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Developing and Implementing Effective K-5 Response to Intervention Programs. Kate Esposito, Ph.D. Jeff Miller, Ph.D. It has become increasingly apparent to anyone who keeps up with "what's hot and what's not" in the education community that Response to Intervention (RTI) is on the move
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Developing and Implementing Effective K-5 Response to Intervention Programs Kate Esposito, Ph.D. Jeff Miller, Ph.D.
It has become increasingly apparent to anyone who keeps up with "what's hot and what's not" in the education community that Response to Intervention (RTI) is on the move • (Horowitz, 2007)
Controversy exists • “Response to Intervention is emerging nationally as an effective strategy to support every student.” • (O’Connell, 2008)
Does RTI delay identification? • How are at -risk students identified? • What are most effective interventions/preventions? • How is responsiveness to instruction defined? • How long should interventions last? RTI4success.org;US Office of Special Education
Response to intervention is defined as the change in behavior or performance as a function of an intervention. • (Gresham, 1991)
EBIS Prevention and Planning Models EBIS/RTI Planning Model
RTI is… • Multi-tiered prevention system • Integration of ongoing assessment & intervention • Goals are: • Maximize student achievement • Reduce behavior problems
Used to: • Identify at-risk learners • Monitor progression of individual students • Change course of action based on response • Identify specific learning disabilities • Haager, Klingner & Vaughn, 2007;RTI4success.org, 2008
Response to instruction and intervention • “a general education approach of high quality instruction, early intervention and prevention and behavioral strategies (CDE, 2008).”
core components of RTI • High Quality Classroom Instruction • Research-based instruction • Universal Screening • Continuous Progress Monitoring • Research-based interventions • Progress monitoring during instruction and intervention • Fidelity of program implementation • Staff development and collaboration • Parent involvement • SLD determination
RTI Implementation • Set explicit guidelines for assessing student progress • Process to ensure programs/interventions are implemented with fidelity and consistency across curriculum • Model schools use teams to monitor progress • Start of year (school screening) • Meet monthly to monitor students receiving tier1 interventions • Monthly for tier 2 interventions
Tier 1 “All children can learn.” • General Ed strategies • Curriculum driven thru state standards • Informal individual intervention. • D.I. • Primary intervention pathway • Constant monitoring
Movement into Tier 2 • Who isn’t this working for?
Moving from Level 1 to Level 2 • Evidence based • Process driven
Tier 2 Support • Small group instruction • Intensity increased • Need based • Indiv. progress monitored more freq. (1 x/monthly) • State adopted supplemental programs
Process driven??? Team Meetings • Ongoing collaborative • Data Driven Process • Determine what secondary intervention might look like
Is the intervention working? • Yes…discontinue intervention • Yes…but continue intervention • No…revise existing intervention • No…change to individualized approach
Moving from Tier 2 to Tier 3 or Referral • Individualized intervention • Parent involvement • Separate classroom (?) • Time line implemented • Targets specific skill deficits identified in Tiers 1 & 2 • Target unmet= comprehensive evaluation and potential placement
Tier 3 = SpEd??????? • RTI Teams determine special education referral. • After individualized intervention has proven to be unsuccessful
RTI is cited in IDEIA (2004) in relation to determination of SLD. • RTI is not mandated, rather it is an option
RTI as Identification Tool • Problem based approach • Reduction of overrepresentation of minority students • Timely systematic delivery of interventions
Paradigmatic Shift RTI Model Traditional Model • Emphasizes quality instruction • Progress monitoring • Questioning in teams • Necessitates collaboration • Student centered focus • Deficit model • Assumes something is “wrong” and the student needs to be “fixed” • Limits collaboration • Limits interactional understanding
Model RTI Teams • General education teacher • Educational Specialists • Support Staff • Reading specialists • Behavioral specialists • School Psychologists • Administrators • Parents • Student
Power of Collaboration • Team based interventions • Co-teaching • Team Teaching • PLC’s • SLC’s
Fundamentals of PLC… • What do we want each student to learn? • How will we know when each student has learned it? • How will we respond when a student encounters challenge?
For your consideration… • Shared conference periods • Administrative buy-in & support • Professional development provided • Support • Support • Support