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Enhancing RtI: Instruction and Intervention

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Title: Enhancing RtI: Instruction and Intervention


1
Enhancing RtI Instruction and Intervention
PowerPoints available at www.fisherandfrey.com Cli
ck Resources Book available from ASCD
  • Nancy Frey and Doug Fisher
  • www.fisherandfrey.com

2
Purpose of RtI
An alternative way to identify students as having
learning disabilities, making sure that students
who struggle were not misidentified as disabled
when different and/or more intensive instruction
addressed their needs.
Big RTI
3
A school improvement process designed to ensure
that students receive the instruction,
intervention, and support necessary to be
successful.
little rti
4
Paucity of Research
The majority of RTI research focuses on students
at the elementary level.
5
Constrained vs. Unconstrained Skills
Phonemic Awareness Phonics Fluency
6
Constrained vs. Unconstrained Skills
Comprehension Vocabulary
7
Research Questions
As RtI is implemented in a high school, 1) What
happens with student achievement? 2) How can
RtI interventions be organized and delivered in a
high school setting?
8
Student Participants
444 9-12th graders 62 free/reduced lunch 15
from military families 44 Latino/Hispanic 22
Black 16 Asian 18 White 70 EL students
8.5 Students with disabilities 4 with 504
plans
9
Outcomes Schoolwide
Outperformed state-identified similar schools by
11. Student achievement increased 4 on state
achievement measures. Independent auditor noted
that the school, outperforms all local
schools in the percentage of students at or above
proficiency in ELA and math. (Audit report, June
2009)
10
Outcomes Grade Point Averages
  • GPAs increased from 2.89 to 3.36,
    (t12.58, df742, plt.001).
  • The largest gains in GPA came from students
    living in poverty and students with disabilities.
  • For students living in poverty, average GPA
    increased from 2.26 to 3.12
    (t16.84, df414, plt.001).
  • For students with disabilities, average GPA
    increased
  • from 1.30 to 3.02 (t7.26, df61, plt.0001).

11
Outcomes Attendance
By the end of the two-year data collection
period, attendance had increased from 90.4 to
95.6.
12
Outcomes Referrals to
Special Education
Reduced from 17 referral rate to 3.
8.5 had an IEP, compared to county average of
11.5.
13
I used to refer students to special education
when I needed help with them. Now I have that
help, and I am part of that help.
9th grade English teacher, May 2009
14
Response to Instruction and Intervention (RtI2)
Tier 1 75
Tier 2 10-15
Tier 3 5-10
Manipulate variables
15
Tiers 2 and 3 intervention are not a Band-Aid
for ineffective Tier 1 instruction.
16
What could Tier 1 look like?
Tier 1 75
17
Tier 1 Quality Core Instruction
Increased productive group work (school goal was
50 of instructional minutes) Competency-based
grading Better implementation of Gradual Release
of Responsibility instructional framework (Fisher
Frey, 2008)
18
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
Guided Instruction
We do it
You do it together
Collaborative
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
A Model for Success for All Students
Fisher, D., Frey, N. (2008). Better learning
through structured teaching A framework for the
gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria,
VA Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development.
19
The sudden release of responsibility
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
Fisher, D., Frey, N. (2008). Better learning
through structured teaching A framework for the
gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria,
VA Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development.
20
DIY School
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY (none)
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
Fisher, D., Frey, N. (2008). Better learning
through structured teaching A framework for the
gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria,
VA Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development.
21
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
Guided Instruction
We do it
You do it together
Collaborative
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
A Model for Success for All Students
Fisher, D., Frey, N. (2008). Better learning
through structured teaching A framework for the
gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria,
VA Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development.
22
Video available to Principal Leadership
subscribers at www.principals.org/pl0910frey
September 2010 issue
23
Feed forward to improve programmatically
24
Item Analysis in Science
25
What could Tier 2 look like?
Tier 2 10-15
26
Tier 2
Schedule Intervention to Supplement, Not
Supplant Core Instruction
Tutorials Academic Recovery Progress monitoring
and assessments (did not exist prior to study)
27
Manipulate the variables
28
Access to Expertise
29
Time and Duration
30
Increased guided instruction with smaller groups
31
Group size
32
Assessments Screening tools
33
CBMs 1-2 times per month for progress monitoring
Cloze assessments Oral fluency measures Timed
math exercises Timed writing
34
(No Transcript)
35
Video available to Principal Leadership
subscribers at www.principals.org/pl0211fisher
February 2011 issue
36
What could Tier 3 look like?
Tier 3 5-10
37
Tier 3 Intensive Interventions
Did not exist at the beginning of the study 11
instruction By end of second year, every
certificated adult had provided individualized
instruction to at least one student
38
Keep the teacher at the center of communication
39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
Daily 11 instruction
42
Analytic writing samples Vocabulary CBMs
Increased Progress Monitoring with specialized
assessments
43
Every certificated adult meets with students
44
TEACHER RESPONSIBILITY
I do it
Focus Lesson
Guided Instruction
We do it
You do it together
Collaborative
You do it alone
Independent
STUDENT RESPONSIBILITY
A Model for Success for All Students
Fisher, D., Frey, N. (2008). Better learning
through structured teaching A framework for the
gradual release of responsibility. Alexandria,
VA Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development.
45
The Takeaway
The Takeaway
  • Instruction and Intervention are linked
  • Manipulate variables (time, assessment,
    expertise, instruction) to intensify intervention
  • Build in a feed forward method so that RtI2
    results inform classroom instruction and
    programmatic improvements
  • Keep the teacher and family at the center of
    communication
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