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Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

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Page 1: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Response to Intervention:Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Page 2: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Our Goal :Our Goal :

Building a Student Achievement Building a Student Achievement Pyramid of InterventionPyramid of Intervention

that includes

PREVENTION, INTERVENTION and PREVENTION, INTERVENTION and ACCELERATION STRATEGIESACCELERATION STRATEGIES

To assist in improving the achievement of ALL students

Page 3: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

THE BIG PICTURE:THE BIG PICTURE:Raising Expectations for Georgia’s ChildrenRaising Expectations for Georgia’s Children

• A HIGHER BARA HIGHER BAR• NEW CURRICULANEW CURRICULA• NEW ASSESSMENTSNEW ASSESSMENTS

If we are truly raising expectations for ALL students, periodic academic struggles

are normalnormal and should be expectedshould be expected!

Page 4: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

These divisions within the GaDOE These divisions within the GaDOE collaborated to construct the state POI:collaborated to construct the state POI:

• Career, Technical, and Agricultural Education

• Standards, Instruction and Assessment

• Exceptional Students• Early Intervention

Programs• English to Speakers of

Other Languages

• Innovative Academic Programs

• Reading First• Remedial Education

Program • School and Leader Quality• Teacher Quality• Student Support Services• Title I• Gifted

Page 5: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

The School Keys (Georgia School Standards)

EIGHT STRANDS OF QUALITY

The School Keys (Georgia School Standards)

EIGHT STRANDS OF QUALITYCurriculumCurriculum

InstructionInstruction

AssessmentAssessment

Planning and OrganizationPlanning and Organization

Student, Family & Community SupportStudent, Family & Community Support

School CultureSchool Culture

LeadershipLeadership

Professional LearningProfessional Learning

Page 6: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

6

What is Georgia’s What is Georgia’s

PPyramid?yramid?

RResponse esponse tto o IInterventionntervention

Page 7: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

TIER 1 STANDARDS-BASED CLASSROOM LEARNING:

All students participate in general education learning that includes:•Implementation of the Georgia Performance Standards through research-based practices

•Use of flexible groups for differentiation of instruction•Frequent progress monitoring

TIER 2NEEDS BASED LEARNING:

Targeted students participate in learning that is in addition to Tier 1 and different by including:

•Formalized, systemic processes of intervention•Greater frequency of progress monitoring

TIER 3SST DRIVEN LEARNING

Targeted students participate in learning that is in addition to Tier 1 and Tier 2 and different by including:

•Individualized assessments•Interventions tailored to individual needs

•Referral for specially designed instruction if needed

TIER 4SPECIALLY DESIGNED

LEARNING

Targeted students participate in learning that includes:•Specialized programs

•Adapted content, methodology, or instructional delivery•GPS access/extension

Georgia Department of Education Kathy Cox, State Superintendent of Schools April 12, 2006 All Rights Reserved

Decreasing numbers of

students

Increasing Intensity of Intervention

Response to Intervention:GEORGIA STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT PYRAMID

Page 8: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Georgia’s Model: Georgia’s Model: Student Achievement Pyramid of Intervention (POI)Student Achievement Pyramid of Intervention (POI)

8

Tiers of support for students in order to meet and exceed expectations in:

– Academics

– Communication/language deficits

– Appropriate school behavior/social skills

• Provides assistance to any student for any duration necessary

Page 9: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Who will need to collaborate to build a Who will need to collaborate to build a district-level Pyramid of Intervention?district-level Pyramid of Intervention?

• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________

• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________• _____________________

Page 10: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What may prevent a district-level Pyramid of What may prevent a district-level Pyramid of Intervention from being fully operational? Intervention from being fully operational?

Issues related to “turfdom”: Unclear grasp or knowledge of student need

Programs with conflicting goals

Lack of coordination across resources, services, projects, or unites

Lack of coordination across programs

Student groupings that are NOT instructionally based

Policies, rules, etc.

Flexibility of resources (human, financial, time, etc.)

Page 11: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

The Historical Evidence of InterventionsThe Historical Evidence of Interventions

Essential Practice Evidence Adequate Behavioral Definition? 15% Data Prior to Intervention? 10% Written Plan for Intervention? 15% Progress Monitored/Changes made? 5% Compare pre to post measures? 10%

Dan Reschly, Vanderbilt University

Page 12: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

District wide expectations that must be in District wide expectations that must be in place to successfully implement a POI!place to successfully implement a POI!

District wide focus on collaboration of resources and services toward increasing student academic achievement

A strong Tier I (standards-based classrooms), district wide, that will yield improvements in student achievement and reductions in behavioral transgressions

Strategic collection, disaggregation, and analyses of data, to identify the assets and needs specific to each unique learning community

Page 13: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

District-wide expectations that must be in District-wide expectations that must be in place to successfully implement a POI!place to successfully implement a POI!

School structures that allow teachers the time to meet regularly to examine data, problem-solve, and share instructional strategies

Common classroom “look-fors” that will drive the collection of information and data and guide focused interventions

A clear, strongly-articulated Student Support Team (SST) process and protocol

Clear expectations and processes for Tier 4 (special education referrals) thus limiting the possibility of inappropriate placements, disproportionality

All schools within the district will respond to the unique needs of the population served

Page 14: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

How can the framework of Pyramid of Interventions How can the framework of Pyramid of Interventions improve a student's educational performance? improve a student's educational performance?

Benchmarks are established that indicate current performance. These “points of reference” aid in monitoring students’ performance and their progress toward skill attainment. The POI is designed, specifically, to identify solutions - the instructional, behavioral and social “adjustments” that lead to student success. The POI relies on artifacts and evidences to support interventions.

Page 15: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Do staff members within your district Do staff members within your district “behave” this statement?“behave” this statement?

“ALL KIDS CAN LEARN.”

Page 16: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Who is responsible? Who is responsible? IF:IF: The curriculum is not responsible

The setting is not responsible

The adults are not responsible

What or who does that leave?What or who does that leave? The child must be responsible

Quote:Quote:

“…disabilities have become the sociological sponge to wipe the spills of general education…” Reid Lyon

Page 17: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

The Charles Darwin School The Pontius Pilate School

The Henry Higgins SchoolThe Chicago Cub Fan School

“We believe all kids can learn . . . based on their ability.”

“We believe all kids can learn . . . if they take advantage of their opportunity we give them to learn.”“We believe all

kids can learn . . . something, and we will help all students experience academic growth in a warm and nurturing environment.”

“We believe all kids can learn . . . and we will work to help all students achieve high standards of learning.”

Page 18: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

The Charles Darwin School

“We believe all kids can learn . . . based on their ability.”

Is your current practice in sync with your posted mission?

Isn’t perfection really impossible?

What can be gained from attempting the impossible?

Would you want your son or daughter to attend school in

this district?

How much impact does school have on a student?

Page 19: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

“Never, never think outside the Box !”

Page 20: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

The Pontius Pilate School

“We believe all kids can learn . . . if they take advantage of their opportunity we give them to learn.”

Is your current practice in sync with your posted mission?

Think back to your elementary, middle and high school days.

How responsible were you at age 8, age 12, or age 16?

Did you take advantage of everything that school offered?

Were you always highly motivated to learn?

Do teachers have a responsibility to motivate and engage?

At your school, do young people come to watch old people work?

How do you involve students in their own learning?

Page 21: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

“How We Fix These Broken Kids”

Page 22: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

The Chicago Cub Fan School

“We believe all kids can learn . . . something, and we will help all students experience academic growth in a warm and nurturing environment.”

How do you ensure rigor in your classroom?

How do you measure growth for individual students?

Is your feedback to students directly related to their

performance on the standards, in addition to advice on

how they can improve?

Page 23: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Bill Watterson

Page 24: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

The Henry Higgins School

“We believe all kids can learn . . . and we will work to help all students achieve high standards of learning.”

Can we have these teachers for ALL students?Can we have these teachers for ALL students?

Page 25: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Mark an X through the

Belief Quadrant that best

represents the practicespractices

of most of the: Elementary Schools Middle Schools High Schools

Tally results.

Examining Current Beliefs:Examining Current Beliefs:“KNOW THYSELF” ACTIVITY

Page 26: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Six Critical Components of an RTI/POI ModelSix Critical Components of an RTI/POI Model

Universal Screenings Measurable definition(s) of problem area(s) Baseline data prior to an intervention(s) Identification of available interventions Frequent, on-going PROGRESS MONITORING Comparison of pre-intervention data to post-

intervention data, for efficacy

Page 27: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Response to Intervention (RtI) is not:

• Intended to delay services to students eligible for special education

• Intended to be used to document every service available for a child

Page 28: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

RTI Implementation Questions RTI Implementation Questions What are you already doing? (SST, general educational

programs/initiative, etc) What would your “tiers” look like? How rigid is movement in terms of tiers? Is it fluid and flexible? How are you going to monitor integrity and fidelity? What are your strength and weaknesses in terms of resources? Who are your key personnel, what are their roles, and what are their

competencies? Start identifying Instructional Barriers and Organizational Barriers,

Brokering Existing Initiatives, and Identifying New Initiatives (Six Step Process)

Page 29: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

ALL Students

TIER 1 STANDARDS BASED CLASSROOM LEARNING:

All students participate in general education learning that includes:

▪ Implementation of the Georgia Performance Standards curriculum through research-based instructional practices▪ Use of flexible groups for differentiation of instruction

▪ Frequent progress monitoring

Page 30: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

►Essential Components of Tier 1 Universal screening, benchmarking, and formative assessments are utilized at school

level. Evidence based curricula and strategies are in place for all students, and

differentiation is documented by general education teachers through the general education environment.

At risk students are identified in an area of instructional need (language, academics, behavior).

Any student identified as at risk is instructed and monitored for at least a grading period with progress monitoring tool or CBM in order to determine instructional effectiveness.

Data is included and analyzed by classroom general education teacher for decision making that indicates if Tier 1 universal interventions should be continued or if there is a need to proceed to the increased intensity of Tier 2 interventions.

Page 31: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

► Tier I: Tier I: A Standards-Based Classroom is one in which…A Standards-Based Classroom is one in which…• curriculum, assessment and instruction are rigorous, relevant, and

aligned to the standards (GPS/QCC)

• ALL students have equal access to the standards (including required previewing, remediation, and acceleration of standards)

• clear expectations are set for and communicated to ALL learners

• LOTS (language-of-the-standards) is used consistently

Page 32: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

► Tier I:Tier I:A Standards-Based Classroom is one in which…A Standards-Based Classroom is one in which…• tasks are performance-based, authentic, and require use of a

variety of learning modalities

• students produce artifacts and evidences of learning

• progress is monitored frequently; timely feedback is provided; reteaching or extension of learning is performed immediately

• feedback (formative and summative) is directly related to standards AND instructs students how to get to “the next level” of performance

Page 33: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

► Essential Components of Tier 1Essential Components of Tier 1• In every standards-based school, there

should be evidence of the following:

• School-wide screening

• Peer coaching

• Common planning/Collaboration

• Common assessments

• Data analysis where teachers share results of evidence and artifacts of learning

• Goal setting

• Data analysis to drive instruction

• Test talks with students

• Protected instructional time

• Curriculum documents in use to plan for instruction

• All certified and classified staff at the school participate in all professional learning

• Plans in place for students who are not successful

• Mission/vision of school clearly visible and communicated to students and parents

• School-wide discipline plan consistently implemented

• Professional learning aligned with School Improvement

• Parent /community involvement

• Information sessions for parents on curriculum, testing, parenting skills

• Daily Awareness Walks by administrators

• Opportunities for teachers to provide input/leadership

• Celebrations for students’ accomplishments

Page 34: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

► In every standards-based classroom, there should be evidence of the following:

• Whole group• Small group• Flexible grouping• Pairs• Cooperative groups (or collaborative groups?)• Research based strategies in place• Agendas• Syllabi• Risk-free learning environment• Clear and precise explanation of teaching and

learning for each lesson• Curriculum aligned with Georgia Performance

Standards• Learner focused• Use of technology to support instruction• High level of student engagement• Differentiation of instruction based on but not

limited to readiness levels, interests, and learning styles

• Students demonstrating what they have learned• Students showing ownership of what they have

learned

• Constant interaction and/or monitoring by teacher• Goal setting• Standards clearly communicated to students/clear

expectations• High expectations for all learners• Higher order questioning by teachers to promote

metacognitive thinking by learners• Immediate and frequent feedback from teacher

(written and oral)• Verbal and written commentary• Peer tutoring• Co-teaching/ Inclusion• Bell-to-bell instruction• Exemplary work posted• Formative and summative assessment• Benchmarks• Student conferencing• Clear, precise, and timely communication to

students and parents regarding students’ progress• Help sessions before and/or after school• School-wide discipline plan consistently

implemented within classroom• Plan in place to communicate with parents

Page 35: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!
Page 36: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!
Page 37: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!
Page 38: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!
Page 39: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Standards-Based ClassroomsStandards-Based Classrooms

Concept Not Addressed Emergent Operational Fully Operational

1. The Georgia Performance Standards are utilized as the curriculum in the school (based on the phase-in plan), and there is a shared understanding of the standards.

Teaching is often driven solely by the textbook (or other resources) or is performance activities-based but unaligned with the GPS.

Curriculum documents are developed to support implementation of the GPS, using textbooks as a resource.

Teachers work together to build consensus on what students are expected to know, understand, and be able to do and plan instruction based on the GPS.

Teachers utilize the GPS to collaboratively plan for instruction and assessment.Teachers and students articulate a common understanding of what they are expected to know, understand, and be able to do based on the Georgia Performance Standards.

2. Standards are accessible to all students.

Teachers do not explain the purpose of the lesson or articulate the expectations for student work. Visual cues and other strategies to make the standards accessible are not evident.

Teachers use a variety of strategies to make the standards accessible to students such as paraphrasing, repetition, visual cues, essential questions, etc. Teachers do not explicitly state the standard(s) being addressed during a lesson.

Teachers use the language of the standards during instruction as well as when they provide feedback to students.Teachers provide students with models and provide specific examples of how the work meets standards.Students explain the standards in their own words.Students can articulate the standards and elements they are currently working on and show evidence of the standards in their work.

Teachers expect students to use the language of the standards to describe their work. Students use the language of the standards to support their work and their answers.Students use the language of the standards when they provide feedback to other students.

3. Teachers sequence the lesson or their instruction in a logical, predictable manner referencing standards throughout.

There is not an agreed upon school-wide instructional framework or sequence for instruction.

Teachers implement a common instructional framework or sequence of lessons. (e.g., opening, work session, closing)

Teachers implement a sequence of instruction or instructional framework that provides opportunities for students to receive explicit instruction connected to the standards, apply learning independently and collaboratively, share and explain their work as it relates to the standards, and receive feedback based on the standards.

Teachers expect students to explain the standards and/or elements they are applying during the sequence of instruction or instructional framework.Students can explain the sequence of instruction and how they apply the standards and elements to the resulting work.

Page 40: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Concept Not Addressed Emergent Operational Fully Operational

4. A variety of delivery modes are incorporated into instruction to ensure that all students have access to and meet standards.

Teachers use lecture as the predominant mode of instruction assuming the responsibility of “imparting” knowledge and “covering” the curriculum.

Teachers use a variety of delivery modes including modeling, demonstration, small-group instruction, whole group instruction, one-on-one instruction, etc. but still assume the responsibility of “imparting” knowledge and “covering” the curriculum.

Teachers use a variety of delivery modes to ensure mastery of the standards (e.g., extended time, additional support, etc.) rather than impart knowledge.Students can explain different grouping options typically used in the class.Students transition smoothly from one activity to another.

Teachers can explain the specific purposes of how students are divided into work groups and can articulate the data that led to the flexible groups. The delivery modes observed support the learning goals of the lesson and students’ needs. All students make progress toward meeting standards and apply new knowledge to real-world tasks.

5. Students are expected to meet the same standards and instruction is differentiated by content, process, and/or product.

Content is present in the same way to all students regardless of readiness levels, learning styles, and/or student interests. Teachers make a single plan for all learners.

Teachers use summative assessments to determine students in need of support. Teachers assign students to interventions outside of the regular classroom instructional time.

Teachers use summative and formative assessments to systematically and purposefully plan for student differences. Classroom instruction is tailored to student readiness levels, learning styles, and interests to ensure that students meet the same standards.Students show mastery of standards in a variety of ways.

Teachers monitor student progress to revise content (how students are given access to the standards), process (how students learn and apply the standards) and product (how students demonstrate their understanding of the standards). Teachers revise content, process, and product as necessary.Although the content, process, and product may differ for students they can explain how their work meets standard(s).

6. Assessments are aligned to the GPS and used frequently to adjust instruction and provide students with feedback.

Assessment is typically summative in nature and used to assign grades.

Teachers use summative assessments aligned to the standards. These assessments are analyzed to identify students in need of additional instruction.

Teachers utilize formative assessments frequently which are directly aligned to the standards and lead to revision of instruction as well as specific feedback to students. Examples include: rubrics; conferencing; questioning; observations; written reflections (e.g. 3-2-1, KWL, ticket out the door, etc.); graphic representations of thinking; etc.Summative assessments are utilized to identify students in need of additional instruction or interventions and to revise classroom instruction.

Teachers collaborate regularly to develop common formative and summative assessments. They use the results from the assessments to revise common assessments and instructional plans.Students utilize summative and formative assessment results to set learning goals toward meeting standards.

Page 41: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Concept Not Addressed Emergent Operational Fully Operational

7. Examples of student work are displayed for student use. Benchmarks are provided to gauge progress over time. Exemplars are provided to exemplify the standards.

Teachers do not have a collection of benchmark (anchor papers) or exemplary student work.

Teachers collect examples of local and national benchmark and exemplary student work. Teachers post examples of student work.The benchmarks demonstrate progress toward meeting the standards.The exemplary work shows expected levels of rigor as defined in the standards.

Teachers explain how the exemplary work meets standards and refer to it frequently during the sequence of instruction or instructional framework.Teachers explain how a set of benchmark work displays progress over time toward the standards. Teachers explicitly teach students how to compare their work to the benchmark work to identify next steps.Students can explain how they use benchmark and exemplary student work to improve their own work.

Teachers collect benchmark work and exemplars from their own class.Students identify where their work falls in relation to the benchmarks. Students identify exemplars from their own collections of work and describe their work based on the standards.Students can identity next steps toward meeting standards and revise accordingly.

8. Student performance tasks require students to show progress toward meeting the standard(s)/element(s).

Students are not demonstrating progress towards standards in performance tasks. Rather, they are passive selectors of correct answers.

Teachers design performance tasks that require students to show evidence of the standards.

Teachers collaboratively analyze common performance tasks to ensure rigor and revise tasks as needed.Students can explain how performance tasks show evidence of the standards they are working on.

Teachers ensure that performance tasks make connections to other content areas and real world situations.Students apply their understanding of the standards to other content areas and real-world situations.

Page 42: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Concept Not Addressed Emergent Operational Fully Operational

9. Students receive feedback through written or verbal commentary aligned with the standards that results in revision of work, if needed.

Feedback is limited to evaluative judgments such as, “That is right,” “That is incorrect,” “80%,” “Great job,” etc.

Teachers provide feedback that extends evaluative judgments but does not connect to the standards. For example, That is incorrect because you forgot to move the decimal point.

Teacher feedback is directly aligned to the standards and provides students with specific strengths and next steps. For example, You develop your character by using literary language when you said, “he had orange hair like wire…Good writers help the reader to feel satisfied when the story ends. They do this by providing a sense of closure. A next step for you as a writer would be to provide closure to your writing.Students identify how their work meets standards based on teacher feedback.

Teachers encourage students to revise their work as a result of feedback from teachers and peers.Teachers expect students to use the language of the standards when describing their work, providing feedback to peers, and identifying next steps.Students use the language of the standards as they discuss their work and explain teacher feedback.Students identify their next steps based on teacher feedback.Students can show a piece of student work and describe how it was revised to meet standards based on teacher feedback.Students provide feedback to peers that is directly aligned to standards.

10. Student work reflects understanding of the Georgia Performance Standards.

Teachers independently determine what students should know, understand, and be able to do with little or no relation to the Georgia Performance Standards. Student work does not represent student understanding of the standard(s).

Teachers collaboratively identify what students should know, understand and be able to do relative to the Georgia Performance Standards and design instruction and assessments accordingly.

Teachers collaboratively analyze student work based on the Georgia Performance Standards. Based on collaborative analysis of student work, teachers revise instruction.As a result of revised instruction, students revise their work to reflect their understanding of the standards.

Teachers have collaboratively aligned assessments and instruction to the GPS.Students analyze the quality of their own work and articulate why it meets, exceeds, or does not meet standards. Students identify their own next steps towards meeting standards.

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Page 44: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What is a standards-based classroom?What is a standards-based classroom?The standards-based classroom is one in which the environment, resources, instructional practices and assessments are aligned to student knowledge of and demonstration of articulated, state standards.

What characterizes rigor in a standards-based classroom?What characterizes rigor in a standards-based classroom?Rigor may be defined as curriculum that “challenges all learners to demonstrate depth of understanding, including such cognitive processes as explanation, interpretation, application, analysis of perspectives, empathy, and self-knowledge. Rigor in the curriculum:results in desirable discomfort, leading to continued questioning on the part of each studentrequires content to be deeply considered differentiates for individuals and flexible, fluid groupsreflects high expectationsallows for and encourages varying methods of solution or pathways to discoveryteaches to each student’s “zone of proximal development”

Page 45: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What characterizes relevance in a standards-based classroom?What characterizes relevance in a standards-based classroom?Relevance in the curriculum:leads to the creation of ideas or products that are useful in real-world problem solving differentiates in order to reflect individual student interests, including career interestsemphasizes inter-disciplinary connectionsaligns with articulated workplace competenciesleads to authentic assessmentsfurther reveals real-world problems and their potential solutions

What do students do in a standards-based classroom?What do students do in a standards-based classroom?The standards-based classroom is one in which individual students and student groups are working with concepts, tools, and resources that will lead toward mastery of specific standards. Therefore, the standards-based classroom is rich in resources, opportunities, and conversations that make standards and expectations clear and further encourage student self-reflection. A standards-based classroom “looks like” a community of learners who speak about qualities evident in work that meets and exceeds standards. Students self-reflect on progress toward standards by a facilitated examination of their own work samples.

Page 46: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What do teachers do in a standards-based classroom?What do teachers do in a standards-based classroom? “Demystify” and “deconstruct” standards and their accompanying elements through

facilitated dialogues and experiences as part of strategic and thoughtful instructional design

Maintain an excitement about and focus upon standards through instructional design that is engaging, experiential, and affords students the opportunity to examine and perform standards

Model processes for students to make cognitive processes more transparent Expect and demand student awareness of individual progress toward standards Monitor and document individual student progress toward standards to

communicate with students, parents, and school/teacher leaders Provide resources that demonstrate standard performance (including collected

student work samples) Provide regular, critical, and task-specific feedback to individual students, instead

of feedback that is broad, ill-deserved, or meant for the entire group Encourage and facilitate student revision of work for continuous improvement and

progress toward standard Differentiate processes and expected products for individual students and/or groups

of students Utilize formative data such as student work and the application of results from

formative assessments to make instructional decisions, including how to differentiate for individuals and groups

Award grades as reflection of progress toward standard Collaborate with teachers across and within grade levels and across and within

disciplines Maintain a classroom environment, including visual displays that support learning

and progress toward specific standards

Page 47: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What do administrators and school leaders need to do in order to What do administrators and school leaders need to do in order to support the implementation of and monitoring of effectiveness in support the implementation of and monitoring of effectiveness in standards-based classrooms?standards-based classrooms? Create a daily schedule that allows for collaboration and professional

learning time for teachers. Model a healthy sense of urgency that is balanced with clearly

articulated school-wide expectations for instructional design and delivery.

Provide time for teachers to be released of obligations in order to maximize time for relationship-building that enables teachers to truly know students.

Facilitate professional learning teams around student work analysis and building a common understanding of the performance standards, as well as, measure professional learning by the extent to which changes are seen in the classroom.

Support teachers in efforts to maximize learning within their professional learning communities.

Design and utilize tools (such as a professional learning design, school-wide protocol, etc.) that support professional learning.

Allow for structural divisions to personalize the learning environment and facilitate teacher/student relationships.

Page 48: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

TIER 2NEEDS BASED LEARNING:

Targeted students participate in learning that is in addition to Tier 1 and different by including:

▪ Formalized, systematic processes of intervention▪ Greater frequency of progress monitoring

Targeted Students

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Tier 2Tier 2 Standards based learning PLUS

Formalized, systematic processes of intervention

Interventions are in “addition to” regular classroom learning

Interventions are strategic, diagnostic, and prescriptive in nature

Participation in intervention is fluid and flexible; dynamic grouping and regrouping

Progress Monitoring is administered frequently to determine if a change in delivery or strategy is required.

Page 50: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Tier 2: One example…Reading Tutorial Project using

High School Students as Tutors

• Implemented in 4 elementary schools over multiple years (8 cohorts of students)

• Teachers identified 1st and 2nd graders who were not mastering reading skills sufficiently.

• Each of those students was administered a Woodcock Reading Mastery Assessment: Word Identification & Passage Comprehension subtests

Page 51: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Tier 2 - Questions to considerTier 2 - Questions to consider• Describe the system that is in place to determine which students are

struggling?

• How are all teachers made aware of the pre-planned interventions that are available for all students?

• How does the school ensure that interventions have a specific end time so as not to become “tracking?”

• Describe the evidence supporting that the available interventions have sufficient intensity and fidelity to “catch students up?”

• What process do instructional leaders use to evaluate the effectiveness of the interventions on the unique needs of the school’s population?

Page 52: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

How do we operationalize Tier I and Tier II?How do we operationalize Tier I and Tier II?• Critical elements:

- We must teach the GPS using scientifically-based strategies for all students in Reading, ELA, and math

- Some form of school wide screenings must be used to group and re-group students for supplementary assistance

- Formative assessments must be analyzed to determine student needs (initially and on-going)

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►►How is your district implementing How is your district implementing Tier 1 and Tier 2?Tier 1 and Tier 2?

• Do you have screening measures in place? If so, where is the data maintained?

• What is the cut-point to determine those students that may be considered at-risk?

• How are students targeted for preventative intervention?• How long are students provided preventative intervention?

What determines success?• How has the role of general education teachers, specialists

and support staff changed?

Page 54: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

TIER 3TIER 3SST-DRIVEN LEARNING:SST-DRIVEN LEARNING:

Targeted students participate in learning that is in addition to Tier 1 and Tier 2 and different by including:

• Individualized assessments

• Interventions tailored to individual needs

• Referral for specially designed instruction if needed

Page 55: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What is Tier 3?What is Tier 3?

• Tier 3 should be the district’s and school’s line of defense for reducing the number of students who are low performing or perhaps may later be referred for special education evaluation!

Page 56: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What are the components of Tier 3?What are the components of Tier 3?Tier 3 consists of general education instruction, specializedinterventions, and monitoring by the Student Support Team (SST).This may include an increased focus on:

Providing small group and/or individual instruction Mastery of content (relative to points of reference identified

on criterion screening measures) Progress monitoring Adequate duration of the intervention(s)

(Nine to twelve weeks recommended) Frequency (time) of intervention service(s)

(Three to four sessions per week with 45-60 minutes per session recommended)

Instructor efficacy and effectiveness

Page 57: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

TIER 3 – Questions to considerTIER 3 – Questions to consider Have we assessed student’s current and past access to standards-based

instruction? Is support/professional learning provided to the teacher when she/he is

implementing interventions? Are students assessed to determine the “root cause” or “causes”of the

learning problem- whether the difficulty is academic, behavioral, or other ? Are interventions tailored to assist the specific “root causes”? Are interventions provided with sufficient intensity and duration to produce

the desired result? Is the intervention monitored and evaluated effectively?

Page 58: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

How Should Student Support Teams Operate?

Target students to participate in:Continued participation in standards-based,

regular education instruction (Tiers I & II)

Individualized assessments

Interventions tailored to individual needs

Page 59: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

• In Georgia, it is required that each school have a Student Student Support Team Support Team in order to brainstorm interventions for students who are not responding sufficiently.

• Student Support Teams Student Support Teams are a result of the 1982 class action law suit, Marshall vs. Georgia that sought to ensure that students were receiving effective interventions.

• SSTSST was designed as a safeguard against the inappropriate identification of a student as having a disability.

• In MANY schools, if the Student Support Team Student Support Team is not functioning properly, it is seen as a hoop to jump through in order to get students into special education.

Page 60: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Tier 3 / SST…some specifics Tier 3 / SST…some specifics When the student remains at the lowest 10%- 25% of performance in the

area(s) of deficit and additional interventions are deemed necessary by teachers, parents, or others, the SST process is initiated with a referral to SST.

Baseline and progress monitoring data from Tier 2 are analyzed to create specific goal(s) to increase student achievement in the area(s) of delay.

The SST may determine the need for additional information on the student. This may include the use or administration of informal or formal measures to gather individual data on the area(s) of concern.

Members of SST collaborate to identify no more than 2 specific interventions to utilize with the student.

Page 61: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Tier 3 / SST…some specificsTier 3 / SST…some specifics

The plan for implementation includes a timeline detailing how long the intervention will be implemented and dates for progress monitoring.

If the child is making progress using the SST interventions, the interventions are continued for a minimum of 12 weeks. If progress toward the goal is minimal, SST members will revise or change the intervention.

The intervention plan should be implemented and data collected for at least 4 weeks before changes are made.

If the intervention plan is successful, the SST will create a plan for reducing the level of support needed by the child to the Tier 2 level. This plan should include a realistic timeframe for accomplishing this goal.

The SST may make a referral to special education if the intervention plan and the revisions are not successful in helping the child meet the goals identified by the SST.

Page 62: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

TIER 4SPECIALLY DESIGNED LEARNING:

Targeted students participate in learning that includes:

Specialized programsAdapted content, methodology, or instructional delivery

GPS access/extension

Page 63: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Georgia has seen significant changes in the education of students with disabilities.

• We have seen significant increases in the percentage of students with disabilities who are educated in general education environments.

• In 2000, compared to other states, Georgia was the 2nd lowest (of ALL states) regarding the percentage of students with disabilities who were educated in general education classes for most of the school day. Where can we GROW from here?

Page 64: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What essential element drives RtI/POI?What essential element drives RtI/POI?

Progress

Monitoring

Page 65: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

FACTS about Progress MonitoringFACTS about Progress Monitoring

• Regular and systematic use of multiple indicators to assess and monitor children’s progress on a standard

• Good assessment is essential to help teachers tailor appropriate instruction to children and to know when and how much intensive instruction on any particular skill or strategy might be needed (National Association for the Education of Young Children, 1998)

Page 66: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

FACTS about Progress MonitoringFACTS about Progress Monitoring

• Progress Monitoring is conducted frequently• Progress Monitoring is designed to:

– Identify students who are not demonstrating adequate progress

– Compare the efficacy of different forms of instruction

• Thereby design more effective, individualized instructional programs for struggling learners(National Center on Student Progress Monitoring, 2004)

– Project rates of student improvement

Page 67: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Progress Monitoring dataProgress Monitoring datashould be recorded and analyzed at:should be recorded and analyzed at:

• The district level• The school and/or grade level• The classroom level• The individual student level

Page 68: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What We Look For in Student-Level What We Look For in Student-Level Progress MonitoringProgress Monitoring

INCREASING SCORES:

Student is becoming a more skilled learner

FLAT SCORES:

Student is not profiting from instruction and requires a change in the instructional program

Page 69: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Example: Sarah’s Progress on Words Read Correctly

(National Center on Student Progress Monitoring, 2004)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

Wor

ds R

ead

Corr

ectly

Sarah Smith Reading 2

Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May

Page 70: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Example: Jessica’s Progress on Words Read Correctly

(National Center on Student Progress Monitoring, 2004)

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

Wor

ds R

ead

Corr

ectly

Jessica Jones Reading 2

Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May

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REMEMBER…..REMEMBER…..

The Pyramids of Intervention (RtI) process is the practice of providing high-quality instruction/intervention matched to student needs and using learning rate over time and level of performance to make important educational decisions.

Page 72: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

What Next???

Page 73: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

KEYS TO THE PYRAMIDIt is only as good as Tier One.

Progressions should be logical.

Interventions should be well defined.

Interventions should be well communicated.

Interventions should not be “person dependent”.

Interventions should be “fundable”.

Pressure and encouragement are required!

Start small and grow!

Page 74: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

WHY CHANGE?WHY CHANGE?

If not If not YOUYOU…then who?…then who?

If not If not NOWNOW…then when?…then when?

Page 75: Response to Intervention: Georgia’s Pyramid Diagnostic, prescriptive and timely responses to meet the needs of ALL Georgia students!

Thank YouThank You

Contact Information:

John DoeDivision of ABC

Georgia Department of Education

[email protected]

phone