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Institute for Academic Access University of Kansas.

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Presentation on theme: "Institute for Academic Access University of Kansas."— Presentation transcript:

1 Institute for Academic Access University of Kansas

2 Purpose of the IAA Creating real access to the high school general education curriculum for students with disabilities (SWDs) Improving educational outcomes achieved by SWDs

3 Research Partners Planning Team Keith Lenz Gary Adams Materials & Assessment Team Doug Carnine Bonnie Grossen Betsy Davis Instructional Methods Team Don Deshler Jean Schumaker Janis Bulgren

4 Target Population High-school students with disabilities (SWDs) who: Have been formally classified Are expected to earn standard high school diplomas Are or have been enrolled in a rigorous general education curriculum Or Could be enrolled in a rigorous general education curriculum if support were available

5 Interactive Research Model Strands Project Years

6 Achievement Gap Grade in School Grade Level in Achievement

7 Mean Percentage of Intervals General Education Teachers Were Observed in Various Activities for Each School

8 Mean Percentage of Intervals General Education Teachers Were Observed in Various Activities 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1. Lecture/read 2. Give directions 3. Listening 4. Ask question 5. Monitor 6. Model 7. Verbal rehearsal 8. Simple enhancer 9. Advance organizer 10. Role Play 11. Content Enhancement (complex) 12. Elaborated Feedback 13. Write on board 14. Describe skill/strategy 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1. Lecture/read 2. Give directions 3. Listening 4. Ask question 5. Monitor 6. Model 7. Verbal rehearsal 8. Simple enhancer 9. Advance organizer 10. Role Play 11. Content Enhancement (complex) 12. Elaborated Feedback 13. Write on board 14. Describe skill/strategy

9 Mean Percentage of Intervals Special Education Teachers Were Observed in Various Activities for Each School

10 Special Education Teacher Observations 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1. Lecture/read 2. Give directions 3. Listening 4. Ask question 5. Monitor 6. Model 7. Verbal rehearsal 8. Simple enhancer 9. Advance organizer 10. Role Play 11. Content Enhancement (complex) 12. Elaborated Feedback 13. Write on board 14. Describe skill/strategy

11 Course Options for SWDs Type A: Courses taught by SPED teachers for SPED students Type B: Courses taught by general education teachers for low achievers and at-risk students Type C: Rigorous courses taught by general education teachers with heterogeneous groups of students Type D: Advanced placement courses taught by general education teachers Type E: Other courses taught by general education teachers (e.g., vo-tech electives)

12 Rigorous General Education Enrollments for SWDs

13 Enrollments in “Rigorous” General Education Classes Total possible “rigorous” class enrollments:3220 Actual # of “rigorous” enrollments:682 Total # of SWD:805 Estimates for GE teachers of # of SWD: 205

14 Student Achievement

15 Model for Ensuring Access and Positive Outcomes

16 The Content Literacy Continuum During School: Level 1: Enhanced content instruction (Mastery of critical content for all regardless of literacy levels) Level 2: Embedded strategy instruction (Routinely weave strategies instruction within and across classes using large-group methods) Level 3: Intensive strategy instruction (Mastery of specific strategies using 8- stage instructional sequence; individual Strategic Tutoring) Level 4: Intensive basic skill instruction (Mastery of entry level literacy skills at the 4th-grade level) Level 5: Therapeutic intervention (Mastery of language underpinnings of curriculum content and learning strategies) After School: Strategic Tutoring (Extending the instructional time “box” through before- and after-school tutoring)

17 Student-Learning Research Studies

18 Learner-Friendly Courses Through Content Enhancement

19 Comparing Two Concepts

20 Concept Comparison Table

21 Mean Percentage Total Scores Student Subgroups

22 Concept Anchoring Table

23 Anchoring Known Information to New Information

24 Concept Anchoring Routine ConceptLDLANAHA Pyramid of Numbers Enhanced CommensalismNot Enhanced ConceptLDLANAHA Pyramid of Numbers Not Enhanced CommensalismEnhanced Condition 1: Sub-Groups of Students Condition 2: Sub-Groups of Students

25 Results for Student Subgroups Condition 1 (Commensalism Enhanced) Condition 2 (Pyramid of Numbers Enhanced)

26 Recall Enhancement Routine Presented in lecture Enhanced with routine Facts repeated Experimental Group LDNLD (N=9)(N=11) Control Group LDNLD (N=9)(N=12) Nonreviewed Facts Reviewed Facts

27 Student Performance on Reviewed Facts

28 Percentage of Students Performing at Passing Levels Nonreviewed FactsReviewed Facts LD NLD LD

29 Question Exploration Guide

30 The Course Organizer

31 The Frame Device

32 Strategy Instruction

33 Learning Strategies Curriculum Word Identification Strategy FIRST-Letter Mnemonic Strategy Sentence Writing Strategy Paraphrasing StrategyPaired Associates Strategy Paragraph Writing Strategy Self-Questioning Strategy LINCS Vocabulary Strategy Error Monitoring Strategy InSPECT Strategy Theme Writing Strategy Assignment Completion Strategy Test-Taking Strategy ACQUISITIONSTORAGEEXPRESSION & DEMONSTRATION OF COMPETENCE

34 Learning Strategy A Learning Strategy is how a person plans, acts, and evaluates performance on a task and its outcome.

35 Application of Strategies Assignment: In chronological order, list the political leaders of the Soviet Union from 1917 to the fall of communism. What strategies did you use? Lenin Stalin Khrushchev Brezhnev Andropov Chernenko Gorbachov

36 The Strategy FIRST Letter Mnemonic Strategy: Step 1: Form a word Step 2: Insert a letter Step 3: Rearrange the letters Step 4: Shape a sentence Step 5: Try combinations Little Soviet Kids Become Adult Commies Gradually LENIN STALIN KHRUSHCHEV BREZHNEV ANDROPOV CHERNENKO GORBACHOV

37 The Sentence Writing Strategy P ick a formula E xplore words to fit the formula N ote the words S earch and check

38 Sentence Writing Strategy Mean Percentage of Complete Sentences

39 The Paragraph Writing Strategy S et up a diagram C reate a title R eveal the topic I ron out the details B ind it together with a clincher E dit your work

40 Paragraph Writing Strategy Mean Percentage of Points Earned

41 The Error Monitoring Strategy W rite on every other line using “PENS” R ead the paper for meaning I nterrogate yourself using the “COPS” questions T ake the paper to someone for help E xecute a final copy R eread your paper

42 Error Monitoring Strategy Mean Percentage of Errors Corrected

43 Error Monitoring Strategy Mean Number of Errors Per Word

44 Steps of the Theme Writing Strategy T hink O rganize it W rite a draft E valuate it R efine it

45 Theme Writing Strategy Mean Percentage of Points Earned

46 All Writing Strategies Mean Score on District Writing Competency Exam

47 Theme Writing Strategy Mean Grade in English

48 Homework Assistance through Strategic Tutoring

49 Strategic Tutoring Instructional Phases AssessingConstructing TEACHING Transferring

50 Strategic Tutoring Model The role of the Strategic Tutor is to: Explain content, build knowledge Share extensive knowledge of strategies Apply principles of Strategic Instruction Mentor and “connect” with students

51 Strategic Tutoring Study 1 BaselineAfter ST STUDENT 3 Mean Percentage Correct BaselineAfter ST STUDENT 1 BaselineAfter ST STUDENT 2

52 Strategic Tutoring Study 2 Mean Percentage Score BaselineAfter ST TESTS & QUIZZES PretestPosttest STRATEGY KNOWLEDGE

53 Teacher-Learning Studies

54 Teacher Training Results Content Enhancement Routines Percentage of Teacher Behaviors Performed

55 Professional Development Approaches Traditional –Inservice on inservice days Enlightened –Interviews, partnership learning, participant choice, in-class modeling, ongoing Instructional Coaches –Enlightened + Onsite coaching and collaboration for implementation

56 Implementation Rates

57 Effectiveness of Staff Development Activities KnowledgeSkill AcquisitionClassroom app. Present information40-80%10%5% Present & Model80-85%10-40%5-10% Present & Model & Practice & Feedback80-85%80%10-15% Present & Model & Practice & Feedback & Coaching90%90%80-90%

58 Lesson 1: The Anchoring Table

59 Lesson 2: The Linking Steps

60 Lesson 3: The Cue-Do-Review Sequence

61 Lesson 4: Example Routines

62 Creating Your Own Anchoring Table

63 Study 1: Implementation Results Mean Percentage of Points Earned ANCOVA: No differences R.M. ANOVA: Significant gains for both groups (p <.001)

64 Study 1: Knowledge Test Results ANCOVA: No differences R.M. ANOVA: Significant gains for both groups (p <.001) Mean Percentage of Points Earned

65 Study 1: Anchoring Table Test ANCOVA: No differences R.M. ANOVA: Significant gains for both groups (p <.001) Mean Percentage of Points Earned

66 Study 1: Concept Acquisition Test (All Students) Percentage of Points Earned HLM Approach:Significant posttest differences (p<.014) Significant gains for both groups (p<.001)

67 Study 1: Concept Acquisition Test (Students with LD) HLM Approach:No significant differences between groups Significant gains for both groups (p<.001)

68 School-Change Research

69 Effects of Content Enhancement

70 9th Grade Physical Science

71 Content Enhancement Study at MHS 9th Grade Physical Science

72 Sentence Writing Strategy (Example Class Among 1000 Students) Mean Percentage of Sentences

73 Comparison of Writing MEAP Over 3 Years Percentage of Students

74 Self-Questioning Strategy A ttend to clues as you read S ay some questions K eep predictions in mind I dentify the answer T alk about the answers

75 Self-Questioning 7th Grade Science Class Growth Scores

76 Word Identification Strategy D iscover the context I solate the prefix S eparate the suffix S ay the stem E xamine the stem C heck with someone T ry the dictionary

77 Word Identification Intervention at MHS

78 LD Subgroups in Word Identification Intervention at MHS

79 Strategic Reading Study: 2002-03

80 Strategic Reading Class at Muskegon High School (# responders/total group) Grade Level Scores on GMRT-Comprehension Subtest

81 State Reading Competency Scores: Chase Middle School Skill Levels Percentage of All Students

82 7th Grade Maryland Functional Tests Results Percentage

83 Student Success Validated practices Fidelity implementation Coordinated implementation Quality Professional Development Strong Administrative Leadership + + + + = Vision Supports

84 For More Information KU-CRL 1122 W. Campus Road Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Phone: 785-864-4780 www.kucrl.org


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