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Interventions in the Classroom. Making a Case for RTI. Today’s Agenda. Strategy or Intervention Activity RTI Explained Strategy Video—LTHS Case Studies Activity Wrap-up. Objectives. You will know the difference between a strategy and an intervention.
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Interventions in theClassroom Making a Case for RTI
Today’s Agenda • Strategy or Intervention Activity • RTI Explained • Strategy Video—LTHS • Case Studies Activity • Wrap-up
Objectives • You will know the difference between a strategy and an intervention. • You will walk away with at least one strategy and one intervention to engage students. • You will know where to go for resources for RTI.
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • We will give you seven examples of a strategy or an intervention. • You should walk to the sign that states “strategy”, “intervention”, or “not sure” for each example. • Remember, it is okay to be wrong!
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • Calling home when a student has not turned in homework
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • Meeting with a student before or after school to reinforce the class concepts and monitor student’s success.
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • Using a graphic organizer for two students who have difficulty understanding the main ideas of a concept and monitoring their progress.
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • Meeting with a student who has difficulty participating in class because of anxiety, and informing him of the question that will be asked of him the next day so that he has time to prepare.
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • Students who score below 60% on a math assessment have an opportunity to learn missed concepts through diagramming the problems.
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • Using physical movement for the entire class to promote engagement.
Is this a “strategy” or an “intervention”? • Using a research-based method, such as color-coded paper, to help Andrew and Lindsay understand written directions and noting progress made.
So, what is RTI? Strategies and Interventions Explained
What is RTI? • “Response to Intervention is a multi-tiered approach to providing instruction and targeted intervention to improve student outcomes” (Johnson, Smith, Harris). • We use the RTI model to provide effective, research-based instruction to help all students (prevention). • Identify students who are not reaching Enduring Understandings/Essential Outcomes. • Implement research-based interventions and monitor progress
What is RTI? • Strategies • The combination of research-based methods or activities designed to teach the learning objective. • Interventions • Program, actions, or strategies specifically designed to address an identified deficiency and monitored to ensure outcome improvement . (Taken from LTHS PLC Glossary (p.7))
What is RTI? • An instructional strategy can become an intervention when the strategy is intentionally used and monitored to address students who are not reaching the learning outcomes. • Use mid-quarter, quarter, and semester grades as a means to monitor and measure student progress Taken from LTHS PLC Glossary (p.7)
Why RTI? • LTHS Numbers • 2012-2013 Semester 1 Data: • 7.2% of the 1st semester grades were a D or F • In one core class, 10.2% of students enrolled received a D or an F 1st semester of this year. • In another core class, 8.6% of students enrolled received a D or F 1st semester of this year. • 18 Special Education referrals this school year
The Reality… Typical Classroom at LTHS: • 26 students • 3 students are not reaching Essential Outcomes • 51 minutes What do you do?
Two Rules of Teaching According to Pat Quinn “The RTI Guy”: • Effective teaching is harder than ineffective teaching. • Small changes can make a big difference.
Who Benefits from RTI? • EVERYONE! • Typically a few students in each class are directly impacted by specific interventions that lead to Essential Outcomes. • All students will benefit from research-based strategies/interventions implemented with whole class. • http://lthspl.weebly.com/rti.html
RTI Video • September 2012 Newsletter: • Using physical movement as a strategy to promote engagement • “When we sit for more than twenty minutes, our blood pools in our seat and in our feet. By getting up and moving, we recirculate that blood. Within a minute, there is about 15 percent more blood in our brain. We do think better on our feet than on our seat! Students sit too much in classrooms, especially in secondary schools. Look for ways to get students up and moving, especially when they are verbally rehearsing what they have learned (Sousa, 2001).” • Link to video
RTI at Work Pros: allows for thoughtful/engaged discussion with other students, breaks up monotony of students taking notes in desks, since everyone is up, moving, and talking, it allows me to work with students that need help (intervention) without singling them out, students are reenergized Cons: the biggest con I could potentially see would be behavior issues; however I’ve never had problems with activities like this—you just have to tell them your expectations up front, students could potentially just copy from someone else Feedback from Erin Shook:
Case Studies • You will now break up into small groups. • Each group will analyze four scenarios of struggling students. • In addition, everyone will have a list of effective, research-based interventions/strategies. • The groups will identify the interventions/strategies that would best address each scenario.
Review • What to do: Strategy v. Intervention? • Why RTI is important? • Who benefits? • You are monitoring students’ response to an intervention (RTI) and decreasing the need for the intervention.
Strategies/Interventions Covered Today • Opening Activity and Video • Physical Movement--September Newsletter • Case Studies • CUCC (Circle, Underline, Count, Complete) Executive Function Strategy—November newsletter • Write-Around/Written Conversations—December newsletter • Story Impressions—October Institute Day 2011 • Text Coding—October Institute Day 2011 • Homework Planning Checklist—in handouts
Final Thought • While it’s important to know the difference between a strategy and an intervention… • BOTH relate to RTI as a model for ALL students to benefit from better instruction.
Links to Resources • RTI Tab on PLT website: • http://lthspl.weebly.com/rti.html • Pat Quinn “The RTI Guy” website: • www.TotalRTI.com --his newsletters are great…and free!
References • Buffum, A., Mattos, M., & Weber, C. (2009). Pyramid response to intervention: RTI, professional learning communities, and how to respond when kids don’t learn. Bloomington, IN: Solution Tree Press. • Johnson, E., Smith, L., & Harris, M. (2009). How RTI works in secondary schools. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin. • Marzano, R. J., Pickering, D.J., & Heflebower, T. (2010). The highly engaged classroom. Bloomington, IN: Marzano Research Laboratory. • Sousa, D. A. (2001). How the brain learns. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. • LTHS PLC Glossary