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June 5, 2014 Michelle Burks - Elementary ELA Coordinator
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RSA is the Reading Sufficiency Act The purpose it to require early childhood intervention and ensure that students are reading on grade level by 3 rd grade. RSA is the OSDE mandating that we Screen, Monitor and Intervene with all students in grades K-3. RSA is the OSDE requiring us schools to provide Response to Intevention (RTI). RSA is the law
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We need to screen our students for reading difficulties. Without the law many students would never be screened, progress monitored or tested at all. Students need to be on grade level be for entering 4 th grade if it is within their cognitive abilities. K-3 is a time where we learn to read, 4 th grade is the beginning of “reading to learn” and students need a strong foundation.
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It’s political It’s additional red tape on something we are already doing It has become overly complicated It now has very steep consequences
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Step 1: Screen all of your students (even students on an IEP). Step 2: Really dig deep into your screening results and make them worth your time. Step 3: Provide your struggling students with intervention and then monitor the progress of that intervention. Step 4: Document what you are doing.
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Good interventions are targeted, directed and intensive. A good intervention is skill specific. Ex. Long vowels, digraphs, fluency rate, sight words…etc. Pick one skill and work only on that skill during intervention until progress is made. Progress monitor your interventions. Either by using STAR, DIBELS or a teacher created assessment. Document your time and track what you are doing.
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Students who score in the Unsatisfactory range on the reading portion of the 3 rd OCCT will be retained by law IF they do not meet one of the 6 good cause exemptions (GCE). As of May 2014 a committee can over ride the law and promote a student if they unanimously decide that is what is best for the child. The committee must have: principal, parent, 3 rd grade teacher, 4 th grade teacher, reading specialist. The decision to promote must be unanimous.
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The OSDE requires us to choose an assessment, our is the Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills (DIBELS) DIBELS is our Universal Screening tool, meaning we screen every student with this assessment to gain a baseline. We are required by law to benchmark our students 3 times per year and progress monitor at least monthly.
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It’s relatively short, and still provides you with oral reading information. You are provided with a substitute teacher to assist you in your benchmark assessments three times per year. It gives teachers valid information to determine if a child is AT RISK of a reading difficulty. It’s just a screening tool, it is not the only assessment to use when making instructional decisions. (STAR, informal class assessments) DIBELS give you a baseline.
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You can progress monitor after every 4 interventions? Frequent progress monitoring can speed up the RTI Special Ed referral process. You can progress monitor with out of level materials? We receive RSA funds based on every student who does not meet the Fall Benchmark. Test them early, it only makes you look better in the end.
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It is the law that every child who does not meet the Fall and Winter benchmark be placed on an RSA Academic Performance Plan (APP). This plan states: how the student performed, what you the teacher are going to do for them, what if any additional services the child will receive. The APP must be signed by the parent in the fall and the spring and kept on file in the students cumulative record. You must by law document your interventions. Document, document, document
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You must enter your data into www.DIBELS.net after every benchmark and progress monitoring.www.DIBELS.net You must notify parents of the students progress. Explain DIBELS to your parents using the Parents Report. If you have questions check the video tutorials. Check the DISTRICT website for forms and information.
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Questions, Comment, Concerns
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