Title: RTI: Decision Rules
1RTI Decision Rules
2Team Activity RTI Team Decision Rules
- As a group, discuss
- What the duration should be of the typical RTI
Team intervention plan at your school. - How many intervention plan trials your RTI Team
would make before considering a referral to
Special Education.
3Methods to Determine a Students Expected Level
of Achievement
4Methods to Determine a Students Expected Level
of Achievement
- Local Norms. One method for determining the skill
level required for school success is to sample
the academic abilities of typical students at
specific grade levels in a school or district.
The resulting data can be compiled into local
norms. An advantage of local norms is that
they will show with precision the skill gap
between a struggling student and his or her
classmates. A potential drawback of local norms,
however, is that these norms can vary
substantially across districts and even across
schools within districts. Districts can take
certain steps (e.g., aggregating local norms from
across the district to create district norms)
to adjust for differences in average academic
performance between schools. However, those steps
can only minimizenot eliminatethe potential for
significant differences in average performance
between schools.
5Methods to Determine a Students Expected Level
of Achievement
- Research Norms. Some research studies have
collected data on typical rates of academic
performance or other instructionally relevant
behavior from samples of students and published
that data in the form of research norms. RTI
Teams find such pre-existing research norms to be
convenient to use. While research norms can be
a helpful starting point in estimating expected
levels of student performance, though, they
should generally be used cautiously. One
limitation to some research norms, for example,
is that they are based on small samples of
students and therefore may not reflect a true
picture of average student performance across the
nation. Another possible drawback of research
norms is that the groups of students used in
these studies are not representative of the
racial and ethnic diversity of student
populations in specific school districtslimiting
the usefulness of those norms to these districts
RTI decision-making.
6Selected Research-Based Norms for Academic Skills
and Related Behaviors (pp. 181-182)
Curriculum-Based Measurement Oral Reading Fluency (Tindal, Hasbrouck, Jones, 2005) Curriculum-Based Measurement Oral Reading Fluency (Tindal, Hasbrouck, Jones, 2005) Curriculum-Based Measurement Oral Reading Fluency (Tindal, Hasbrouck, Jones, 2005) Curriculum-Based Measurement Oral Reading Fluency (Tindal, Hasbrouck, Jones, 2005)
Correctly Read Words Per Minute Correctly Read Words Per Minute Correctly Read Words Per Minute
Grade Fall Winter Spring
1 NA 23 53
2 51 72 89
3 71 92 107
4 94 112 123
5 110 127 139
6 127 140 150
7 128 136 150
8 133 146 151
Comments These multi-state norms are based on a large sample size and are among the best research norms available for oral reading fluency. Comments These multi-state norms are based on a large sample size and are among the best research norms available for oral reading fluency. Comments These multi-state norms are based on a large sample size and are among the best research norms available for oral reading fluency. Comments These multi-state norms are based on a large sample size and are among the best research norms available for oral reading fluency.
7Selected Research-Based Norms for Academic Skills
and Related Behaviors (pp. 181-182)
Curriculum-Based Measurement Math Computation (Adapted from Deno Mirkin, 1977) Curriculum-Based Measurement Math Computation (Adapted from Deno Mirkin, 1977) Curriculum-Based Measurement Math Computation (Adapted from Deno Mirkin, 1977)
Grade Digits Correct in 2 Minutes Digits Incorrect in 2 Minutes
1-3 20-38 6-14
4 Up 40-78 6-14
Comments These math computation norms are still widely referenced. However, the norms were collected nearly 30 years ago and may not be widely representative because they were drawn from a relatively small sample of students. Additionally, the norms make no distinction between easy and more challenging math computation problem types. Because of these limitations, these norms are best regarded as a rough indicator of typical student math computation skills. Comments These math computation norms are still widely referenced. However, the norms were collected nearly 30 years ago and may not be widely representative because they were drawn from a relatively small sample of students. Additionally, the norms make no distinction between easy and more challenging math computation problem types. Because of these limitations, these norms are best regarded as a rough indicator of typical student math computation skills. Comments These math computation norms are still widely referenced. However, the norms were collected nearly 30 years ago and may not be widely representative because they were drawn from a relatively small sample of students. Additionally, the norms make no distinction between easy and more challenging math computation problem types. Because of these limitations, these norms are best regarded as a rough indicator of typical student math computation skills.
8Selected Research-Based Norms for Academic Skills
and Related Behaviors (pp. 181-182)
Curriculum-Based Measurement Writing (Mirkin, Deno, Fuchs, Wesson, Tindal, Marston, Kuehnle,1981) Curriculum-Based Measurement Writing (Mirkin, Deno, Fuchs, Wesson, Tindal, Marston, Kuehnle,1981)
Grade Total Words Written in 3 Minutes
1 15
2 28
3 37
4 41
5 49
6 53
Comments These research norms in writing are still among the few that have been published. While they can be useful as a general starting point for estimating typical writing skills, these norms also have limitations they are somewhat dated, were based on a relatively small sample size, and apply only to one area of CBM writing-- total words written. Comments These research norms in writing are still among the few that have been published. While they can be useful as a general starting point for estimating typical writing skills, these norms also have limitations they are somewhat dated, were based on a relatively small sample size, and apply only to one area of CBM writing-- total words written.
9Selected Research-Based Norms for Academic Skills
and Related Behaviors (pp. 181-182)
School Attendance Rates of Absenteeism (National Center for Educational Statistics, 2005) School Attendance Rates of Absenteeism (National Center for Educational Statistics, 2005)
Grade Days of School Missed Per Month
All Grades (K-12) 80 of students in a large national sample missed no more than 2 days of school per month.
Comments These attendance norms were compiled from a large data set. They are a reliable yardstick for estimating typical rates of student attendance. Comments These attendance norms were compiled from a large data set. They are a reliable yardstick for estimating typical rates of student attendance.
10Selected Research-Based Norms for Academic Skills
and Related Behaviors (pp. 181-182)
Time on Task (Anderson, 1976 Gettinger, 1985) Time on Task (Anderson, 1976 Gettinger, 1985)
Grade Time on Task
All Grades (K-12) 80 or more estimated
Comments There are few reliable norms for the amount of on-task behavior a student must show in the classroom to have an optimal chance for success. The issue is further complicated because existing studies of typical rates of time on task often fail to distinguish between passive academic engagement (student simply looking at the teacher) and student active academic engagement (student actively showing what they have learned through involvement in observable activities). There is little disagreement, though, that students need to attend to instruction in order to learn. Therefore, RTI Teams are encouraged to set a goal of at least 80 on task (counting both passive and active student engagement). Comments There are few reliable norms for the amount of on-task behavior a student must show in the classroom to have an optimal chance for success. The issue is further complicated because existing studies of typical rates of time on task often fail to distinguish between passive academic engagement (student simply looking at the teacher) and student active academic engagement (student actively showing what they have learned through involvement in observable activities). There is little disagreement, though, that students need to attend to instruction in order to learn. Therefore, RTI Teams are encouraged to set a goal of at least 80 on task (counting both passive and active student engagement).
11Methods to Determine a Students Expected Level
of Achievement
- Criterion-Referenced Benchmarks. Homework
completion, reading comprehension, and knowledge
of higher-level math operations are just three
examples of academic competencies for which
schools are unlikely to have norms. When faced
with a lack of clear-cut norms (e.g., homework
completion, reading comprehension, or knowledge
of higher-level math operations), the RTI Team
can work with the referring teacher to set a
criterion-referenced benchmarkthat is, an
assessment that compares a students performance
on an academic task or behavior to a pre-selected
standard of mastery (e.g., Fuchs Fuchs,
2006).A disadvantage of criterion-referenced
benchmarks is that they can be somewhat
arbitrary, often based largely on teacher
judgment. An advantage of such benchmarks,
however, is that they can be applied flexibly to
a very wide range of student academic skills and
behaviors for which formal peer norms are
unavailable.
12Closing the Gap Calculating Expected Rates of
Student Progress
13Methods to Calculate Expected Rates of Student
Progress
- Growth Norms Based on Research. While scarce,
some research articles have been published that
track average rates of student progress in basic
academic skills over time. Research-based norms
are convenient but may be based on small sample
sizes. Still, when available, they can be helpful
starting points for calculating expected student
rates of growth.
14Methods to Calculate Expected Rates of Student
Progress
- Growth Estimates Based on Distance Between Target
Student Performance and Local Norms. If a school
or district has compiled its own local norms (for
example, in curriculum-based measurement oral
reading fluency), the grade norms of a student
with academic delays represent the goal toward
which that student will work. If for example, a
schools local norms indicate that the typical
reading rate in 4th-grade text is 73 words per
minute in that building, then this figure may be
used as the ultimate goal for a 4th grade student
who has deficits in reading fluency. The RTI Team
would calculate a rate of weekly improvement that
the student must achieve to allow that student
ultimately to catch up with his or her peers.
15Methods to Calculate Expected Rates of Student
Progress
- Growth Rates Based on Criterion-Referenced
Benchmarks. If criterion-referenced benchmarks
are set as goals for student performance, then
these benchmarks become the goal toward which the
student works. The RTI Team and referring teacher
would set weekly rates of student improvement
sufficiently ambitious to help the student to
achieve the benchmark within a reasonable period
of time.For example, a teacher may refer a
student to the RTI Team because she turns in
homework on average only 40 percent of the time.
Based on the grading formula for the course, the
teacher estimates that the student will receive a
passing grade if she manages to turn in at least
80 percent of assigned homework. So the RTI
Team and teacher adopt this homework completion
goal of 80 percent as a criterion-referenced
benchmark and intervention goal. They agree to
try a homework intervention for 8 weeks. The
expectation is that the student will increase
homework completion by at least 5 percent per
week until the student reaches the goal of 80
percent.
16Methods to Determine a Students Expected Level
of Achievement
- Growth Rates Based on Criterion-Referenced
Benchmarks. (Cont.) For more advanced academic
tasks, the referring teacher and team may want
to - Create a step-by-step checklist that breaks the
global task into clearly defined essential
sub-steps. - Write a rubric that evaluates the students
performance on each sub-step. - The RTI Team would set a goal for the student
based on the checklist. For example, a student
may have a checklist to guide preparation and
writing of the assignments. One goal for the
student at the end of the intervention period
might be to have at least 80 percent of his or
her writing assignments meet minimal requirements
using the checklist and rubric. Another goal
might be tied to have the student attain passing
grades on at least 80 percent of those
assignments.
17When Does the RTI Team Refer a Student to Special
Education?
18Evaluating the Intervention Plan of the
Non-Responding Student pp. 183-184
19END