+ All Categories
Home > Documents > The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Date post: 03-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: jordan-white
View: 30 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction. Laura Isbell, PhD Texas A&M-Commerce. What is RTI?. Response to intervention (RTI) integrates assessment and intervention within a school-wide, multi-level prevention model to maximize student achievement and reduce behavior concerns/challenges - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
20
The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction Laura Isbell, PhD Texas A&M-Commerce
Transcript
Page 1: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Laura Isbell, PhDTexas A&M-Commerce

Page 2: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

What is RTI?

Response to intervention (RTI) integrates assessment and intervention within a school-wide, multi-level prevention model to maximize student achievement and reduce behavior concerns/challenges

(National Center on Response to Intervention)

Page 3: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Defining RTI

Schools identify students at-risk for poor learning outcomes, monitor student progress, provide evidence-based interventions and adjust the intensity and nature of the interventions based on a student’s responsiveness

RTI may be used as part of the determination process for identifying students with specific learning disabilities (SLD) or other disabilities

Page 4: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Technology to enhance RTI

Technology offers a potential medium through which RtI implementation could be made easier and more likely to occur (Ysseldyke & McLeod, 2007).

Previous research found that the use of technology substantially facilitated collecting, managing, and analyzing educational data (McIntire, 2002; McLeod, 2005; Pierce, 2005; Wayman, 2005)

Page 5: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

RTI model

Tier 3:Tertiary InterventionIndividualized supports and services

2%-5% of students

Tier 2: Secondary InterventionSmall group of students needing additional supports and

services

10%-15% of students

Tier 1: Primary Intervention Available to all students in all settings

80% of students

Page 6: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Tier 1: Primary Level

Tier 1 intervention includes a differentiated, empirically validated mathematics curriculum available to all students.

At the primary intervention, Tier 1, efforts are established to promote learning for all students, anticipating that at least 80% of students will respond to these strategies and will not require additional intervention (Ervin, 2009).

If less than 80% of students are meeting standards, additional focus on the core curriculum and teaching methods should be considered.

Page 7: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Tier 1 Recommendations using technology

Systematic monitoring of student learning for all students

Adjustment of instruction with acceleration or deceleration as needed using progress monitoring forms, data-bases, data maps, or RTI plan forms in excel

Version 3 of the Ecobehavioral Assessment System Software (EBASS) is based on the research of Greenwood, Carta, and Atwater (1991) and provides a technology-enhanced assessment of the instructional environment.

EBASS is a software system that school personnel can use to conduct systematic classroom observational assessments with laptop, notebook, or hand-held computers.

Page 8: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

How frequently should teachers assess students at Tier 1?

Teachers should administer a mathematics assessment to all students a minimum of three times per year to determine student progress and the need for intervention or additional supports. (Fuchs & Fuchs, 2006)

Page 9: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Tier 2: Secondary Level

Tier 2 intervention is for those students who have mathematics difficulty and/or are at-risk mathematics disabilities and are performing below their peers. These students have not demonstrated sufficient progress in Tier 1

Secondary Intervention, Tier 2, instruction is provided to those students, approximately 15%, who display poor response to the group instructional procedures in Tier 1 (Murawski & Hughes, 2009).

Page 10: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Tier 2 recommendations

Currently the most common application of technology to tiered interventions is the use of Web sites to identify interventions (e.g., Intervention Central and IES What Works Clearninghouse).

However, there are many well-constructed and research-based technology-enhanced interventions that both target the student deficit and allow for automated delivery.

Page 11: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

How frequently should teachers assess students at

Tier 2? Effective Tier 2 interventions should be targeted

to the student deficit, occur 3 to 5 times per week, and last approximately 30 minutes per day (Burns, Hall-Lande, Lyman, Rogers, & Tan, 2006).

Recent meta-analyses found moderate to large effects for various technologies, including personal computers, game-like curricula, and interactive simulations (Blanchard & Stock, 1999; Vogel et al., 2006), which suggest that schools could use technology to improve core instruction.

Page 12: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Tier 3: Tertiary Level

In the tertiary stage, tier 3 interventions, this level of intensive intervention is appropriate for those students who continue to show extensive gaps in their skills after Tier 2 intervention.

Tertiary intervention, tier 3, provides more intensive interventions for about 2-5% of students for whom Tier 1 and Tier 2 interventions were not adequate (Murakski & Hughes, 2009)

Page 13: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Tier 3 recommendations

Functional assessment to identify the skills that must be addressed

Interventions that are individualized with monitoring and specific instruction in application of newly acquired skills similar to the application required in the classroom setting Fuchs & Fuchs (2008)

Three of the more commonly used technology-enhanced interventions for math include the VmathLive from Voyager Learning, and Renaissance Learning’s Accelerated Math and Math Facts in a Flash.

All three of these programs have interactive software that appears appealing to students, allows for automated interventions with little supervision, and can be used to target specific skills and objectives.(Burns, 2006)

Page 14: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

How frequently should teachers assess students at Tier 3?

Systematic, on going progress monitoring should be in place. Assessments should be administered at a minimum once per week or if needed daily.

Page 15: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Progress Monitoring

To effective gauge student progress, teachers must monitor student’s response to primary, secondary, or tertiary interventions in order to determine future interventions using progress monitoring

Educators should consider and document:

1) Are students meeting short- and long-term performance goals?

2) Does the instruction need to be adjusted or changed?

3) Are students making progress at appropriate rates?

Page 16: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

16 5.29.08

Page 17: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Data based data collection

The use of technology makes ongoing data collection, data consumption, and data-based decision making a more plausible proposition, and it can keep these important aspects of RtI from monopolizing teacher time.

Page 18: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Data-based decision making

Data-based decision making guides intensity, frequency, and duration of interventions

Establish routines and procedures for making decisions

Compare state, district, national benchmarks to assess student progress

Using student data to make instructional decisions

Video: RTI Data in Action

Page 19: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Successful implementation of RTI: Working together for students

For RTI to be successful, a wide array of strategies: Teachers need to actively collaborate with their colleagues to

make sure that

(a) lessons are research based

(b) lessons address the wide variety of needs in the general education classroom

(c) lessons ensure access to the general education curriculum for diverse learners, stakeholders needs to collaborate

(d) data consistent; We don’t want no Dirty data

Page 20: The use of technology to enhance RTI instruction

Additional resource: The IRIS Center

http://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/module/rti01-overview/


Recommended