Title: FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT: CurriculumBased Measurement Progress Monitoring
1FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT Curriculum-Based
MeasurementProgress Monitoring
- NC Department of Public Instruction
- Exceptional Children Division
- Program Improvement Professional
Development-2008
2Todays Agenda
- What is CBM?
- State norming project review
- Hands on CBMs
- Measuring Behavior in an RtI model
3What is the or Responsiveness to Instruction
Model?
- A student with academic delays is given one or
more research-validated interventions. - The student's academic progress is monitored
frequently to see if those interventions are
sufficient to help the student to catch up with
his or her peers. - If the student fails to show significantly
improved academic skills despite several
well-designed and implemented interventions, this
failure to 'respond to intervention' can be
viewed as evidence of an underlying Learning
Disability.
www.interventioncentral.com
4Why RtI?
- One advantage of RtI in the diagnosis of
educational disabilities is that it allows
schools to intervene early to meet the needs of
struggling learners. - Another advantage is that RtI maps those specific
instructional strategies found to benefit a
particular student. This information can be very
helpful to both teachers and parents.
www.interventioncentral.com
5What are Summative and Formative Evaluation?
- Summative Assessment Culmination measure.
Mastery assessment. Pass/fail type assessments
which summarize the knowledge students learn. - High-stakes tests (EOGs)
- GRE, ACT, SAT, GMAT, etc. tests
- Drivers license test
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
6What are Summative and Formative Evaluation?
- Formative Evaluation Process of assessing
student achievement during instruction to
determine whether an instructional program is
effective for individual students. - When students are progressing, continue using
your instructional programs. - When tests show that students are not
progressing, you can change your instructional
programs in meaningful ways.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
7Todays High Stakes Evaluation World
- High Stakes Tests are USUALLY appropriate for
only for summative evaluation. - NOT as useful for decisions teachers need to
make every day (formative) - For whom do I need to individualize instruction
or find more intensive instructional programs? - How do I organize my classrooms for instructional
grouping? - How do I know that my teaching is working for
each student so that I can make changes in
instruction when necessary? - NOT very useful to administrators who must make
decisions about allocating instructional
resources, especially in a preventative or
responsive model.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
8Summative Assessment Example Weight
- High standard All children will have a healthy
weight by the end of third grade. - High Stakes Assessment Assessing body density.
- Weighing each student.
- Immersing each student in a large tub filled with
water and measuring the amount of water
displaced. - Divide weight by displacement and get density, a
very accurate picture of physical status.
- After 8-9 YEARS of growth, we would
- Place students who are unhealthy in remedial
programs. - Create new health programs.
- Blame the effectiveness of old health programs.
- Blame the students (or their families) for over
or under eating.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
9Formative Evaluation Example Same Standard,
Different Assessment
High Standard All children will have a healthy
weight by the end of third grade. Universal
Screening Assessment Monitor weight directly,
frequently, and continuously. From birth,
measure weight frequently and continuously with a
simple, albeit less precise, general outcome
measure, weight in pounds, using a scale.
(General Outcome Measure)
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
10Formative Evaluation Example Same Standard,
Different Assessment
- At any point in development
- The child could be weighed and a decision made
about healthy weight. - This process is
- Efficient.
- Sufficiently accurate.
- Proactive.
- Cost effective.
- We would know their health status before they
reached the high stakes point!
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
11Characteristics of General Outcome Measures (GOMs)
- Powerful measures that are
- Simple
- Easier to obtain data (less time and good data)
- Accurate
- Very specific data
- Efficient
- Only a few minutes to administer
- Generalizable
- Reliable
- Can compare and contrast student performance
across school, district, country
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
12General Outcome Measures (GOMs) from Other Fields
Medicine measures height, weight, temperature,
and/or blood pressure. Federal Reserve Board
measures the Consumer Price Index. Wall Street
measures the Dow-Jones Industrial
Average. Companies report earnings per share.
McDonalds measures how many hamburgers they
sell. In Education, Curriculum Based Measurement
is a General Outcome Measure
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
13What is Curriculum Based Measurement?
- Curriculum Based Measurement is a form of
Curriculum-Based Assessment (CBA). - CBM is a method of monitoring student educational
progress through direct assessment of academic
skills - CBMs measure basic skills in reading,
mathematics, spelling, written expression and
readiness skills - Teacher gives the student brief, timed samples,
or probes, made up of academic material that
the student is expected to learn - Early literacy skills (phonics and phonological
awareness) are downward extensions of CBM. - Because CBM probes are quick to administer and
simple to score, they can be given frequently to
provide continuous progress data. The results are
charted and provide for timely evaluation based
on hard data.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
14Using Curriculum Based Measures as General
Outcome Measures
- Its about using General Outcome Measures (GOMs)
for formative assessment/evaluation to - Inform teaching
- AND
- ensure accountability.
- Its different from, but related to, summative
high-stakes testing/evaluation, which - Doesnt inform teaching.
- Mostly used for accountability/motivation.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
15Using Curriculum Based Measurement as a General
Outcome Measure
- Universal (school-wide) screening using CBMs
allows us to add systematic Formative Evaluation
to current practice. - For Teachers (and Students)
- Early Identification of At Risk Students
- Instructional Planning
- Monitoring Student Progress
- For Parents
- Opportunities for Communication/Involvement
- Accountability
- For Administrators
- Resource Allocation/Planning and Support
- Accountability
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
16Using Curriculum Based Measurement as a General
Outcome Measure Research
- Curriculum-Based Measurement (CBM) was developed
more than 20 years ago by Stanley Deno at the
University of Minnesota through a federal
contract to develop a reliable and valid
measurement system for evaluating basic skills
growth. - CBM is supported by more than 25 years of
school-based research by the US Department of
Education. - Supporting documentation can be found in 100s of
articles, book chapters, and books in the
professional literature describing the use of CBM
to make a variety of important educational
decisions.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
17Summary of Research Validating Curriculum Based
Measurement
Reliable and valid indicator of student
achievement Simple, efficient, and of short
duration to facilitate frequent administration by
teachers Provides assessment information that
helps teachers plan better instruction Sensitive
to the improvement of students achievement over
time Easily understood by teachers and
parents Improves achievement when used to monitor
progress
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
18Curriculum Based Measurement Advantages
- Direct measure of student performance
- Helps target specific areas of instructional need
for students - Quick to administer
- Provides visual representation (reports) of
individual student progress and how classes are
acquiring essential reading skills - Sensitive to even small improvements in
performance - Capable of having many forms
- Monitoring frequently enables staff to see trends
in individual and group performanceand compare
those trends with targets set for their students.
- Correlates strongly with best practices for
instruction and assessment, and
research-supported methods for assessment and
intervention.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
19Curriculum Based Measurement Things to Remember
- Designed to serve as indicators of general
reading achievement CBM probes dont measure
everything, but measure the important things. - Standardized tests to be given, scored, and
interpreted in a standard way. - Researched with respect to psychometric
properties to ensure accurate measures of
learning. - Are sensitive to improvement in brief intervals
of time. - Tell us how students earned their scores
(qualitative information). - Designed to be as short as possible to ensure
do-ability. - Are linked to decision making for promoting
positive achievement and problem-solving.
Adapted from www.aimsweb.com
20Curriculum Based Measurement
- CBM has been shown to posses high levels of
reliability - Reliability - the extent to which the
measurements of a test remain consistent over
repeated tests of the same subject under
identical conditions - 42 one-minute CBM type assessments in reading,
math, and written expression for grade K-5 were
found to have reliability coefficients between
.90-.99 with just three one-minute
administrations (Jenkins, 2002)
21Curriculum Based Measurement
- Discriminant Validity - Does it appear to measure
what its supposed to measure? - And
- Doesnt associate with constructs that shouldnt
be related. -
- Several studies have demonstrated the ability of
CBM to differentiate between students receiving
special education services, students receiving
Chapter 1 services, and students not receiving
any of those services (Deno, Marston, Shinn, and
Tindal, 1983 Marston and Deno, 1982 Shinn and
Marston, 1985 and Shinn, Tindal, Spira, and
Marston, 1987).
22Curriculum Based Measurement Local Norming
Project
- What is it?
- Using selected CBM probes to assess basic
predictive skills for a sample of students to
determine typical performance - Completed for a school, district, region, or
state. - Choose predictive measures (based on research)
for each grade in reading, math, and writing
23Curriculum Based Measurement Local Norming
Project
- How do I do it (Shinn)?
- A representative set of curriculum probes is
compiled for each grade to be assessed - Develop a norming plan
- Will every student be assessed or do you need a
statistical sample? - Assemble a team
- Involve classroom teachers as well as other
people in the building - Conduct the norming project
- Summarize data in a meaningful way
24Curriculum Based Measurement Local Norming
Project
- Why do I need to do it?
- This is OPTIONAL!!!
- Norms allow for comparison of a students
performance to a regional sample instead of a
national norm - Normative data is based on students actual peer
group and is representative of the students
geographical region, culture, ethnicity, and
instructional environment - Many CBM systems (DIBELS, AIMSweb, etc.) will
compile this data for you
25Curriculum Based Measurement Local Norming
Project
- What information does it give?
- Gives a typical performance of students
- Student performance at different percentiles
- Growth rates
26NC CBM Norming Project
- Completed during the 2004-05 school year
- 3 days in a row in October, January, and April
- Each pilot county (New Hanover, Bertie, Harnett,
Guilford, Burke) completed a project for K
through 5th grades - Random sample, 120 students per grade level
- Probes were given in reading, math, and writing
(Basic Skill Builders)
27CBM Norming ProjectKindergarten
- Letter Identification
- Sight Word Identification
- Phoneme Identification
- Letter Identification (spelling)
- Number Identification (math)
28CBM Norming ProjectFirst Grade
- Phoneme Identification
- Blend Identification
- Sight Word Identification
- Word Identification in sentences
- Letter Identification (spelling)
- Number Identification (math)
- Addition (sums 0 10)
- Subtraction (answers to 9)
29CBM Norming ProjectSecond Grade
- Phoneme Identification
- Blend Identification
- Sight Word Identification
- Word Identification in sentences
- Word Identification in a passage
- Addition (without regrouping)
- Subtraction (without regrouping)
30CBM Norming ProjectThird Grade
- Phoneme Identification
- Blend Identification
- Sight Word Identification
- Word Identification in a passage
- Addition (with regrouping)
- Subtraction (with regrouping)
- Multiplication (1 9)
- Math Word Problems
- Spelling
- Written Expression
31CBM Norming ProjectFourth and Fifth Grade
- Sight Word Identification
- Word Identification in a passage
- Multiplication (1 12)
- Mixed Math
- Math Word Problems
- Spelling
- Written Expression
32CBM Procedures for Reading
- Administration example
- Hard Consonants and Short Vowels
- (Phoneme Identification, First and Second Grades)
- Directions Look at the letters on this page.
When I tell you to begin, say the sound each
letter makes. If you dont know a sound, skip it
and keep working. If you get to the end before I
say stop, start again at the top. - Begin. (one minute) Stop.
33Hard Consonants and Short Vowels a m t d
i h n s o f m a a m t z y
u x d s t g v p x y z y
u f o s n h i d t m a i t
f o s m i s c e g v qu y
t e c m i s p r v m d c f
n p e v qu p r v a i o l d
h s p b g o d a i o d s
r b v x a i o u i h d s
r qu z y h o r k u a n f t
m i n a m t b i h n s o f m
a f m s
34CBM Procedures for Reading
- Administration example
- Blends
- Directions This page has nonsense words. Look
at the first word at the top of the page. Say
each word working across the page. Skip any word
you do not know and keep working until I say
stop. If you get to the end before I say stop,
start back at the top. - Begin. (one minute) Stop.
35 Blending Sounds with Both Long and Short Vowels
36CBM Procedures for Reading
- Administration example
- Sight Word Identification (Dolch Words 3)
- Directions When I tell you to begin, say each
word you see starting at the top and moving
across the page. If you do not know a word, skip
it and keep working. If you get to the end
before I say stop, start back at the top. - Begin. (one minute) Stop.
37 Dolch Words - 3
38CBM Procedures for Reading
- Administration example
- Dolch Word Passage
- Directions Look at the story on this page.
When I tell you to begin, read the story to me.
If you do not know a word, skip it and keep
working. If you get to the end before I say
stop, start back at the top. - Begin. (one minute) Stop.
39 Dolch Passage
40CBM Procedures for Math
- Administration example
- First grade math Hear to Write numbers
- Directions When I tell you to begin, write the
numbers you hear me say in the boxes. Listen
carefully, I will say the numbers only one time.
If you dont know an answer, skip it and keep
going. - Begin. (one minute) Stop.
41Write the numbers you hear.
5
1
3
8
9
2
42CBM Procedures for Math
- Administration example
- Third grade math
- Math computations are scored by correct digits
per minute - Directions Look at the addition problems on
your sheet. When I tell you to begin answer as
many of the problems as you can. If you dont
know an answer, skip it and keep going. - Begin. (one minute) Stop.
43Third Grade Addition, Double Digit with Regrouping
44Third Grade Addition, Double Digit with Regrouping
45Third Grade Addition, Double Digit with Regrouping
46CBM Procedures for Math
- Fifth grade math word problems
- Math word problems are scored by the answer and
label (third grade) or the equation, answer, and
label (fourth and fifth grades) - Directions Look at the sheet with the word
problems. When I tell you to begin, read and
solve as many problems as you can. If you do not
know an answer, skip the problem and keep
working. Remember to write the equation, the
answer, and label for each problem. For example,
Val had 12 cakes. He ate 1 of them. How many
cakes did he have left? The equation is 12 1
11. The answer is 11. The label is cakes. - Begin. (one minute) Stop.
47Simple Addition, Multiplication, and Division
without Explicit Numbers
48CBM Procedures for Writing
- One minute to brainstorm, Three minutes to write
and edit - Ways to score writing
- Total words
- Total letters
- Correctly spelled words
- Correct writing sequences
- NC Norms are scored for correct writing sequences
49CBM Procedures for Writing
- Correct Writing Sequences
- Goes beyond confines of isolated word to consider
units of writing and their relation to one
another (fluency!) - Words and essential punctuation marks are
considered separate writing units - To receive credit, writing sequences must be
correctly spelled and be grammatically correct
50CBM Procedures for Writing
- Correct Writing Sequences
- The words in each writing sequence must make
sense within the context of the sentence - Students writing is judged according to the
standards of informal standard American English.
- A caret () is used to mark the presence of a
correct writing sequence - Reversed letters are acceptable, as long as they
do not lead to a misspelling
51CBM Procedures for Writing
- Is that a red car ?
- It was dark . Nobody could see the
trees in the forest . - It was dark . Nobody could seen
the trees in the forrest .
www.interventioncentral.com
52CBM Procedures for Writing
- If I woke up on a deserted island, I would
- I woud drink water from the ocean
- and I woud eat the fruit off of
- the trees . Then I woud bilit a
- house out of trees , and I woud
- gather firewood to stay warm . I
- woud try and fix my boat in my
- spare time .
www.interventioncentral.com
53CBM Procedures for Writing
54North Carolina Norms Practice
- Norm (mean) for a kindergartener in number
identification in the fall - Norm for a fifth grader in written expression in
the spring - Norm for a first grader in sight word reading in
the winter - Norm for a first grader in sight word reading in
the spring
55Other types of CBMs - DIBELS
- Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills
- Assesses similar skills as Skill Builders, a
little more in depth - Benchmark assessment data is available (national
data) - Can use for benchmark assessments (3 or 4 times a
year) as well as for progress monitoring
56Other types of CBMs - DIBELS
- Kindergarten Fall
- Initial Sound Fluency
- Letter Naming Fluency
- Kindergarten Winter
- Initial Sound Fluency
- Letter Naming Fluency
- Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
- Nonsense Word Fluency
- Kindergarten Spring
- Letter Naming Fluency
- Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
- Nonsense Word Fluency
57DIBELS Initial Sound Fluency
- Identify, isolate, and pronounce the first sound
of an orally presented word - About 3 minutes to administer
- Administer to
- Kindergarten - fall
- Kindergarten - winter
58DIBELS Letter Naming Fluency
- Name randomly mixed uppercase and lowercase
letters - One minute timed task
- Administer to
- Kindergarten fall
- Kindergarten winter
- Kindergarten spring
- 1st Grade fall
59DIBELS Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
- Identify the individual sounds that make up a
word - No student materials examiner reads words to
student - One minute timed task
- Administer to
- Kindergarten winter
- Kindergarten spring
- 1st Grade fall
- 1st Grade winter
- 1st Grade spring
60DIBELS Nonsense Word Fluency
- Read CVC nonsense words
- One minute timed task
- Administer to
- Kindergarten winter
- Kindergarten spring
- 1st Grade fall
- 1st Grade winter
- 1st Grade spring
- 2nd Grade - fall
61Other types of CBMs - DIBELS
- First Fall
- Letter Naming Fluency
- Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
- Nonsense Word Fluency
- First Winter
- Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
- Nonsense Word Fluency
- Oral Reading Fluency
- First Spring
- Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
- Nonsense Word Fluency
- Oral Reading Fluency
62DIBELS Oral Reading Fluency
- Read connected text accurately and fluently
- Three one-minute timed passages
- Administer to
- 1st Grade winter
- 1st Grade spring
- 2nd Grade fall
- 2nd Grade winter
- 2nd Grade spring
63Other types of CBMs - DIBELS
- Second Fall
- Nonsense Word Fluency
- Oral Reading Fluency
- Second Winter
- Oral Reading Fluency
- Second Spring
- Oral Reading Fluency
64Other types of CBMs - AIMSweb
- Similar reading probes to DIBELS
- Adds a reading comprehension piece (MAZE)
- Also has math computation, early numeracy and
writing components - Product is for purchase, probes not available for
free
65AIMSweb Tests of Early NumeracyNumber
Identification
- Name single digit and double digit numbers
- One minute timed task
- Administer to
- Kindergarten fall
- Kindergarten winter
- Kindergarten spring
- 1st Grade fall
- 1st Grade winter
66AIMSweb Tests of Early NumeracyQuantity
Discrimination
- Identify greater number
- One minute timed task
- Administer to
- Kindergarten fall
- Kindergarten winter
- Kindergarten spring
- 1st Grade fall
- 1st Grade winter
- 1st Grade - spring
67AIMSweb Tests of Early NumeracyMissing Number
- Identify missing number
- One minute timed task
- Administer to
- Kindergarten fall
- Kindergarten winter
- Kindergarten spring
- 1st Grade fall
- 1st Grade winter
- 1st Grade - spring
68AIMSweb MAZE (Reading Comprehension)
- Student reads passage silently for 3 minutes
- Every 7th word is replaced with three choices
- Student circles correct choice
- Can be group administered
69AIMSweb Data Management
70AIMSweb Data Management
71Other types of CBMs www.interventioncentral.org
- Website has many CBM probes available for free
- You can create multiple forms of early literacy
and numeracy probes - Many national norms available for comparison
72Other types of CBMs www.interventioncentral.org
- Numberfly
- Create probes for Quantity Discrimination,
Missing Number, Number Identification
73Other types of CBMs www.interventioncentral.org
- ChartDog
- Create charts for student progress
74Wrap Up of CBM
- Pros and Cons of each measure we discussed
- How to use these measures as a school-wide
screening tool (universal screening) - Benefits of a using universal screening
- Need for a good data management system
- Think about going paperless!
75Measuring Behavior
- What about behavior?
- Must consider behavior difficulties just like we
consider academic difficulties - Environment (School and Classroom)
- Curriculum
- Instruction
- Learner
- What does this remind you of?
76Measuring Behavior
- After considering Environment, Curriculum,
Instruction, Learner and a behavior still exists,
it is time to determine the FUNCTION of the
behavior - Functional Behavior Assessment
- Many times, the function of the behavior is
related to the academic difficulties! - Address both behavior and academics at the same
time
Problem Solving
77Measuring Behavior
- Functional Behavior Assessment
- Provides an operational definition of behavior
- Identifies events that are related to the
behavior - Identifies consequences that maintain the
behavior - Forms a hypothesis about the function of the
behavior - Uses direct observations to confirm hypothesis
78Measuring Behavior
- Functional Behavior Assessment
- Identify Behaviors and Concerns
- Define the Target Behavior
- Gather Data, Direct Assessment
- Context of the Behavior
- Setting, Physiological, Environmental, Academics
- Function of the Behavior
- Attention, Self-Stimulation, Escape,
Power/Control - Hypothesis
- When this occurs, the student does, to
get/avoid
79Measuring Behavior
- How do we systematically record behavior? (CBM
equivalent?) - Identify behavior
- Structured observations with comparison peer
- In the structured observation, also include ratio
of interactions - 8 positive to each 1 negative
80Measuring Behavior Observation Recording
Methods
- Event Recording
- Can only be used for discrete behaviors (obvious
beginning and end), i.e., hitting, throwing an
object - Simple frequency count of the behavior
- Count is made within a specified observation
period (reading group, 1000 1030, lunch) - Method of choice when the objective is to
increase or decrease the amount of times a
student engages in a discrete behavior - Can easily be done on a sticky note with hash
marks - Examples Number of times Michael talks out in
one hour, number of times Joe hit another student
in 30 minutes
81Measuring Behavior Observation Recording
Methods
- Interval Recording
- Way of recording an estimate of the actual number
of times a behavior occurs. Continuous behaviors
are better tracked with interval recording. - Behaviors that occur at high frequency
- Behavior that occurs for extended time periods
- How? Define a specific time period and divide it
into equal intervals (10 seconds) - Record if the behavior occurred at any time
during the interval and a if the behavior did
not occur - Limitations
- Actual number of occurrences is not included
- Difficult to teach a class and conduct this
method - Difficult to have a comparison student
82Measuring Behavior Observation Recording
Methods
- Time Sampling
- Set period of time at intervals (15 minutes at 10
second intervals) - Note with or if the behavior happened at the
end of the interval - Suitable to behaviors that are long in duration
and for behaviors that happen with high frequency - Can use a comparison student
- Expressed in terms of percentage
83Measuring Behavior Observation Recording
Methods
- Duration Recording
- Focus is on measures of time rather than
instances of behavior - Used when concern is length of time a student
engages in a behavior - Suitable for discrete behaviors
- Can be used when event recording does not give
the whole picture (length of time student is out
of seat)
84Measuring Behavior Observation Recording
Methods
- Latency Recording
- Used when primary concern is how long a student
takes to begin performing a behavior once it has
been requested - Measures the length of time between the
presentation of an antecedent stimulus and the
initiation of behavior
85Measuring Behavior The Daily Behavior Report
Card
- DBRCs have been referred to under a number of
different titles, including home notes (Blechman,
Schrader Taylor, 1981), home-based
reinforcement (Bailey, Wolf, Phillips, 1970),
daily report cards (Dougherty Dougherty, 1977),
and home-school notes (Long Edwards, 1994). - Within the literature on DBRCs, a consistent
description or definition has not evolved, and a
variety of options exist when creating a daily
rating card.
86Thanks to Chris Reilly-Tillman,
ECU interventioncentral.org
Measuring Behavior The Daily Behavior Report
Card
- While the lack of a common definition or title
has not emerged, common characteristics across
DBRCs can be identified. These characteristics
include - A behavior(s) is specified,
- Rating of the behavior(s) occurs at least daily,
- Obtained information is shared across individuals
(e.g., parents, teachers, students), and - The card is used to monitor the effects of an
intervention and/or as a component of an
intervention.
87Thanks to Chris Reilly-Tillman,
ECU interventioncentral.org
Measuring Behavior The Daily Behavior Report
Card
- DBRCs are intuitively appealing to educators, as
they can provide a simple, inexpensive, and
flexible method of providing frequent feedback to
students and parents. - DBRCs require only minor changes in existing
classroom practices. - DBRCs are effective at monitoring behavior
changes. - The potential dual role DBRCs to serve as both a
monitoring device and an intervention component. - Another related reason for the appeal of DBRCs
relates to the home/school orientation to
intervention and data collection .
88Measuring Behavior The Daily Behavior Report
Card
- www.interventioncentral.org
89Questions?
- Special Thanks
- Susan H. Laney, School Psychologist
- Guilford County Schools
- laneys_at_gcsnc.com
- Dr. Tom Jenkins, Director
- Educational Consultation Services, LLC
- www.educationalconsultationservices.com
- Chris Reilly-Tillman
- ECU
- Email goes here
90Questions?
- Sherry Abernethy
- Consultant for Learning Disabilities
- SAbernethy_at_dpi.state.nc.us
- http//www.ncpublicschools.org/ec/development/lear
ning/intervention/
90