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Rachel German Mar. 13, 2013 INTERVENTION REVIEW: READING IN K-2
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Extensive amount of empirically-supported interventions Reading Early intervention 4 major focus areas Alphabetics Reading achievement Reading comprehension Reading fluency OVERVIEW OF INTERVENTIONS (US Department of Education, n.d.)
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Effective interventions don’t have to be expensive Gains can be seen from early interventions through at least 2 nd grade 4 essential elements of effective early interventions: Phonological awareness, decoding, & word study Guided and independent reading Writing exercises Practicing comprehension strategies during reading Group size and frequency are important considerations OVERVIEW OF INTERVENTIONS (Scammacca et al., 2007)
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Phonics-based early reading for K-2 Program materials include handbooks, lessons, books, sound cards, manuals, etc. $89.95 for Kindergarten $254.95 for First/Second Grade One-on-one tutoring session Theories: Phonics-based Early intervention Individualized instruction Combination of individual oral reading and specific instruction on target areas of need SOUND PARTNERS: OVERVIEW (Cambium Learning Store, 2013a)
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High-need Significantly struggling in reading Needs more structured/individualized attention Maybe with ADHD SOUND PARTNERS: CHARACTERISTICS OF TARGET GROUP
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30-minute sessions 4x per week Sessions consist of 4-8 short activities Change throughout intervention Instruction includes: Letter-sound correspondences Phoneme blending Decoding and encoding phonetically regular words Reading irregular high-frequency words Last 15 minutes per session: oral reading practice Progress Monitoring: Tests given every 10 lessons SOUND PARTNERS: IMPLEMENTATION (What Works Clearinghouse, 2010, p. 2)
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Individualized Intensive Single tutor 30 minute sessions 4x per week Tier II or Tier III Depending on school system structure SOUND PARTNERS AND RTI
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SOUND PARTNERS: EMPIRICAL SUPPORT (What Works Clearinghouse, 2010) Review of 7 studies 442 students Grades K-1
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Peer-tutoring program for grades 1-8 Designed for any content area Sold by Cambium Learning as “Together We Can” Program materials include book with reproducible & dry-erase posters $61.96 Class-wide or small-group/partners Also a computer version Theories: Teaching as a form of learning Shared responsibility Interactive, fun, and competitive CLASSWIDE PEER TUTORING: OVERVIEW (Cambium Learning Store, 2013a)
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All students in class Can pair low-achieving students with high-achieving students Or high with high and low with low Teacher can structure lessons depending on class demeanor, environment, personality, etc. CWPT: CHARACTERISTICS OF TARGET GROUP
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30-minute sessions per day 20 minutes for tutoring 10 minutes for material preparation Every Monday: Students paired up into partners One partner assigned to Team A, one partner assigned to Team B Throughout the week: Partners tutor and test each other Partners reward points for correct answers Progress Monitoring (every Friday): Students individually tested on previous week’s material Students individually pre-tested on next week’s material CWPT: IMPLEMENTATION (What Works Clearinghouse, 2007, p. 1- 2)
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Group-based Interactive Tier I or Tier Ii Easy to implement and provides fun learning environment CWPT AND RTI
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CWPT: EMPIRICAL SUPPORT (What Works Clearinghouse, 2007) Review of 1 study for early literacy Consisted of 416 students
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Used 416 first-grade students from original study 303 remained Divided into three groups: High-risk/low SES treatment group Received CWPT in reading (and math) from grades 1-4 High-risk/low SES control group Non-risk/high SES index group Even after two years with no treatment/intervention: High-risk treatment group were 31% higher than control group No difference seen between non-risk index group & treatment group CWPT: LONGITUDINAL EFFECTS (Greenwood, Terry, Utley, Montagna, & Walker, 1993)
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Cambium Learning Store: Sopris Learning. (2013). Sound partners. Retrieved from http://www.soprislearning.com/literacy/sound-partners Cambium Learning Store: Sopris Learning. (2013). Together we can. Retrieved from http://store.cambiumlearning.com/together-we-can/ Greenwood, C. R., Terry, B., Utley, C.A., Montagna, D., & Walker, D. (1993) Achievement placement and services: Middle school benefits of ClassWide Peer Tutoring used at the elementary school. School Psychology Review, 22(3), 497-516. Scammacca, N., Vaughn, S., Roberts., G., Wanzek, J., & Torgesen, J. K. (2007). Extensive reading interventions in grades K-3. Retrieved from http://www.fcrr.org/science/pdf/torgesen/extensive_reading_interventions_K-3.pdf US Department of Education: Institute of Education Sciences. (n.d.). What works clearinghouse. Retrieved from http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/ What Works Clearinghouse. (2007). WWC intervention report: ClassWide peer tutoring. Retrieved from http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/intervention_reports/WWC_CWPT_070907.pdf What Works Clearinghouse. (2010). WWC intervention report: Sound partners. Retrieved from http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/pdf/intervention_reports/wwc_soundpartners_092110.pdf REFERENCES
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