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CEEDAR Center: ceedar.org & NCII: intensiveintervention.org
Matt–combined title slide Putting Practices Into Practice: The Power of HLPs and EBPs Through MTSS CEEDAR Center: ceedar.org & NCII: intensiveintervention.org
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Ceedar 2.0: winning aspiration
Every student with a disability has an equitable opportunity to achieve.
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Ceedar center priority areas for sustainability and scale up
Focus Areas Preparation Program Reform General Education Special Education Leadership Preparation Program Evaluation Standards, Licensure, and Program Accreditation
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National Center on Intensive Intervention’s Mission
NCII builds the capacity of SEAs and LEAs, universities, practitioners, and other stakeholders to support implementation of intensive intervention in literacy, mathematics, and behavior for students with severe and persistent learning and/or behavioral needs, often in the context of their multi-tiered system of support (MTSS) or special education services. Why intensive intervention is important What intensive intervention looks like through the DBI process Considerations for implementation Resources NCII Website
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NCII Supports and Services
A new focus for NCII: Higher Ed
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Things to think about… How familiar are you with high-leverage and evidence-based practices? How familiar are you with multi-tiered systems of support? What steps do/could you take to support educators in learning and implementing HLP and EBP through an MTSS framework? What assistance can be provided to increase effective implementation?
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It must be admitted that spelling is not taught successfully; indeed, the difficulty lies in the fact that it is seldom taught at all. Spelling lessons are assigned, studied, recited, but not taught. Much of the time spent in hearing children recite—guess till they get it right—should be spent in a definite teaching process, until they cannot get it wrong. (George W. Loomis, 1902)
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High-leverage practices
Practices that educators can learn and implemented across content areas HLP in Special Education Collaboration Assessment Social/Emotional/Behavioral Practices Instruction
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Evidence-based practices
Practices with evidence (from research or the field) to support their effectiveness for improving outcomes of students with disabilities Add Tools chart images NCII’s Intervention Tools Charts
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Ta to support teacher development
Use of the… HLP guidance document for policy, preparation, and program review/approval Innovation Configurations to review and revise programs Learning to Teach Practice-Based Preparation in Teacher Education Establishing and nurturing partnerships NCII collaboration with the University of Connecticut, the National Center for Leadership in Intensive Intervention, and 325K Grantees Add from NCII work
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State Examples Teri will add Rhode Island
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Framework for implementation
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Taxonomy of Intervention Intensity
Teri Putting HLPs and EBPs into Practice at Tiers 2 and 3
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The DBI process starts with a validated intervention program.
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Taxonomy (Fuchs, Fuchs, & Malone, 2017)
Dimensions to consider: Strength Dosage Alignment Attention to Transfer Comprehensiveness Behavioral or academic support Individualization We will spend additional time looking at these interventions later in the presentation, but we wanted to introduce them as key areas to consider when selecting a strong validated intervention platform for students who are struggling.
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Strength: Starting with Evidence of Effectiveness
“The benefits of evidence-based practices are many. I first want to give a disclaimer and say that they’re not a panacea. They’re not guaranteed to work for everyone, and they aren’t easy to implement with fidelity and implement over time. If they were easy, we’d be doing them already. That being said, I think it’s our professional duty as educators to use what is most likely to bring about improved student outcomes. And if you believe, as I do and most educators do, that multiple high-quality experimental research studies are the best way, the most reliable way, to determine whether something works then evidence-based practices just give you the best bet that a practice will work.” Transcript: The benefits of evidence-based practices are many. I first want to give a disclaimer and say that they’re not a panacea. They’re not guaranteed to work for everyone, and they aren’t easy to implement with fidelity and implement over time. If they were easy, we’d be doing them already. That being said, I think it’s our professional duty as educators to use what is most likely to bring about improved student outcomes. And if you believe, as I do and most educators do, that multiple high-quality experimental research studies are the best way, the most reliable way, to determine whether something works then evidence-based practices just give you the best bet that a practice will work. I have made the analogy to making a bet. Why would you make a 50/50 bet? Maybe it’ll work. Maybe it won’t work. Kind of like a flip of a coin, when an evidence-based practice represents about a 90/10 bet. You’ve got a 90 percent chance of the intervention or the practice or the program working and only a 10 percent chance of it not working. The primary benefit then is that it’s more likely to pay off in terms of improved student outcomes than using practices that aren’t evidence-based. But I think there are other benefits as well. There are benefits to the teacher in terms of feeling good about the instruction that you provide as a professional, and that you’re engaging with the research, and that you’re not wasting time just going from practice to practice more or less randomly hoping that something’s going to work, but you’re putting in the work up front to identify evidence-based practices, and that’s going to pay off in the long run in terms of saving time and being more efficient in your practice. And I think this also impacts school culture. If we can start to get people identifying and implementing evidence-based practices and supporting each other and talking to each other about using evidence-based practices, that becomes the school culture. And so, as new teachers come in, they become enculturated into that norm of highly effective practices, which then really kind of changes the game about how schools and other educational settings work. So I think there’s lots of different benefits to implementing and using evidence-based practices. Meet the needs of many at-risk students Efficient use of time and resources Defined in policy and guidance (e.g., ESSA, RDA)
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Strength: What to Consider
Type/Source Population Students who are struggling Desired Outcomes Effects NCII Interventions Tools Chart What Works Clearinghouse Best Evidence Encyclopedia
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Dosage: Things to Consider
How many opportunities exist for students to respond and receive corrective feedback? How often does the intervention occur? What is the duration of the intervention? How many students are part of the intervention group?
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Alignment: Matching to the Target Skill
A hammer is an effective tool, but not with a screw… EBPs are validated for a specific purpose with a specific population. EBPs are only useful for a range of problems and, as such, must be paired up with the right situation.
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Attention to Transfer Alignment to standards
Connections between mastered and related skills
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Comprehensiveness
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Behavioral Support Academic interventions also should support cognitive processes/executive functions such as: Memory Self-regulation and self-monitoring Attribution Attention Motivation These need to be taught to students! Consider a task analysis break down of SEL/EF skills.
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Consider Integration Skill deficit Avoidance behavior
Removal from task
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let’s talk What steps do/could you take to support educators in learning and implementing HLPs and EBPs through an MTSS framework? What assistance can be provided to increase effective implementation?
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Final take-aways Teri will add
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I can tell you’re struggling with fractions, Tony, but there aren’t any EBPs for kids in your grade. Maybe check back in a few years?
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(this is where integrating HLPs and EBPs truly help!)
Can I still implement DBI if I don’t have a complete menu of standardized programs? YES! (this is where integrating HLPs and EBPs truly help!) Use EBPs when available and consider augmenting for content areas with insufficient resources. Remediation materials that came with your core program Expert recommendations (if evidence-based programs are not available) from Institute of Education Sciences (IES) practice guides, reputable professional organizations, etc. Standards-aligned materials Collect data to determine whether most students are profiting.
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Shifting the Dialogue Interventions or programs: “We use [curriculum, program] because the district tells us we have to. And, I use remediation materials during small group instruction.” vs. “We researched this program and it has strong effect sizes with our population.” Fidelity: “I checked attendance.” vs. “I monitored the student’s engagement during intervention, as well as adhered to the critical components of the intervention included in the fidelity checklist.” Progress Monitoring: “Their scores increased from the fall.” vs. “The student is demonstrating progress toward the goal we set, as demonstrated by graphed data.” Only Adding Time: “We added a double block of intervention.” vs. “We increased the number of opportunities for the student to respond and receive corrective feedback.” or “We increased the explicitness of how the content was taught.” Students with disabilities need access to tiered supports, with special education services being the most intensive supports available.
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Contact us Erica McCray: edm@coe.ufl.edu
Meg Kamman: Teri Marx:
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DISCLAIMER This content was produced under U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education Programs, Award No. H325A Bonnie Jones and David Guardino serve as the project officers. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the positions or polices of the U.S. Department of Education. No official endorsement by the U.S. Department of Education of any product, commodity, service, or enterprise mentioned in this website is intended or should be inferred. Add NCII disclaimer
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NCII Disclaimer This module was produced under the U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education Programs, Award No. H326Q Celia Rosenquist serves as the project officer. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent the positions or policies of the U.S. Department of Education. No official endorsement by the U.S. Department of Education of any product, commodity, service, or enterprise mentioned in this website is intended or should be inferred.
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