Response to Intervention www.interventioncentral.org Assessing Intervention Integrity Jim Wright www.interventioncentral.org.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reading Recovery: Can School Psychologists Contribute? Ruth M. Kelly, Western Illinois University Kelly R. Waner, Special Education Association of Adams.
Advertisements

Response to Intervention Intervention Planning, Documentation, & Follow- Through Jim Wright
RTI: Student Assessment & Progress-Monitoring Jim Wright www
Response to Intervention Getting Started With ‘Response to Intervention’: A Guide for Schools Drawn from: Tracey Hall, Center.
Response to Intervention Finding RTI-Ready Measures to Assess and Track Student Academic Skills Jim Wright
CHANGING ROLES OF THE DIAGNOSTICIAN Consultants to being part of an Early Intervention Team.
Adapted from :RTI Works’ Series © 2011 Jim Wright
RTI Data Challenge: Setting Individual RTI Academic Goals Using Research Norms for Students Receiving ‘Off-Level’ Interventions Source: Shapiro, E. S.
Response to Intervention (RTI) Presented by Ashley Adamo and Brian Mitchell January 6, 2012.
RTI & Classwide Instruction
Giving Classroom Teachers the Tools to Serve as RTI ‘First Responders’ Jim Wright
Universal Screening and Progress Monitoring Nebraska Department of Education Response-to-Intervention Consortium.
Response to Intervention How to Monitor RTI Reading Interventions Jim Wright
Power Pack Click to begin. Click to advance Congratulations! The RtI process has just become much easier. This team member notebook contains all the information.
Response to Intervention RTI for Elementary Schools: Reading Program ‘Readiness Check’ Jim Wright
Measuring Student Behavior Jim Wright
RTI for Middle and High Schools: A Way to Improve Teacher Practice and Motivate Struggling Students Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Response to Intervention: Managing Behavior for Academic Success: A Skill-Building Lab Jim Wright.
Response to Intervention RTI Data Challenge: Setting Individual RTI Academic Goals Using Research Norms for Students Receiving.
Response to Intervention RTI: Decision Rules.
Response to Intervention Response to Intervention: An Overview for Educators K-12 Jim Wright
Response to Intervention RTI: Academic Interventions Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Academic Interventions for Difficult-to-Teach Students Jim Wright
Response to Intervention (RTI) at Mary Lin Elementary Principal’s Coffee August 30, 2013.
RTI Teams: Following a Structured Problem-Solving Model Jim Wright www
Response to Intervention RTI Teams: Goal-Setting Jim Wright
Response to Intervention RTI for Middle and High Schools: Cohorts 1 & 2 Update Jim Wright
Response to Intervention RTI for Elementary Schools: Cohorts 1 & 2 Update Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Assessing Intervention Integrity Jim Wright
Mississippi’s Three Tier Model of Instruction An Overview of the Intervention Policy and Process.
Mississippi’s Three Tier Model of Instruction An Overview of the Intervention Policy and Process.
Response to Intervention Methods of Classroom Data Collection Jim Wright
Response to Intervention How Do We Define a Tier I (Classroom-Based) Intervention? Jim Wright
3 rd grade4 th grade5 th grade English/Language Arts Math Science school /
RTI Implantation Guide Overview Fall Before we begin… Student Intervention Planning is not a pre-referral process. It is the process of collaborating.
Spicewood, IB World School Response to Intervention.
Jim Wright The School Pre-Referral Intervention Team: A Checklist for Getting Started… Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Ideas to Empower Students to Take a Role in Their Own Intervention Plans Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Activity: Selecting the ‘Best of the Best’ Tier I Intervention Ideas.
Response to Intervention Monitoring Student Progress at the Secondary Level Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Establishing RTI Guidelines to Diagnose Learning Disabilities: What Schools Should Know Jim Wright.
Response to Intervention RTI Teams: Following a Structured Problem- Solving Model Jim Wright
RTI stands for Response to Intervention. It is a four tiered process designed to meet the needs of struggling students. W HAT IS RTI??
Response to Intervention 1 Behavioral ‘Big Ideas’. What are big ideas that can help teachers to more effectively manage challenging.
Response to Intervention RTI Teams: Following a Structured Problem- Solving Model Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Instruction and Interventions within Response to Intervention Jim Wright
Treatment Integrity Degree to which something is implemented as designed, intended, planned: –Delivery of instruction/intervention –Formative evaluation.
Instruction & Interventions Within RTI: Workshop Agenda
Response to Intervention Educating Stakeholders & Building Staff Support for RTI Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Measuring the ‘Intervention Footprint’: Issues of Planning, Documentation, & Follow-Through Jim Wright.
Response to Intervention RTI: What Are Your Questions? At your tables: Discuss the key questions that you still have about.
Response to Intervention RTI: RCSD Cohort 1 Update Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Finding a Way Out of the ‘Research-Based’ Maze: A Guide for Schools Jim Wright
Response to Intervention Tools for Measuring Aspects of Student Behavior Jim Wright
Clayton R. Cook Diana Browning Wright. Purposes of Assessment Screening Who needs help? Diagnosis Why is the problem occurring? Progress Monitoring Is.
Multi-Tiered System of Support Problem-Solving Process Literacy District More than Literacy.
Mississippi’s Three Tier Model of Instruction
RTI: Academic Interventions for Difficult-to-Teach Students Jim Wright
Getting Started With ‘Response to Intervention’: A Guide for Schools Jim Wright January 2006 
How Do We Know Whether Motivation is a Barrier to Learning
Setting RTI Goals Adapted from :RTI Works’ Series © 2011 Jim Wright
RTI Teams: Potential Pitfalls Jim Wright
School-Based Intervention Teams: Potential Pitfalls Jim Wright www
RTI Workshop: Report-Out Activity Jim Wright www. interventioncentral
Evaluating Your RTI Team’s Effectiveness Jim Wright www
Monitoring Student Progress at the Secondary Level Jim Wright www
How to Assert Academic Control in the Classroom: Tier I Ideas
Big Ideas in Behavior Management
Academics & Motivation: Measurement Issues Jim Wright www
RTI Teams: Following a Structured Problem-Solving Model Jim Wright www
Presentation transcript:

Response to Intervention Assessing Intervention Integrity Jim Wright

Response to Intervention 2 Why Assess Intervention Integrity? When a struggling student fails to respond adequately to a series of evidence-based interventions, that student is likely to face significant and potentially negative consequences, such as failing grades, long-term suspension from school, or even placement in special education. It is crucial, then, that the school monitor the integrity with which educators implement each intervention plan so that it can confidently rule out poor or limited intervention implementation of the intervention as a possible explanation for any student’s ‘non-response’.

Response to Intervention 3 Intervention Integrity Check: Direct Observation Intervention integrity is best assessed through direct observation (Roach & Elliott, 2008). –The key steps of the intervention are defined and formatted as an observational checklist. –An observer watches as the intervention is conducted and checks off on the checklist those steps that were correctly carried out. The observer then computes the percentage of steps correctly carried out.

Response to Intervention 4 Intervention Script Builder

Response to Intervention 5 Limitations of Direct Observation as an Intervention Integrity Check Direct observations are time-consuming to conduct. Teachers who serve as interventionists may at least initially regard observations of their intervention implementation as evaluations of their job performance, rather than as a child-focused RTI “quality check”. An intervention-implementation checklist typically does not distinguish between--or differentially weight--those intervention steps that are more important from those that are less so. If two teachers implement the same 10- step intervention plan, for example, with one instructor omitting a critical step and the other omitting a fairly trivial step, both can still attain the same implementation score of steps correctly completed. Source: Gansle, K. A., & Noell, G. H. (2007). The fundamental role of intervention implementation in assessing response to intervention. In S. R. Jimerson, M. K. Burns, & A. M. VanDerHeyden (Eds.), Response to intervention: The science and practice of assessment and intervention (pp ).

Response to Intervention 6 Supplemental Methods to Collect Data About Intervention Integrity Teacher Self-Ratings: As a form of self-monitoring, directing interventionists to rate the integrity of their own interventions may prompt higher rates of compliance (e.g., Kazdin, 1989). However, because teacher self- ratings tend to be ‘upwardly biased (Gansle & Noell, 2007, p. 247), they should not be relied upon as the sole rating of intervention integrity. One suggestion for collecting regular teacher reports on intervention implementation in a convenient manner is to use Daily Behavior Reports (DBRs; Chafouleas, Riley-Tillman,, & Sugai, 2007). Sources: Chafouleas, S., Riley-Tillman, T.C., & Sugai, G. (2007). School-based behavioral assessment: Informing intervention and instruction. New York: Guilford Press. Gansle, K. A., & Noell, G. H. (2007). The fundamental role of intervention implementation in assessing response to intervention. In S. R. Jimerson, M. K. Burns, & A. M. VanDerHeyden (Eds.), Response to intervention: The science and practice of assessment and intervention (pp ). Kazdin, A. E. (1989). Behavior modification in applied settings (4th ed.). Pacific Gove, CA: Brooks/Cole..

Response to Intervention 7

Response to Intervention 8 Supplemental Methods to Collect Data About Intervention Integrity Intervention Permanent Products: If an intervention plan naturally yields permanent products (e.g., completed scoring sheets, lists of spelling words mastered, behavioral sticker charts), these products can be periodically collected and evaluated as another indicator of intervention integrity. (Gansle & Noell, 2007). Source: Gansle, K. A., & Noell, G. H. (2007). The fundamental role of intervention implementation in assessing response to intervention. In S. R. Jimerson, M. K. Burns, & A. M. VanDerHeyden (Eds.), Response to intervention: The science and practice of assessment and intervention (pp ).

Response to Intervention 9 Intervention Integrity: Verify Through a Mix of Information Sources Schools should consider monitoring intervention integrity through a mix of direct and indirect means, including direct observation and permanent products (Gansle & Noell, 2007), as well as interventionist self-ratings (Roach & Elliott, 2008). Source: Gansle, K. A., & Noell, G. H. (2007). The fundamental role of intervention implementation in assessing response to intervention. In S. R. Jimerson, M. K. Burns, & A. M. VanDerHeyden (Eds.), Response to intervention: The science and practice of assessment and intervention (pp ). Roach, A. T., & Elliott, S. N. (2008). Best practices in facilitating and evaluating intervention integrity. In A. Thomas & J. Grimes (Eds.), Best practices in school psychology V (pp ).