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Making RTI Work for Children, Teachers, and Schools

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... bunny. Child 2: This is a kid in a bunny ... Child: I am a bunny. Teacher: ... That makes sense, but what letter would you see at the beginning of bunny? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Making RTI Work for Children, Teachers, and Schools


1
Making RTI Work for Children, Teachers, and
Schools
  • Mary K. Lose
  • Assistant Professor
  • Oakland University
  • Rochester, Michigan
  • International Reading Association Annual
    Conference
  • Atlanta, Georgia
  • May 2008

2
Overview
  • Effect of IDEA
  • Fundamental Principles of an Effective RTI
    Approach
  • Policy Implications
  • Decisions and Actions

3
Revised Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act (IDEA)
  • Option 1
  • 15 special education funds for EIS and
    professional development

4
Revised Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act (IDEA)
  • Option 1
  • 15 special education funds for EIS and
    professional development
  • Option 2
  • Early intervention
  • No labeling of students

5
Important
  • USDE does not require or endorse any particular
    model of RTI
  • SEA may establish the criteria for identifying
    children with LD, but the state criteria must
    permit local agencies to choose an RTI model

6
Goal Limit Unnecessary Referrals
  • Based on inadequate instruction or limited
    English proficiency
  • Reduce number of children identified for LD
    services

7
Goal Appropriate and Timely Response to
Students in Support of Their Learning
8
Fundamental Principles of a Successful RTI
Approach
  • A child, not a group, learns to read
  • Identify child using authentic assessments
  • Intervene early, not later in support of the child

9
Fundamental Principles of a Successful RTI
Approach, cont.
  • The most struggling child requires the most
    expert teacher
  • Teacher expertise requires high-quality,
    sustained professional development
  • The only valid RTI approach is one in which the
    child responds successfully
  • Invest in evidence-based interventions in support
    of the child

10
Keys to Successful Response to Intervention
(RTI)
  • Evidence-based approaches that emphasize
  • Teacher expertise
  • Sustained teacher development
  • Scalable
  • Can be implemented immediately by schools

11
Keys to Successful Response to Intervention
(RTI), cont.
  • Intensive interventions
  • Tiers of support
  • Collaboration among
  • Classroom teachers
  • Literacy specialists
  • Special educators
  • Emphasis
  • What matters most is what the teacher does

12
Fundamental Principles of a Successful RTI
Approach
13
A Child, Not a Group, Learns to Read
Child 1 I am a bunny. Child 2 This is a kid
in a bunny costume. Child 3 I am a
rabbit. Child 4 (Smiling)
14
Identify Child Using Authentic Assessments
Reading and Writing Connected Text
15
Intervene Early, Not Later, in Support of the
Child
  • Children who are low performing in first grade
    are very likely to be low performing in fourth
    grade
  • Juel, C. (1988).

16
The Most Struggling Child Requires the Most
Expert Teacher
  • Skilled teachers teach and prompt in response to
    the child

17
Skilled Teachers Prompt in Response to the Child
Child I am a bunny. Teacher Option A It
could be, but something doesnt look right at the
beginning Option B (on noticing the childs
hesitancy) That makes sense, but what letter
would you see at the beginning of bunny? Option
C Try that again Option D (No response
child continues reading)
18
Teacher Expertise Requires High-Quality,
Sustained Professional Development
Emphasis on theory and practice Teachers
teaching and childrens learning.
19
Invest in Evidence-Based Interventions in
Support of the Child
  • What Works Clearinghouse
  • http//ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc//

20
What Works Clearinghouse Beginning Reading
Reports
21
What Works Clearinghouse Beginning Reading
Reports (cont.)
22
(No Transcript)
23
Our Responsibility to Children
  • Always keep children as the focus of our work

24
Our Responsibility to Children
  • Always keep children as the focus of our work
  • Implement highly rated evidence-based approaches

25
Our Responsibility to Children
  • Always keep children as the focus of our work
  • Implement highly rated evidence-based approaches
  • Provide proven interventions

26
Our Responsibility to Children
  • Always keep children as the focus of our work
  • Implement highly rated evidence-based approaches
  • Provide proven interventions
  • Delivered by skilled responsive teachers

27
Policy Implications
  • Excellent professional development can yield
    outstanding results and this can be replicated

28
Policy Implications
  • Excellent professional development can yield
    outstanding results and this can be replicated
  • Institutional commitment makes a difference

29
Policy Implications
  • Excellent professional development can yield
    outstanding results and this can be replicated
  • Institutional commitment makes a difference
  • Even under optimum conditions, not all teachers
    are likely to achieve excellent results

30
Policy Implications
  • Excellent professional development can yield
    outstanding results and this can be replicated
  • Institutional commitment makes a difference
  • Even under optimum conditions, not all teachers
    are likely to achieve excellent results
  • Teacher selection and retention need to reflect
    this if student achievement is to be the primary
    purpose of an educational enterprise

31
Response toInterventionLayersof
SupportBased on the Needs of the ChildKey
PersonnelClassroom TeachersLiteracy
CoachesIntervention SpecialistsSpecial
EducatorsPrincipals
Longer-term Support Special Education for those
who did not respond to early intervention/s
Tier III
INTERVENTIONS

Tier II
Classroom Instruction
and
Individualized instruction with an expert teacher
for the lowest performing students who did not
respond to classroom instruction in Kindergarten
or early first grade.
Tier I
High quality small group instruction in
elementary grades for students who are performing
at slightly higher levels but who still need
support
Lose, M. K. (2008, January).
32
Teachers, not prescriptive one-size-fits-all
approaches to instruction, matter most!
33
What will it take to make RTI work?
  • What staff development plan do we have that
    supports learning to implement research-based
    literacy instruction?
  • What safety nets are in place for children who
    need support beyond excellent classroom
    instruction?
  • Do we have a school team, including the
    principal, that closely monitors progress and
    makes informed instructional decisions about the
    lowest achieving readers and writers?

34
What will it take to make RTI work? (cont.)
  • Are assessment data used to inform instruction
    and to monitor student progress?
  • Does the climate in our school promote
    collaborative planning and problem-solving?

35
Decisions
  • Abandon the phrase slow learner

36
Decisions
  • Abandon the phrase slow learner
  • Commit to a schoolwide philosophy that all
    children can learn and it is the shared
    responsibility of our staff to realize this goal

37
Decisions
  • Abandon the phrase slow learner
  • Commit to a schoolwide philosophy that all
    children can learn and it is the shared
    responsibility of our staff to realize this goal
  • Decide to invest in early, rather than later,
    intervention for learners

38
Action Steps
  • Assist struggling learners through
    individualized, intensive instruction

39
Action Steps
  • Assist struggling learners through
    individualized, intensive instruction
  • Invest in teacher expertise versus prescriptive
    approaches to students learning difficulties

40
Action Steps
  • Assist struggling learners through
    individualized, intensive instruction
  • Invest in teacher expertise versus prescriptive
    approaches to students learning difficulties
  • Allocate resources to implement evidence-based
    interventions

41
Thank you!
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