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Response to Intervention Kate Murray Shayna Stuempfig

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1 Response to Intervention Kate Murray Shayna Stuempfig
RTI Response to Intervention Kate Murray Shayna Stuempfig

2 What is it? RTI is a data-driven, multi-tiered approach to the early identification and support of students with learning and behavioral needs. RTI is not a program but a process: a way to identify who is at risk and, more importantly, why. RTI helps us to support students within general education long before they fail, it can help us better identify those students with true disabilities in need of special education services, and it aims to avoid mislabeling students as disabled when they are not. **RTI integrates assessment and intervention within a multi-level prevention system to maximize student achievement and to reduce behavior problems. With RTI, schools identify students at-risk for poor learning outcomes, monitor student progress, provide evidence-based interventions and adjust the intensity and nature of those interventions depending on the student’s response. (National Center on RTI) **Alternate: RTI is a data-driven, multi-tiered approach to the early identifcation and support of students with learning and behavioral needs. RTI is not a program but a process: a way to identify who is at risk and, more importantly, why. RTI helps us to support students within general ed long before they fail, can help us better identify those students with true disabilities in need of special ed services, and avoid mislabeling students as disabled when they are not. (me) Response to Intervention is a new movement that shifts the responsibility for helping all students become successful from Special Education teachers and curriculum to the entire staff, including Special and regular education teachers and curriculum.

3 Why do we need RTI? Our kids are continuing to fail despite amazing teachers and kick ass lessons There is an overrepresentation of African American students in special education (especially under Emotional Disturbance) Why are they failing? Lots of reasons! Stress, lack of sleep, lack of exercise, different learning styles, poor nutrition, poor vision, lack of opportunity to learn, chaos at home, processing issues, adolescent ridiculousness RTI is the process of learning why certain students are failing so we can help them be successful Many steps can be taken to help student succeed prior to referring them to special education I like “RTI is the process of learning why…” – esp. the words PROCESS and WHY – as opposed to a PROGRAM that tells us HOW Also, I feel that especially since you guys are presenting this, seeing it as part of a process that makes it easier to identify what’s going on so that students can be helped no matter if they qualify or not will be important to making sure it doesn’t come across as “we in sped are tired so now you all need to take on more responsibility” Adolescent brains are not fully developed The frontal cortex, the area of our brain that controls our impulses, is not completely formed in adolescents

4 It’s the Law Under RTI, schools will consider most students for special education services only after the students have not responded to a series of timely, systematic, increasingly focused and intensive research-based interventions, which are the responsibility of the regular education program. RTI is a part of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA) signed into law in 2004

5 What does RTI look like? Tier 3(5-10%)
Intensive: Small Group/Individual Tier 2 (10-15%) Strategic: Small Groups/Lower class size or pre-teach class Tier 1 (80-90%) Benchmark/ Universal Access: All students Might be good to acknowledge that this is the national model and the %s might not quite match what we got…

6 What does this mean for you?
If a student is continually struggling academically or behaviorally despite general classroom supports, you may call on a problem-solving team to help figure out the best way to support the student and how to best mobilize these supports/help/intervention. That problem solving team is our SST. Remember to invite all of the student’s teachers and notify Cyndi Baker-Smith by filling out one of the referral forms and putting it in her box. Put the date and time of the SST on the referral form. One of us will lead the SST Pass out referral forms. **Comments are just suggestions by the way…my thoughts are that teachers ideally are talking about these students and what to do at their PLCs, over drinks, in their sleep…so couching this in terms of problem solving and mobilizing supports might help change the nature of SST from “hoop” to “help” (as in, a hoop to jump through)

7 SST meeting At the SST meeting teachers will set an academic or behavioral goal for the student and discuss possible interventions and supports. The teachers will leave with a student check-in packet that they will fill out over the following 6 weeks before the next SST meeting. This packet will help monitor the student’s response to the interventions put in place and be the data looked at when the SST meets again. This data will direct the team towards the best help for that student. Pass out forms **I’m trying to put something in there that will suggest that this new “thing” they have to do is actaully going to be really helpful to getting the end goal met: help for their students

8 Interventions vs. Supports
Something you do with a student to build a specific skill. Hot read/cold read, echo reading, pre-reading practice SUPPORTS Something you do to support a student who already has the skills or to motivate him or her to do other skill-building activities Student check-in, staying after school to finish work, seat change

9 How to Intervene Tier 1 (80-90%): Universal Access
Culturally and linguistically responsive instruction School-wide/classroom positive behavioral strategies High expectations and inclusive environment Researched-based differentiated instruction i.e. identifying students who are not learning skills in PLCs and planning small group work time to target skill building Progress monitoring Examples at Westlake After school program, parent resource center, schedule change, Kagan strategies, lunchtime/afterschool help Yay. What specifically do you mean by progress monitoring here? You may have to give examples of all of these – maybe get a teacher to give examples? Esp. of differentiated instruction and progress monitoring…

10 How to Intervene Tier 2 (10-15%): Strategic SST process begins
Small group, outside of core instructional time Before/afterschool for minutes Referral to learning center to work with intervention teacher or specialist (i.e. Kate and Neku) Tier 1 continues plus more time, more focus, and more progress monitoring Examples at Westlake Math strategies, conflict management, girls’/boys’ group, modifications and accommodations in class I feel it’s important to mention that you can do interventions before having an SST – the SST is kind of the “I’ve tried everything and can’t figure out what to do next” step. I am asusming that teachers are already doing things to help students when they notice low skills/defiance, and maybe even talking to their PLCs and getting ideas there. That said, an SST is a really good, official way to document that stuff is being done. I like – Tier 1 continues and Examples at Westlake BTW, Read 180 replaces core, no? If so, it’s a Tier 3. If I’ve said different in the past I apologize.

11 How to Intervene Tier 3 (5-10%): Intensive
Increased frequency and duration of skill building help More frequent progress monitoring Intensify SST process Examples at Westlake Read 180, individual counseling, one-on-one academic intervention, behavior contract, more frequent use of the learning center, referral to special education testing (last step)

12 Special Education Referral
We have 60 days to complete the assessment once the assessment plan is signed Expect students who are assessed to remain in your classroom Common disabilities include: Specific Learning Disability (SLD) Emotional Disturbance (ED) ADHD (OHI) Speech and Language Impairment (SLI) Is this a necessary slide? I wanted teachers to know what we are looking for when we assess for special ed. Maybe talk a little about the discrepancy model Oakland has for SLD, talk about how ED is mental illness-not just adolescence, and talk a bit about how students are placed in their least restrictive environments. I get a lot of complaints about ED kids who are not moved right away.

13 Questions??? Please contact us anytime throughout the year
We are here to support you and use us as a resource


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