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Implementing a Response to Intervention Model

Implementing a Response to Intervention Model. By John E. McCook, Ed.D. jmccook125@aol.com Lansing, Michigan. WHY RTI?. Einstein’s definition of insanity: “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results” USDOE has written the obituary for the discrepancy model

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Implementing a Response to Intervention Model

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  1. Implementing a Response to Intervention Model By John E. McCook, Ed.D. jmccook125@aol.com Lansing, Michigan

  2. WHY RTI? • Einstein’s definition of insanity: “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results” • USDOE has written the obituary for the discrepancy model • Based upon President’s Commission on Excellence • Based upon IDEIA 2004 • Based upon LDA research findings

  3. WHY RTI? • Discrepancy has developed into a “wait to fail” model • Discrepancy model has not proven to be effective • Over identification • Congress in 1975 placed a 2% limit on prevalence if USDOE did not determine criteria by Jan 1, 1978 • USDOE sets criteria Dec 29, 1977 • Almost 2% 1977 and almost 6% 2001 • Widespread variance of prevalence • KY 2.96%, GA 3.29% …..CT 4.93%......MA 7.88%, NM 8.41%, RI 9.46% • Disproportionality

  4. Why RTI? • Use information that makes sense to school personnel • Logical • Research based • Discussion is based on school staff experience • Utilize teacher’s daily data as part of the problem solving method • Is this the best we can do? • "The question is not, Is it possible to educate all children well? But rather, Do we want to do it badly enough?" D. Meier

  5. Teaching Reading is Urgent: Brutal Fact

  6. 4.9 With substantial instructional intervention With research-based core but without extra instructional intervention 3.2 Control Intervention Early Intervention Changes Reading Outcomes 5.2 5 4 Low Risk on Early Screening Reading grade level 3 2.5 2 At Risk on Early Screening 1 44 1 2 3 4 Grade level corresponding to age Torgesen, J.K. ( 2001). The theory and practice of intervention: Comparing outcomes from prevention and remediation studies.  In A.J. Fawcett and R.I. Nicolson (Eds.). Dyslexia: Theory and Good Practice. (pp. 185-201). London: David Fulton Publishers. Slide coursety of W. Alan Coulterhttp://www.monitoringcenter.lsuhsc.edu

  7. The American Educational System Structure Our education system has grown up through a process of “Disjointed Incrementalism” (Reynolds, 1988) SPED Gifted Migrant Programmatic Evolution Title I K-12 Education ELL At-Risk

  8. Resource Allocation • Turfdom exists presently in the kingdoms we have created resulting in: • Conflicting programs • Redundancy • Lack of coordination across or among programs • Conflicting and convoluted funding streams • Student groupings that are not instructionally based • Rules, rigidity, and structure for structure’s sake • Bureaucracy for the sake of bureaucracy

  9. Resource Allocation • Resources must be made available in a manner that is directly proportional to the STUDENT need • Resources must be available in a continuous stream and not a discrete stream • Funding should be shifted in areas of need • Personnel should be utilized to strengthen student achievement

  10. The Basics Academic Systems Behavioral Systems • Intensive, Individual Interventions • Individual Students • Assessment-based • High Intensity • Of longer duration • Intensive, Individual Interventions • Individual Students • Assessment-based • Intense, durable procedures • Targeted Group Interventions • Some students (at-risk) • High efficiency • Rapid response • Targeted Group Interventions • Some students (at-risk) • High efficiency • Rapid response • Universal Interventions • All students • Preventive, proactive • Universal Interventions • All settings, all students • Preventive, proactive Any Curriculum Area 1-5% 1-5% 5-10% 5-10% Students 80-90% 80-90%

  11. IDEIA: A New Way of Viewing LD • States can no longer require local school districts to use the discrepancy formula (IQ-Achievement) when identifying LD students • This implies local school districts May or May Not use the discrepancy formula

  12. Identification occurs too late Identification requires students to fail Too many students Minority over/under representation Cost in assessment and services Classified without participating in effective reading instruction in the regular classroom What is the LD problem?

  13. Who Authored the LD Obituary? • President’s Commission on Excellence in Special Education • Commissioned papers • LD Summit • Researcher Roundtable • Finding Common Ground Roundtable • Funding the National Research Center on Learning Disabilities (NRCLD)

  14. Researcher Roundtable Response To Intervention: • There should be alternate ways to identify individuals with SLD in addition to achievement testing, history, and observations of the child. Response to quality intervention is the most promising method of alternate identification and can both promote effective practices in schools and help to close the gap between identification and treatment. Any effort to scale up response to intervention should be based on problem solving models that use progress monitoring to gauge the intensity of intervention in relation to the student’s response to intervention. Problem solving models have been shown to be effective in public school settings and in research.

  15. IDEIA 2004 SLD • Disorder in a basic psychological process …may manifest itself in the imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations • Does not include learning problem due to visual, hearing, motor disabilities, mental retardation, emotional disturbance, environmental, cultural or economic disadvantage

  16. IDEIA 2004 SLD Special Rule for Eligibility Determination. In making a determination of eligibility under paragraph (4)(A), a child shall not be determined to be a child with a disability if the determinant factor for such determination is: (A) lack of appropriate instruction in reading, including in the essential components of reading instruction (as defined in section 1208(3) of ESEA); (B) lack of instruction in math; or (C) limited English proficiency.

  17. IDEIA 2004 • When determining whether a child has a disability … a local educational agency shall not be required to take into consideration whether a child has a severe discrepancy between achievement and intellectual ability • ..a local education agency may use a process that determines if the child responds to scientific, research-based intervention as a part of the evaluation procedures

  18. IDEIA 2004 Proposed Regulations Re: LD Identification • States can prohibit the use of a severe discrepancy between achievement and intellectual ability • State may not require LEA’s to use a discrepancy model for determining whether a child has an SLD. • State must permit a process that examines whether the child responds to scientific, research-based intervention as part of the evaluation procedures. • State may permit the use of other alternative research-based procedures

  19. Alternative Models: Proposed Regulations Alternative models are possible. The type of model most consistently recommended uses a process based on systematic assessment of the student’s response to high quality, research-based general education instruction. The Department strongly recommends that States consider including this model in its criteria. Other models focus on the assessment of achievement skills identifying SLD by examining the strengths and weaknesses in achievement, or simply rely on an absolute level of low achievement. These models are directly linked to instruction. (Fletcher, et al., 2003).

  20. Alternative Models: Proposed Regulations Other models use alternative approaches to determining aptitude-achievement discrepancies that do not involve IQ, including multiple assessments of cognitive skills. However, these models do not identify a unique group of low achievers and maintain a focus on assessment as opposed to intervention. In considering alternative models for identification, we believe that the focus should be on assessments that are related to instruction, and that identification should promote intervention. For these reasons, models that incorporate response to a research-based intervention should be given priority in any effort to identify students with SLD.

  21. IQ-Achievement Discrepancy Passed Away on December 4, 2004: Burial to be announced

  22. HARM • Pivotal issue is harm to children. • Ability-achievement discrepancy model delays treatment to the point where there is documented evidence that treatments are less effective to the point where children suffer the profound consequences of poor reading instruction

  23. Final Nail In The Coffin • Proposed Regulations state discrepancy model is “potentially harmful” to students

  24. Proposed Federal Regulations: Above and Beyond Language of IDEIA 2004 • Proposed regs refer to the discrepancy formula as creating a “waiting to fail” situation with young children. • Language strongly urges the abolishment of the discrepancy model • Appears to give states the right to abolish the discrepancy formula

  25. From K-3 We Learn to ReadThe Rest of Our Lives We Read To Learn!!!

  26. The current separate systems and processes operating within schools are Not getting the Results we expect. But we have been doing things this way for some time. What can we do ? “Never, never think outside the Box !”

  27. Impact of First Grade Teacher CapacityBaltimore Longitudinal Data on Top 25% Aggressive First-grade Boys: Risk of Being Highly Aggressive in Middle School (Kellam, Ling, Merisca, Brown, & Ialongo, 1998) Do we prevent some problems?

  28. What Taboos Do We Face • The curricula can not be responsible • The settings can not be responsible • The adults can not be responsible What does this leave us? • The child must have a disability

  29. Reid Lyon Quote • “learning disabilities have become the sociological sponge to wipe up the spills of general education.”

  30. Scientific Inquiry • Define the Problem • Data to determine IF a problem exists • Data to determine what hypothesis should be made • Data to determine WHY the problem is occurring • Develop a Plan • What are we going to do about the problem? • What will be done differently? • Who will do it? • What are the goals of the plan?

  31. Scientific Inquiry • Implement the Plan • Who will be charged with implementing the intervention? • What material will be different; what methodology will be used? • Where will the intervention take place? • When will the intervention plan occur? • How long will the intervention be utilized ? • Evaluate the Plan • Where were we going? Did we get there? • Did the plan work? • Were the goals of the intervention met? • Were the goals of the overall plan met? • Were we successful?

  32. The Historical Failure of Interventions Essential Practice Not Found • Adequate Behavioral Definition? 85% • Data Prior to Intervention? 90% • Written Plan for Intervention? 85% • Progress Monitored/Changes made? 95% • Compare pre to post measures? 90% Reschly, Dan Vanderbilt University

  33. Six Critical Components of an RTI Model • Universal Screening • Measurable definition of problem area • Baseline data prior to an intervention • Establishment of a WRITTEN plan detailing accountability • PROGRESS MONITORING • Comparison of pre intervention data to post intervention data for efficacy

  34. Universal Screening • Development of “benchmark” data norms • Classroom • Grade level • School • District • Benchmark data taken three times per year • Fall • Winter • Spring

  35. Universal Screening • Data from benchmarks must be available to teachers, principals and district staff and shared with parents • Data must be “user friendly” in format

  36. Example of Benchmark Data

  37. Measurable Definition of Problem • Specific • Lends itself to objective measures, not anecdotal or opinion data

  38. Individual Baseline Data • Use of curriculum based measurement to identify specifically the performance of an individual child on a specific measure e.g. words read correctly in one minute • Ability to compare the child to the class

  39. Determination of Problem: Individual or Group Mastery Instructional At Risk Each bar is a student’s performance Is this a student or core curriculum issue?

  40. Data Analysis • In previous benchmark data for this class, the majority of the students were below mastery level • If the student doesn’t stick out like a sore thumb, and most students are having difficulty, then the problem is either instructional or core curriculum area

  41. Data Analysis Where Small Group of Students are not Performing

  42. Identified Students For Intervention • The previous graph clearly shows that we have a small group of students that are not performing relative to the class • Development of “cut” scores

  43. Establishment of a Written Plan of Intervention • Develop a Plan • So now we have defined the problem– what are we going to do about it? • Here is where many teams go awry. They go back and continue to try the same practices using the same materials that they have used all along and expect the child to perform differently • Specificity • What are we going to do differently • Who is going to do it • When • Where • How long

  44. A description of the specific intervention Duration of the intervention Schedule and setting of the intervention Persons responsible for implementing the intervention Measurable outcomes which can be used to make data-based adjustments as needed during the intervention process Description of measurement and recording techniques Progress monitoring schedule Written Intervention Plans

  45. Progress Monitoring • Formative • Uses a variety of data collection methods • Examines student performance frequently over time, to evaluate response to intervention in making data-based decisions • On-going, systematic process for gathering data • Academic • Social • Behavioral

  46. Positive Response to Intervention

  47. Not Responding to First Intervention

  48. Better Response to Intervention

  49. Comparison of Pre Intervention Data to Post Intervention Data • Did it work? • Decision making rubric applied

  50. Protocol or Problem Solving • Protocol model defines WHAT intervention will be utilized • Problem Solving model does not define any interventions specifically and utilizes team approach to determine intervention • Model incorporates portions of both models • Define 2-3 interventions per area • Team decides which and where

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