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GARDEN SPOT MIDDLE SCHOOL
RTII Overview
April 5, 2012
Objectives
Participants will learn:Secondary level RtII core componentsUnique aspects of secondary RtIIDifferences between past models (IST/LFT)
of student intervention and RtIIAbout other middle school models of RtIIFuture directions of RtII at Garden Spot
Middle School
If you’re not hopelessly confused, you’re out of touch! If you are hopelessly confused, then you only have one choice – try stuff!
Tom Peters, Embracing Chaos (1993)
Rationale for Implementing RtII
Elementary and Secondary Education Act“Every student should graduate from high
school ready for college and a career, regardless of their income, race, ethnic, or language background, or disability status.”
www.ed.gov 4/12/2011 No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 IDEA Reauthorization 2004
Rationale for Implementing RtII
Nearly 7,000 high school students drop out each day.
Nationally, more than 1/3 of African American and Latino students who enter 9th grade will not complete high school with their peers in 4 years.
In PA, 22% of 9th graders fail to graduate from high school within 4 years.
Rationale for Implementing RtII
Many new hires are deficient in basic writing (72%), mathematics (54%), and reading comprehension skills (38%).
Only 15.9% of all students who graduated in 2009 had access to an advanced placement course that helped them earn a score of 3 or higher (3=predictive of college success).
Half of all first-year college students enroll in one or more remedial courses.
What can schools do?
Focus on the following components:AttendanceBehavioral monitoringAcademic tutoringCounseling/mentoringEstablishment of smaller learning
communities for greater personalizationEngaging accelerated coursesNinth grade academiesHomerooms
What can schools do? (Cont.)
Focus on the following components:BenchmarkingProgress monitoringImplementation of multi-tiered support
systems (RtII !)Meaningful and uniform access to rigorous
coursework with high expectationsCareer/college awarenessCommunity engagement8th to 9th grade transition programs
Looking Back
1990s –rolled out the Instructional Support Team (IST) model in PA
Consultation between classroom teacher and member of IST
Defined concerns, convened the IST IST developed interventions to improve
student achievement in classroom
Lessons from Past Practice Solving problems one a time is not particularly
efficient from a resource utilization standpoint. Teachers cannot implement more than 1 or 2
simultaneous interventions with integrity at any given time AND continue teaching an entire classroom effectively.
Individual problem-solving was based mostly on teacher referral, which is reactive and subjective.
State assessments do not provide timely information about student achievement.
Lessons from Past Practice So, is there a better way to gather
information about student achievement?In a more timely manner?That allows for intervention?That is more systematic than helping one
student at a time?That doesn’t require students to be in
special education to get “help?”
What is Secondary RtII? RtII is a comprehensive, standards-aligned
school improvement framework that may be implemented within elementary, middle, and high schools. Fidelity of implementation and sustainability of the RtII framework rests on principles of systems change, high-quality professional learning, and sustainable leadership. In addition to “collective will,” data-based decision-making is a “collective skill” that is necessary to align curriculum, instruction, and assessment in order to enhance student outcomes.
Why Implement Secondary RtII?
The intent of RtII adoption and implementation is to prevent and treat student learning needs as early as possible through screening, progress-monitoring, and evaluation of student response as a function of exposure to increasingly intensive and robust differentiated core and supplemental instruction/intervention.
Why Implement Secondary RtII?
Because education is not one size fits all!
Core Components of RtII
High Quality Classroom Instruction/ Standards-Aligned Core Curriculum
Relational Support Scientifically/ Evidence-Based
Interventions, Instructional Methodologies and Strategies
Tiered Instruction and Interventions Data-Based Decision-Making Professional Development
RtII and PA Standards-Aligned System
1. Clear standards
2. Fair assessments*
3. Curriculum framework
4. Instruction
5. Materials and resources
6. Interventions
http://pdesas.org/
PA’s RtII Framework
www.pattan.net
Tier IStandards-Aligned Core Instruction for All Students
Tier I (100% of Students) Research-based, effective instruction is
provided to all students. Uses whole-class and differentiated instruction. 21st Century Learning Skills infused throughout
the core curriculum. All staff take ownership for developing
readiness for post-secondary education and career.
School-wide positive behavioral support models establish well-defined behavioral expectations, rules and routines.
Tier I (100% of Students)
High expectations, meaningful student engagement, connectivity, skills for life, clear and consistent boundaries and unconditional supports.
Clear expectations for daily attendance, systematic methods for preventing and reducing school absenteeism.
A grading system that reinforces what has been learned rather than the process of learning.
Tier IITargeted Group Instruction for Some Students
Tier II (15-20% of Students) Strategic instruction that is supplemental
to core instruction that is explicit in nature.
May be provided to smaller groups of students and target specific sills or serve the purpose of extended core instruction.
Progress monitoring occurs at least monthly.
Tier II (15-20% of Students) Specific evidenced-based instructional
strategies/ interventions are utilized. 21st Century Learning Skills are
addressed in more explicit ways and students are provided meaningful learning opportunities including community-based instruction, mentoring, peer-support programs, or a system to reward positive behavior.
Attendance is monitored daily.
Tier IIIIntensive Instruction for a Few Students
Tier III (5-10% of Students) More intense supports characterized by
additional time, the focus of instruction, and group size.
Students at Tier III often demonstrate performance that exists within the significantly below average range (i.e., 10th percentile or below).
Instruction is targeted toward the development of foundational literacy or math skills.
Tier III (5-10% of Students) Usually includes a standard protocol
intervention (i.e., highly scripted with frequent opportunities for student response and corrective teacher feedback).
Teacher-student ratio is as low as possible. Progress monitoring every week or every
other week. Usually requires an additional 45-60 mins of
instruction a day or more.
Tier III (5-10% of Students) 21st Century Learning Skills are explicitly
assessed, taught, and monitored, and are infused with authentic experiences (e.g., job shadowing, service learning).
Behavior assessment and individualized positive behavior support plans are developed for the few students who may benefit from intensive intervention.
Challenges of Secondary RtII
Establishing sound instructional core, interventions, and equitable access to the core curriculum
The changes needed to the organizational structure:SchedulingTime for teacher collaboration
Shift in academic focus to prevention
Challenges of Secondary RtII
Adjustments to teacher-student ratio Need for valid and reliable assessments
at secondary level Grading Course credits Less research to pull from than with
elementary RtII (but growing!) Shared ownership of student achievement Literacy across content areas
Example Middle School Model: Roosevelt Middle School
Bristol Township School District, PA Scheduled classes by:
PSSA results/ Emetric dataRTI data from elementary gradesTeacher recommendations
Included a Reading Extension class period: groups included fluency, comprehension, or writing extensions
Example Middle School Model: Roosevelt Middle School
Schedule included common reading extension intervention time to allow for flexible groups
Used specific intervention exit criteria Met monthly to review data as grade
level team Made most group changes each
quarter /marking period change
Example Middle School Model: Russell Middle School
Colorado Springs, CO http://
www.youtube.com/watch?v=VlRM6kf7EZ0
PA Secondary RtII Learning Sites Drexel Hill Middle School
Upper Darby School District Roosevelt Middle School
Bristol Township School District Swatara Middle School
Central Dauphin School District Clairton Middle School
Clairton School District Chartiers Valley Middle School
Chartiers Valley School District
What We Are Already Doing Universal screening
DRP, 4Sight, STAR Math, Social /Emotional /Behavioral Screening w/ AIMSweb, Writing Prompts
Progress monitoringFor some studentsAIMSweb curriculum-based measurements
(CBM) Interventions
Excel period built into scheduleCo-teaching
What We Are Already Doing Data Team
To review data at the school-building and grade level
Weekly team meetingsTo review student performance and needs
Career educationThanks to our school counselors!Bridges Program (online interest inventories)
Clear attendance policies Collecting information from elementary schools
Future Directions for GSMS Maximize use of assessments rather
than adding more assessments Eliminate assessments that are not
helpful for instructional planning Use data and teacher input to schedule
initial courses for students Work toward providing a more seamless
transition between elementary and middle school services
Future Directions for GSMS Include more strategic and targeted
instructional practices for students needing instruction beyond the core curriculum
Implement a system for consistent monitoring of student progress followed by clear decision rules for changing and exiting interventions
Future Directions for GSMS Ongoing professional development and
support for staff Improving fidelity of instruction within the
core curriculum Increasing parental engagement Improving shared ownership for student
achievement Continue to improve function of data
team and RtII team
Questions?
Breakout Sessions Session 1
9:15 – 10:00 Session 2
10:15 – 11:00 Lunch – On Your
Own11:00 – 12:00
Session 312:15 – 1:00
Session 41:15 – 2:00
Debrief in LMC2:15 – 3:00
http://rtiiinservice.wiki.elanco.net/