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Infrastructure Necessary for Effective Instruction and Intervention within an MTSS

47 th Annual Leadership Conference Panama City, FL July 17, 2014. Infrastructure Necessary for Effective Instruction and Intervention within an MTSS. Pam Sudduth, M.A. Shelby Robertson, Ph.D. Day 1. Intensive Intervention: Purpose , foci, and implications

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Infrastructure Necessary for Effective Instruction and Intervention within an MTSS

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  1. 47th Annual Leadership Conference Panama City, FL July 17, 2014 Infrastructure Necessary for Effective Instruction and Intervention within an MTSS Pam Sudduth, M.A. Shelby Robertson, Ph.D.

  2. Day 1 • Intensive Intervention: Purpose, foci, and implications • Best practices for intensifying Tier 1 core instruction • Universal Design for Learning (UDL) Day 2 • Applying a continuum of support to address high probability and high intensity barriers to student engagement and learning • Problem-solving necessary to design and implement effective intensive intervention • Planning for Intensive Intervention Day 3 • Problem-solving around an individual student focusing on technology

  3. Districts That Participated in All Trainings Blue=Day 1 Yellow=Days 2 and 3 Green=All Days

  4. Barriers to Implementation • Time • Resources (Materials/personnel) • Collaboration • Support • Fidelity/Consistency/Accountability • Lack of knowledge/lack of PD • Buy in • Resistance to change • Infrastructure • Unclear mission/vision • Silos

  5. Support for Implementation • Support from the top • PD • Examples • Resources • Technical assistance • Strategies • This PD for entire district • Continuation of this PD—Days 4 and 5 • A way to document interventions

  6. Foundation Since 2004, Florida has engaged in continuous efforts to determine how systematic problem solving and the RtI framework integrate the various elements of Florida’s education system.

  7. Foundational Beliefs 1. Research-based instruction and evidence-based practices 2. Differentiated instruction to meet individual learning needs 3. Reliable, valid, and instructionally relevant assessments 4. Ongoing, systematic problem solving consistently utilized 5. Student data guides meaningful decision making 6. Professional development and follow-up coaching to ensure effective instruction 7. Actively engaged administrative leadership for data-based decision making is inherent to the school culture 8. All stakeholders are part of one proactive and seamless educational system

  8. Critical Elements for Infrastructure to Implement and Sustain MTSS • Leadership that connects the MTSS framework district and school improvement efforts • Alignment of policies and procedures across the continuum from state to classroom • Utilize a problem-solving process to support planning and implementation of a MTSS • Collaborative partnerships with all stakeholders • User-friendly data systems for supporting decision-making • Coaching supports to assist school team and staff problem-solving efforts • Ongoing data-driven professional development that align to student outcomes • Communicating outcomes with stakeholders • Celebrating success frequently

  9. The Game Plan Participants will engage in open discussions regarding the critical infrastructure that is necessary to support instruction/intervention design and implementation within a multi-tiered system of support. systemic supports effective teaming roles and responsibilities resource mapping

  10. Build the Bench

  11. What We Know… Each district (and school within each district) is unique and has its own “DNA”… What works in one does not necessarily work in another.

  12. Systemic Supports A multi‐tiered systemof supportsinvolvesthesystematic use of assessment data to most efficiently allocate resources in order to improve learning for all students.

  13. Catcher Directs and leads other players in a defensive way

  14. Data, Data, Data “It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts.” Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)

  15. Utilizing Data • Data are used to: • Identify students in need of intensive support • Historical data, screening data, EWS • Understand student needs • Diagnostic assessment data, learning scales, Discovery Ed., etc. • Monitor student progress • Progress monitoring data: academic, behavior, engagement • Evaluate effectiveness of tiered intervention support • Program evaluation data: • Academic, behavior, engagement

  16. Using Data to Understand Student Needs

  17. Every system is perfectly aligned for the results it gets. ~Adapted from The Practice of Adaptive Leadership

  18. Utilizing Data

  19. Data will lead you to the changes you need to make…

  20. Reflection • Are the decision- making processes in your district/school allowing for effective implementation of a MTSS? • What barriers are hindering effective implementation of a MTSS?

  21. Baseball Fielding Positions Pitcher, Catcher, First Baseman, Second Baseman, Third Baseman, Shortstop, Left Fielder, Center Fielder, Right Fielder – Essential to the Game

  22. Effective Teaming • Strong teams are essential to retaining and sustaining teachers. • If a team is effective, then people learn from each other.

  23. Teaming Structures • School-Based Leadership Team • Literacy Leadership Teams • Content Area Teams • Specialist Teams

  24. Manager Responsible for strategy on the field and team leadership

  25. School Based Leadership Team • Determine and monitor school-wide learning and development goals • Tier 1- Common issues (school-wide, grade-level, teacher teams and classroom) • Consider how to integrate supports with other school-wide intervention or initiatives and monitor effectiveness. • Tier 2- Develop weekly or bi-weekly support lists to identify groups of student with common needs that require problem-solving to moderate intensity • Tier 3- Monitor effectiveness • Determine students that require more intensive individualized problem-solving and supports (through Specialist Team) • Develop action plans to meet school improvement goals (e.g., SIP) • Allocate the resources needed to fully implement instructional and intervention plans • Manage and coordinate efforts between all school teams

  26. Barriers High probability barrier- • wide-spread or common barriers that impact many students’ engagement and learning (e.g., integrate strategies that support cognitive processing through academic instruction, DI, provide adequate instructional time) High intensity barrier- • significant impact on individual student engagement and learning (e.g., small group & individual instruction, DI, aligned with learning needs)

  27. Buckets of Barriers • High Intensity • Instruction • Curriculum • Environment • Learner • High Probability • Instruction • Curriculum • Environment • Learner Across Multiple Domains

  28. High Intensity High Probability Tier 3 Barriers Tiers 1 and 2 Barriers Multi-faceted needs of students

  29. Teaming Structures • School-Based Leadership Team • Literacy Leadership Teams • Content Area Teams • Specialist Teams Superficial or Authentic?

  30. Pinch Hitter/Runner or Designated Hitter Skilled players on the team

  31. Literacy Leadership Team (LLT) The purpose of the Literacy Leadership Team is to create capacity of literacy knowledge The team… • Utilizes the problem solving framework • Committed to ongoing work outside of regular meeting times • Highly visible, staying connected with each other, the school site and the community • Focused on manageable initiatives in an effort to enhance student learning • Represents a cross-section of all members of the school (administrator, grade level or department representatives, special area teachers, support personnel) • Establishes and adheres to ground rules for meetings (balancing conversation, honoring all ideas, listening, common goals) • Structures work using aliteracy plan • Celebrates success ~Comprehensive Research-Based Reading Plan, Florida DOE

  32. Teaming Structures • School-Based Leadership Team • Literacy Leadership Teams • Content Area Teams • Specialist Teams Superficial or Authentic?

  33. Starting Pitcher Someone you can count on to get the job done

  34. Content Area Teams • Analyze student data around the content area goals • Implement instructional and intervention plans with fidelity to achieve established content area goals • Utilize allocated resources • Collect and analyze student data to determine student response to intervention • Recommend programming changes to leadership team as necessary • Engage in professional development which allows for continuous improvement

  35. Lesson Study

  36. Research shows that… Common team planning time is the single most significant factor in determining the level of implementation and the academic achievement gains shown by teams. ~Teaming With Purpose: Unleashing the Potential (http://education.jhu.edu/PD/newhorizons/lifelonglearning/adolescence/articles/teamingwithpurposeunleashingthepotential/)

  37. "Students will not succeed if faced with a group of teachers whose work together is disjointed, disconnected, or, in some cases, dysfunctional.“ http://www.educationworld.com/a_admin/admin/admin408_a.shtml#sthash.214Ns7uE.dpuf

  38. Teaming Structures • School-Based Leadership Team • Literacy Leadership Teams • Content Area Teams • Specialist Teams Superficial or Authentic?

  39. Relief Pitcher or Left Handed Specialist Expected to perform for a short period of time – provides the support needed to get the job done

  40. Specialist Teams Effective intensive intervention planning occurs within collaborative, specialist teams, which include team members with personal knowledge of the student and relevant and specialized academic and behavior expertise. (related to data analysis, student learning, engagement, curriculum, instruction, technology, and resource allocation)

  41. Specialist Teams • Utilize a problem solving process to identify barriers and inform the intensity of instruction and set goals • Collect and review ongoing progress monitoring data to evaluate the effectiveness of support • Understand core instructional goals and plan interventions explicitly to support students’ achievement of those goals • Develop action plans (with all stakeholders) to address identified barriers to meeting core goals

  42. Specialist Teams • Implement individualized action plans to address identified barriers to meeting core goals • Implement intervention plans with fidelity • Collect and analyze student data to determine the student’s response to intervention • Evaluate intervention response (with all stakeholders) • Make adjustments to intervention plans as indicated by the student data

  43. Reflection • Are teams in your school/district superficial or authentic? • Are teams sustainable?

  44. Roles and Responsibilities

  45. Umpires Enforces the rules of the game and the grounds, makes judgment calls on plays, and handles the disciplinary actions

  46. Roles and Responsibilities The Role of District Leadership: • Allocate resources • Support the design of school schedules • Evaluate the effectiveness of tiered interventions as a whole, and • Provide feedback to schools The Role of School Leadership: • Design the master schedule • Allocate sufficient resources • Monitor the effectiveness of tiered interventions as a whole, and • Provide feedback to intervention providers and planning teams The Role of the Coach: • Guide individuals and teams to build their capacity • Guide the planning and implementation of intensive interventions • Assist with effective collaboration skills, coaching efficient problem solving techniques and providing effective continuous professional development. • Coach on a continuum – scaffold learning approach

  47. Roles and Responsibilities Role of Core Instruction Providers: • Identify high probability and high intensity barriers to student achievement • Plan and implement core instruction • Collaborate with intervention providers to ensure integration and alignment of instruction and intervention • Evaluate effectiveness of instruction and interventions • Provide input to SBLT Role of Intervention Specialist: • Work with core instructionalproviders to identify barriers to learning and engagement • Collaborate with core instructional providers to ensure integration and alignment of intervention strategies and supports with core instruction • Manage the implementationof Tier 3 intervention plans and actively support core instructional providers’ integration of effective intervention strategies and supports • Monitor individual student’s response to intervention and make timely changes to intervention strategies and supports as needed.

  48. Reflection • Is communication and collaboration supported? • Are members of the team(s) building capacity individually?

  49. Resource Mapping

  50. Starting Line Up The starters are usually the best players on the team

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