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Identifying Tier One Instructional Strategies Related to Students’ Academic Achievement

Identifying Tier One Instructional Strategies Related to Students’ Academic Achievement. Jennifer Wilson September 13, 2012. Background. My experiences My question. Introduction. Tier one = general education instruction

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Identifying Tier One Instructional Strategies Related to Students’ Academic Achievement

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  1. Identifying Tier One Instructional Strategies Related to Students’ Academic Achievement Jennifer Wilson September 13, 2012

  2. Background • My experiences • My question

  3. Introduction • Tier one = general education instruction (Burns, Jacob, & Wagner, 2008; Fuchs & Fuchs, 2007; Gersten et al., 2009) • Need for evidence based practices (IDEA, 2004; NCLB, 2001) • Gap between effective strategies and what occurs in classrooms(Cook & Cothren Cook, 2011) • Failure to link strategies and achievement (Foorman, 2007; Foorman & Schatschneider, 2003) • Little examination of tier one instruction (Al Otaiba et al., 2011)

  4. Proposed Strategies • Literature • Danielson (2007) • Stronge (2002) • Observation Tools • Ecobehavioral Assessment Software System (EBASS) • Classroom Climate Scale • English-Language Learner Classroom Observation Instrument for Beginning Readers

  5. Proposed Strategies • Communicating High Expectations • Establishing Routines/Procedures • Promoting Student Engagement • Modeling or Coaching • Using Questioning Techniques • Providing Feedback • Differentiating Instruction • Using Student Assessment / Progress Monitoring • Managing Student Behavior • Organizing Physical Space • Grouping Practices

  6. Standards for Evaluating Strategies • Multiple research methodologies support evidence (Odom et al., 2005) • Experimental / Quasi-experimental designs evaluated  Gersten et al. (2005) • Correlational research designs  Thompson, Diamond, McWilliam, Snyder, and Snyder (2005) • Qualitative studies  Brantlinger, Jimenez, Klinger, Pugach, and Richardson (2005)

  7. Results Summary • 45 studies • 11 qualitative studies • Met credibility measures  53% • Met quality indicators (interviews)  80% • Met quality indicators (observations)  67% • 17 correlational studies • Met quality indicators  38% • 17 experimental / quasi-experimental studies • Met quality indicators  87%

  8. “Substantial evidence” • More than one design (except experiments) • 6 or more studies showed a relation between the strategy and academic achievement

  9. “Substantial evidence” • Student engagement • 12 studies (7 correlational, 5 qualitative) • Teacher questioning • 7 studies (4 experiments/quasi-experiments, 1 correlational, 2 qualitative) • Teacher feedback • 6 studies (2 experiments/quasi-experiments, 2 correlational, 2 qualitative) • Classroom management • 7 studies (5 experiments/quasi-experiments, 2 qualitative)

  10. “Lacking evidence” • Only one design (except experiments) • Fewer than 6 studies

  11. “Lacking evidence” • High expectations • Classroom routines • Teacher modeling or coaching • Differentiating instruction • Monitoring student progress • Organizing space

  12. “Conflicting evidence” • Grouping • Type of grouping practices • Ability grouping • Cooperative learning

  13. Limitations • Peer reviewed journals • Synonyms for strategies • Strategies not “common” in literature and observation tools – not studied • Quality indicators – Exceptional Children (2005) • Success of meeting indicators varied

  14. Implications for Practice • Teach strategies • Teacher preparation • Professional development • Observation

  15. Implications for Research • Line of research needs to be expanded • Evidence base not substantial • Look at a variety of strategies and their relation to student achievement

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