View
86
Download
0
Category
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
Domain 2: consultation and Collaboration. Steven Malm Lauren Moss March 12, 2012. Overview. Definition of Consultation and Collaboration Domain Understanding Consultation and Collaboration Topic 1: Consultation-Based Academic Interventions Activity 1 : Math Interventions at Grissom - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Citation preview
DOMAIN 2: CONSULTATION AND COLLABORATION
Steven MalmLauren Moss
March 12, 2012
Overview Definition of Consultation and Collaboration
Domain Understanding Consultation and Collaboration Topic 1: Consultation-Based Academic
Interventions Activity 1 : Math Interventions at Grissom Topic 2: Collaboration to Implement School-
Wide Progress Monitoring Activity 2: Creating MAZE passages at Sutton Reflection
Definition “School psychologists have knowledge of varied
models and strategies of consultation, collaboration, and communication applicable to individuals, families, groups, and systems and methods to promote effective implementation of services. As part of a systematic and comprehensive process of effective decision making and problem solving that permeates all aspects of service delivery, school psychologists demonstrate skills to consult, collaborate, and communicate with others during design, implementation, and evaluation of services and programs.” (National Association of School Psychologists [NASP], 2010)
Collaboration in Consultation: Multiple Definitions (Schulte & Osborne, 2003)
Equal but Different Two experts with different roles
Peer Facilitator Consultee has more power
Unique Service-Delivery Model Joint responsibility
Consultant-Structured Consultee-Participation Consultant seeks input; consultee implements intervention
Shared Assent to Variable Roles Consultant and consultee define leadership and roles
throughout the process; not a predefined process Equal Value/Equal Power
All parties have equal expertise and decision-making power
Topic 1: Consultation-Based Academic Interventions
Studied the effects of consultation-based academic interventions on children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD; Jitendra et al, 2007) Two groups: traditional and intensive data-based academic
interventions Interventions implemented over a 15-month period Measured effectiveness based on CBM assessments, grades, and
individual goal attainment Results found that there wasn’t a difference between either
consultation group A one-year follow up study found that the achievement gains
of the two groups in the initial study were not significantly different (Volpe, DuPaul, Jitendra, & Tresco, 2009) This study found that the interventions did not have long-term
effects
Activity 1: Math Interventions at Grissom
Working on multiplication and division with pairs of fourth and fifth graders
Utilized a “pre-test” Combine flash cards and math games to
help students learn skills Record progress and amount of time
spent working on skills on documentation sheets
Documentation used to monitor and evaluate student progress; also helps guide the direction of future interventions
Documentation Sheet 1
Documentation Sheet 2
Topic 2: Collaboration to Implement School-Wide Progress Monitoring
IDEA and NCLB put pressure on schools to implement school-wide screening and progress monitoring
Curriculum-Based Measures (CBM) has been shown to be reliable and valid methods of progress monitoring (Deno et al., 2009) Oral Reading (CBM-R) – requires student to read a passage aloud
for a minute individually with instructor. Most widely used
MAZE Reading - students read silently and must choose the correct word within a passage at a series of decision points Can be administered simultaneously to whole class.
Creating and implementing school-wide progress monitoring is time consuming and requires the efforts of many individuals (Deno et al., 2009; Brown-Chidsey & Steege, 2010)
Activity 2: Creating MAZE Passages at Sutton
The 3-5th grade interventionist at Sutton Elementary discussed the need for progress-monitoring for those grades with the principal.
Sutton had used some MAZE passages created by practicum students the year before. MAZE passages had teacher buy-in
Easy to administer to whole class, easy to score, not time consuming
They needed a larger variety of MAZE passages to use. The teachers at Sutton could not make the MAZE
passages due to time constraints. The Ball State students were asked to assist.
Activity 2: Passage Sources
2nd years had to figure out where to get the MAZE materials Children’s literature from the school library? Reading textbooks from each grade level?
Brown-Chidsey et al., 2005 Investigated MAZE passage sources: literature popularly
taught at grade-level vs. material found in specific grade-level curriculum
Scores between conditions were highly correlated. Grade-level sources yielded higher scores than literature-
based sources 2nd years decided to take passages from the students’
reading textbooks 15 passages for EACH grade: 3rd – 5th
Activity 2: My Role 2nd years set-up what needed to be done. 1st years were tasked with making the passages A single set of instructions was generated and
distributed First sentence should be kept completely intact Every 7th word was to be removed and replaced with 3 choices
Correct word Near distracter (same part of speech) Far distracter (different part of speech)
Needed to be between 150 and 400 words Create a cover sheet with practice sentences and an answer
key Each of the 1st years would have to make 3 passages
for each grade.
Reflection Selecting a method of
consultation/collaboration Understanding the interconnectedness of
the NASP domains My role in the MAZE passage creation
Include pre-practicum students in collaboration next year
The research and planning involved with creating progress-monitoring measures Use and refer to MAZE passages in the future
References Brown-Chidsey, R., Johnson Jr., P., & Fernstrom, R. (2005). Comparison of grade-level controlled and
literature-based maze CBM reading passages. School Psychology Review, 34(3), 387-394. Brown-Chidsey, R. & Steege, M.W. (2010). Response to Intervention, 2nd Edition. The Guilford Press: New
York, NY. Deno, S.L,. Reschly, A.L., Lembke, E.S., Magnusson, D., Callender, S.A., Windram, H., & Stachel, N.
(2009). Developing a school-wide progress-monitoring system. Psychology in the Schools, 46(1), 44-55. Espin, C., Wallace, T., Lembke, E., Campbell, H., & Long, J.D. (2010). Creating a progress-monitoring
system in reading for middle-school students: Tracking progress toward meeting high-stakes standards. Learning Disabilities Research & Practice, 25(2), 60-75. doi: 10.1111/j.1540-5826.2010.00304.
Jitendra, A.K., DuPaul, G.J., Volpe, R.J., Tresco, K.E., Vile Junod. R.E., Lutz, J.G., Cleary K.S., Flammer-Rivera, L.M., & Mannella, M.C. (2007). Consultation-based academic intervention for children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: School functioning outcomes. School Psychology Review, 36(2), 217-236.
National Association of School Psychologists (2010). Standards for graduate preparation of school psychologists. 1-16.
Schulte, A.C. & Osborne, S.S. (2003). When assumptive worlds collide: A review of definitions of collaboration in consultation. Journal of Educational & Psychological Consultation, 14(2), 109-138.
Volpe, R.J., DuPaul, G.J., Jitendra, A.K., & Tresco, K.E. (2009). Consultation-based academic intervention for children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder: Effects on reading and mathematics outcomes at 1-year follow-up.
Recommended