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Embracing ‘Response to Intervention’

By Christina A. Samuels — January 18, 2008 8 min read
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Identifying struggling students wasn’t an issue for teachers at Lynnville-Sully Elementary School, tucked away in this town of 900, an hour’s drive east of Des Moines. Knowing what to do next was the hard part.

Even in an elementary school with just 188 pupils, it was hard for teachers to offer intensive instruction to children who needed extra help while juggling the needs of the rest of their students. The school’s reading-support staff created lesson plans that didn’t always relate to regular classroom work. And teachers felt they had to wait too long to get extra resources to help the students who needed it.

“You know what they need, and yet you had to prove it,” said Cindy Gibbs, a 2nd grade teacher. “Sometimes you’d miss half a year before you’d get them in the resource room” for extra help.

Acting on such concerns, the principal and teachers revamped the school’s instructional program in the fall of 2006, introducing a framework best known as “response to intervention,” or RTI. Called “instructional decisionmaking” here in Iowa, RTI relies on frequent, short tests of students and on regular adjustments of instruction, based on what those tests show of a student’s progress, or “response,” to lessons.

Iowa’s school district officials are among the most enthusiastic promoters of the method, which is garnering intense interest among educators around the country.

“RTI is this big thing that really can transform how we approach teaching all kids,” said W. David Tilly III, the director of innovation and accountability for the Heartland Area 91ƬƵ Agency, which provides resources and professional development to 54 districts in the state, including Lynnville-Sully.

First grade students at Lynnville-Sully Elementary School in Sully, Iowa, take part in a guided reading lesson with teacher Jennifer Rozendaal.

Part of the nationwide attention comes from the significant push the federal government has given RTI. States have used the response-to-intervention framework to implement the 6-year-old Reading First initiative authorized by the No Child Left Behind Act. In addition, the 2004 reauthorization of the Individuals with Disabilities 91ƬƵ Act allows states to use RTI as one tool to identify children with specific learning disabilities.

In practice, RTI can look quite different from school to school. But several key components are necessary for a successful program, researchers say. Students are generally screened early in the school year to determine if they may have educational difficulties, and to help their teachers figure out what extra lessons they may need.

Children with such difficulties are given increasingly intense instruction geared to bolstering the areas where they need help. The interventions must be scientifically based and given with fidelity, meaning that teachers must present the lessons as they were meant to be taught. Additional tests, or “progress monitoring,” continues for those students through the school year, to make sure the extra lessons are working.

Finally, if a student still hasn’t responded to several different interventions, he or she may need further evaluation, or special education services. The hope among some proponents of RTI is that by providing intensive instruction as soon as a problem is noted, children can be steered away from special education.

A Three-Tiered Model

Experts say response to intervention should have three levels of intensity, with instruction provided based on students’ individual needs.

75-80%
Universal interventions

• All students
• Preventive and proactive

10-15%
Targeted group interventions

• Some students at risk
• High efficiency
• Rapid response

5-10%
Intensive, individualized interventions

• Individual students
• Assessment-based
• High intensity
• Longer duration

SOURCE: National Association of State Directors of Special 91ƬƵ

Iowa is just one of the places where response to intervention has taken root. The state shares resources among its many small school districts through its area education agencies. The , the largest of 10 in the state, has been cited often in research for its approach to RTI.

Though response to intervention’s inclusion in the federal special education law has made RTI seem like a special education initiative to some, Heartland sees it as a way to change the nature of instruction for all students. Potential benefits for students with learning disabilities are just part of the positive effects RTI can have on an entire school, they say.

Special education identification “is just the toenail on the elephant,” said Mr. Tilly, the Heartland official. “That’s not what it was created for, and that’s not what its best purpose is.”

In Heartland area schools, the process of introducing a school to the RTI process may begin with informal conversations with interested schools. The agency also holds daylong sessions with teams of teachers and administrators, where they are asked to evaluate thoughtfully their own readiness to launch the process. Building consensus is a crucial part of a successful program, administrators say.

But even Heartland’s long experience with the practice hasn’t made every school’s implementation the same—or easy.

“I told teachers it was going to feel really overwhelming. We’re going to be juggling a lot of balls, and it’s going to feel like they’re falling,” said Jolene Comer, the principal of both Lynnville-Sully Elementary School and a 120-student middle school housed in the same building. Heartland officials approached the principal because the school was already in the process of adopting a new reading curriculum. Ms. Comer said the instructional-decisionmaking process seemed to fit well with the other changes in the school.

Introducing RTI required restructuring the day so that grade-level teachers had common planning time, changing staff members’ duties so they could work closely with students who were having problems, and introducing intensive professional development.

“The whole staff really felt like this was important. Now it’s been a year and a half, [and] it feels like business as usual. I feel we’ve accomplished a lot,” Ms. Comer said.

Iowa’s Principles for RTI

• All students are part of one proactive educational system
Belief that all students can learn
Use available resources to teach all students

• Use scientific, research-based instruction
Curriculum and instructional approaches must have a high probability of success for most students
Use instructional time efficiently and effectively

• Use instructionally relevant assessments that are reliable and valid
Screening: Collecting data for the purpose of identifying low- and high-performing students at risk for not having their needs met
Diagnostic: Gathering information from multiple sources to determine why students are not benefiting from instuction
Formative:Frequent, ongoing collection of information, including both formal and informal data, to guide instruction

• Use a problem-solving method to make decisions based on a continuum of student needs
Provide strong core curriculum, instruction, and assessment
Provide increasing levels of support based on increasing levels of student needs

• Data are used to guide instructional decisions
To align curriculum and instuction to assessment data
To allocate resources
To drive professional-development decisions

• Professional development and follow-up modeling and coaching to ensure effective instruction at all levels
Provide ongoing training and support to assimilate new knowledge and skills
Anticipate and be willing to meet the newly emerging needs based on student performance

• 91ƬƵ is vital
Strong administrative support to ensure commitment and resources
Strong teacher support to share in the common goal of improving instruction
91ƬƵ team to build internal capacity and sustainability over time

SOURCE: Iowa Department of 91ƬƵ

The process has led to a new energy within the building, she added. Teachers are working together more than they ever have before. Labels for children aren’t as important as they once were, she said, which she sees as a benefit. “These are all our kids,” Ms. Comer said.

In six days of training with Heartland staffers, the team from Lynnville-Sully was asked some probing questions. Among them: Is the core instruction given to all pupils the best that it can be? How will you know which students require interventions? What interventions will be used? How will you monitor effectiveness?

This is why RTI, despite having common elements, can look so different in practice from one school to the next. “This is not a scripted program,” Ms. Comer said. “You don’t take this and just fit it into your day.”

At Lynnville-Sully Elementary, pupils are screened early in the school year, using Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills, or DIBELS, tests. If those tests indicate that a child has a problem with reading fluency or decoding skills, the teacher administers other diagnostic tests to pinpoint the problem, and to guide the interventions that will be used.

Parents are notified when screening shows that their child may not be learning as fast as his or her classmates. The school has carved out time in the day to allow reading-support teachers to work with small groups of students for at least 30 minutes a day.

Students who need more help get more time, sometimes with the school’s special education teacher, who has a constantly changing group of children to work with. In addition to the students formally identified as requiring special education services, the teacher also works with children who do not have individualized education programs under the IDEA, but just need more help.

The principal, reading-support teachers, and classroom teachers meet once a month to discuss the data they are collecting on students. Three times a year, the school has “data days” to take a deeper look at the overall curriculum and student performance based on other tests.

About 30 percent of the schools’s pupils are now receiving some type of intervention, a percentage the principal would like to see go down.

Jolene Comer, the principal of Lynnville-Sully Elementary and a middle school in the same building, takes part in a meeting to review student data.

The process is too new at Lynnville-Sully for the school to have much hard data on its progress. Instructional decisionmaking had only been in place at the school for a handful of months when the students took the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills last spring. However, the school has seen improvement in its DIBELS fluency scores. Seventy-nine percent of 1st graders met the standards by the end of the 2005-06 school year, a year before the RTI process started. By the end of the 2006-07 school year, the benchmark rate was 83 percent.

At the 2nd grade level, 48 percent of students met the DIBELS benchmarks in 2005-06. In 2006-07, the passing rate was 81 percent.

Lynnville-Sully still has work to do, the principal and teachers acknowledge. The instructional-decisionmaking structure needs a better place for children who are gifted, teachers say.

And implementation at the middle school, which started this past fall, a year after the elementary school began its work, has been slower. Part of the problem is the particular challenges offered by older students and the structure of the middle school day.

The middle school teachers, unlike the elementary school teachers, weren’t necessarily as eager to embrace change, said Shannon Harken, the Heartland AEA educational consultant who works with Lynnville-Sully on its RTI implementation.

Ms. Comer “has had to take two totally different approaches with the two faculties. The middle school teachers liked what they were doing before,” Ms. Harken said.

Teacher Stacy Veiseth helps 3rd grader Brandon Van Wyk improve his decoding skills during reading time at Lynnville-Sully Elementary.

But within the middle school, teachers are noting positive effects.

“There’s a lot more people involved in the conversation [about students], and that’s huge,” said Melissa Doll, who works with middle school students deemed at risk of failing academically. “How much more powerful for the student when we’re all sharing data, and sharing what we see.”

The elementary teachers said they see that same power in sharing information.

“We’re catching more ‘on the edge’ kids,” said Lisa Foster, a 5th grade teacher, referring to students who could be having academic problems but can fade from attention in a classroom of students with more pressing needs.

“Before, we didn’t know how to use all our resources. But because our [instructional-decisionmaking] stuff is so data-driven, we don’t let them fall behind,” she said.

Coverage of district-level improvement efforts is underwritten in part by grants from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
A version of this article appeared in the January 23, 2008 edition of 91ƬƵ Week

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