elementary and secondary students. • Same for ALL students and school districts. • Include REWARDS (recognition) and SANCTIONS (support and options).

  8. RESPONSE TO INTERVENTION(RTI)

  9. Response to Intervention (RTI) • Montana – Reading • Early Detection • General Education • Research Based Interventions/strategies • Three Tiers

  10. What is RTI? • Ongoing assessment of student performance • Use of researched-based instructional practices to provide quality instruction targeted to meet individual student needs • Data-based decision making.

  11. Tiers of Instruction • Tier 1: Core Classroom Instruction • Instruction for ALL students • 80-90% of student population • Tier 2: Strategic Instruction • Targeted instruction addressing specific needs of students • 5-10% of student population • Tier 3: Intensive Instruction • Intensive targeted instruction for the most at-risk students • 1-8% of student population

  12. RTI Level Assessments:

  13. TIER 1: CORE • Instruction for ALL students • 80-90% of student population • Assessment • Fall/Winter/Spring

  14. TIER 2: STRATEGIC • Instruction for identified specific needs • 5-10% of student population • Assessment • Monthly

  15. TIER 3: INTENSIVE • Instruction for the Most-at-risk • 1-8% of student population • Assessment • Weekly

  16. Tier 4??? • Tier 4 • Identification of students with a possible Learning Disability • SPED referral process • General Education • Interventions • RTI • Decrease in students who would otherwise might be referred to SPED

  17. RTI: Review • Activity

  18. Assessment/Measurement

  19. Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM) • A method of measuring student progress through direct assessment of academic skills. • CBM measures are: • Valid and reliable results • Quick to administer and score • Directly related academic expectations • When using CBM the instructor gives the student brief timed examples or “PROBES” which are given under standardized conditions. • The directions are read the same way each time a probe is given. • Performance is scored for Fluency, Accuracy, and Speed.

  20. Resources: CBM and Data Management Systems • AIMsWeb • K-8 benchmark and progress monitoring • Early Literacy AND Early Numeracy measures • Reading, Math, Spelling, Writing • DIBELS • K-6 benchmark and progress monitoring • DIBELS measures • Big Ideas • Indicators

  21. Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills (DIBELS) • Simulation • Intro Video

  22. History • DIBELS were developed based on measurement procedures for Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM). • Like CBM, DIBELS were developed to be economical and efficient indicators of a student’s progress toward achieving a general outcome. • A set of procedures and measures for assessing the acquisition of early literacy skills from K-6. • Short (one minute) fluency measures to regularly monitor the development of reading skills.

  23. “Big Ideas” for Success in Reading

  24. Phonemic Awareness The ability to hear, identify, and manipulate individual sounds in spoken words (Torgesen, 1998). • Research • PA improves word reading, spelling, and comprehension. Poor readers who enter first grade with weak PA are most likely to be poor readers in the fourth grade. • Instruction • Auditory Activities

  25. Phonics • Phonics Instruction • Systematic: pre-specified sequence of letter-sound correspondences taught in logical order • Most common sounds taught first • Progresses from simple to more complex • Once a few letter sound are learned, students are taught a decoding strategy • Students apply recently learned phonics to reading connected text • Explicit

  26. Fluency The ability to read text quickly, accurately, and with proper expression (NRP, 2000). • Research • “repeated and monitored oral reading improves reading fluency and overall reading achievement” (Put Reading First, p.24). • Instruction • Articulate the importance and provide modeling • Reading levels • Monitor fluency progress • Oral reading with feedback • Variety of research-based strategies • Repeated readings, timed, partner.

  27. Vocabulary The knowledge of the meanings and pronunciation of words that are used in oral and written language. • Research and Instruction • Can be developed • Directly (teach important, difficult, and useful words) • Indirectly

  28. Vocabulary • Teach word learning strategies • How to use dictionaries and reference aids • How to use word parts to determine meaning of words. • How to use context clues to determine meaning • Provide multiple exposure to words • Read aloud to students • Encourage independent wide reading

  29. Comprehension The ability to make sense of text and to monitor for understanding. • Research • “text comprehension can be improved by instruction that helps readers use specific comprehension strategies” • Instruction • Monitoring comprehension • Using graphic organizers • Main idea • Summarizing

  30. DIBELS Indicators

  31. Indicators • The ability to hear, identify, and manipulate individual sounds in spoken words • Initial Sound Fluency (ISF) • Assess a child’s skill at identifying and producing the initial sound of a given word. • Phonemic Segmentation Fluency (PSF) • Assesses a student’s skill at producing the individual sounds within a given word. • Letter Naming Fluency (LNF) • Assesses a student’s skill in recognizing upper and lower case letters of the alphabet. Phonemic Awareness ISF PSF LNF

  32. Indicators • Systematic: pre-specified sequence of letter-sound correspondences taught in logical order • Nonsense Word Fluency (NWF) • Assesses a student’s knowledge of letter-sound correspondences as well their ability to blend letters together to from unfamiliar “nonsense” words. Phonics NWF

  33. Indicators • The ability to read text quickly, accurately, and with proper expression • Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) • Assesses a student’s skill at reading connected text in grade-level materials. Fluency ORF

  34. Indicators • The knowledge of the meanings and pronunciation of words that are used in oral and written language • Word Use Fluency (WUF) • Assesses a student’s ability to accurately use a provided word in the context of a sentence. Vocabulary WUF

  35. Indicators • The ability to make sense of text and to monitor for understanding. • Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) • Retell Fluency (RTF) • Assesses a student’s understanding of verbally read connected text. Comprehension ORF RTF

  36. Review • Big Ideas • Indicators • Activity

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