Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

DEVELOPING AND IMPLEMENTING EFFECTIVE K-5 RESPONSE TO INTERVENTION PROGRAMS Kate Esposito, Ph.D. Jeff Miller, Ph.D.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "DEVELOPING AND IMPLEMENTING EFFECTIVE K-5 RESPONSE TO INTERVENTION PROGRAMS Kate Esposito, Ph.D. Jeff Miller, Ph.D."— Presentation transcript:

1 DEVELOPING AND IMPLEMENTING EFFECTIVE K-5 RESPONSE TO INTERVENTION PROGRAMS Kate Esposito, Ph.D. Jeff Miller, Ph.D.

2  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)

3 Controversy exists  “Response to Intervention is emerging nationally as an effective strategy to support every student.” (O’Connell, 2008)

4  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

5  Response to intervention is defined as the change in behavior or performance as a function of an intervention.  (Gresham, 1991)

6 EBIS Prevention and Planning Models Intensity- Interventions & Progress Monitoring EBIS/RTI Planning Model

7 RTI is…  Multi-tiered prevention system  Integration of ongoing assessment & intervention  Goals are:  Maximize student achievement  Reduce behavior problems

8  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

9 It’s not just about identification anymore

10

11 Response to instruction and intervention  “a general education approach of high quality instruction, early intervention and prevention and behavioral strategies (CDE, 2008).”

12 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

13 What does it really look like???

14 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

15 Tier 1  General Ed strategies  Curriculum driven thru state standards  Informal individual intervention.  D.I.  Primary intervention pathway  Constant monitoring “All children can learn.”

16 Movement into Tier 2  Who isn ’ t this working for ?

17 Moving from Level 1 to Level 2  Evidence based  Process driven

18 Tier 2 Support  Small group instruction  Intensity increased  Need based  Indiv. progress monitored more freq. (1 x/monthly)  State adopted supplemental programs

19 Process driven???  Ongoing collaborative  Data Driven Process  Determine what secondary intervention might look like Team Meetings

20 Is the intervention working?  Yes…discontinue intervention  Yes…but continue intervention  No…revise existing intervention  No…change to individualized approach

21 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

22 Tier 3 = SpEd???????  RTI Teams determine special education referral.  After individualized intervention has proven to be unsuccessful

23  RTI is cited in IDEIA (2004) in relation to determination of SLD.  RTI is not mandated, rather it is an option

24 RTI as Identification Tool  Problem based approach  Reduction of overrepresentation of minority students  Timely systematic delivery of interventions

25 Paradigmatic Shift  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 RTI ModelTraditional Model

26 Model RTI Teams  General education teacher  Educational Specialists  Support Staff  Reading specialists  Behavioral specialists  School Psychologists  Administrators  Parents  Student

27

28 Power of Collaboration  Team based interventions  Co-teaching  Team Teaching  PLC’s  SLC’s

29 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?

30 For your consideration…  Shared conference periods  Administrative buy-in & support  Professional development provided  Support

31


Download ppt "DEVELOPING AND IMPLEMENTING EFFECTIVE K-5 RESPONSE TO INTERVENTION PROGRAMS Kate Esposito, Ph.D. Jeff Miller, Ph.D."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google