Title: Using Curriculum-Based Measurement to Measure
1Using Curriculum-Based Measurement to Measure
Response to Intervention Jim
WrightBaldwinsville (NY) Central School
District
Georgia Association of School Psychologists2005
Annual ConferenceSavannah, GA20 October 2005
2Any darn mule can kick a barn down, but it takes
a carpenter to build one.--Lyndon Johnson
3Changes to LD Definition in Part 200 (NYS Regs)
- Learning disabilities. In determining whether a
student has a learning disability , the school
district - (i) may use a process that determines if the
student responds to scientific, research-based
intervention as part of the evaluation procedures
Response-to-Intervention Model and - (ii) is not required to consider whether a
student has a severe discrepancy between
achievement and intellectual ability in oral
expression, listening comprehension, written
expression, basic reading skill, reading
comprehension, mathematical calculation or
mathematical reasoning Discrepancy Model. -
Emergency Adoption of Amendment of Section 100.2
and Parts 101, 200 and 201 of the Regulations of
the Commissioner of Education to Conform to the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
(IDEA) of 2004 Effective September 13, 2005
4Dueling Models Discrepancy vs. Response to
Intervention
5Discrepancy (Wait to Fail) Model
- LD identified by giving a battery of
standardized tests and looking for significant
gaps between students' achievement and
intellectual ability. The tester infers that a
profile of strengths and weaknesses revealed in
cognitive and achievement tests have direct
real-world application to the students classroom
performance.
6Inference as a Reasoning Tool
- inference
- The act or process of deriving logical
conclusions from premises known or assumed to be
true. - -The American Heritage Dictionary
7Learning Disabilities Medical Model
- Traditionally, disability is viewed as a
deficit that resides within the individual, the
severity of which might be influenced, but not
created, by contextual variables. (Vaughn
Fuchs, 2003)
8Learning Disabilities Medical Model
- Underlying premise-that LD is a medical
condition - LD is explained as a neurological condition that
impacts on learning. Because LD is a physical,
within-child condition, it is unlikely that
changes in classroom instruction will
significantly improve academic performance - A formal battery of tests can diagnose LD,
largely in isolation from classroom information - Based on the profile of needs uncovered by
testing results, specific treatments can be
prescribed to help the student learn - These treatments are highly likely to be
effective, making it unnecessary to measure their
impact
9Discrepancy Model Limitations
- Some possible limitations to the 'discrepancy
model - is built upon a high-inference assumption (that
LD is best explained as a medical condition) - requires chronic school failure before special
education supports can be given - fails to consider that outside factors such as
poor or inconsistent instruction may contribute
to a child's learning delays
10Response-to-Intervention (RTI) Model
- LD identified as follows
- Schools identify children experiencing
significant academic delays, - match them up with scientific, research-based
interventions, - and monitor these students' progress.
- A child's failure to respond positively to
several carefully selected, well-implemented
interventions could then be viewed as evidence
that the student has a learning disability and
requires special education services.
11Learning Disabilities RTI
- Underlying premise-that LD is an interaction
between child and instructional environment - Student academic deficits can best be gauged by
observing the child engage in tasks from
classroom curriculum and reviewing work products - Interventions are a quasi-experiment (no
assurance a priori that the intervention will
actually benefit the student) - Ongoing progress-monitoring is required to
document response to intervention - LD is diagnosed when all competing external
explanations for poor student performance (e.g.,
inadequate instruction) are ruled out
12RTI Model Limitations
- Some possible limitations to the
Response-To-Intervention Model (Vaughn Fuchs,
2003) - Has arbitrary cutpoint on a continuum of
non-responding - Interventions and monitoring procedures have not
been fully validated across grade levels - Lacks clear guidelines for when enough is
enough in intervention efforts
13Curriculum Train
14Instructional Variables What Difference Does a
Teacher Make?
- Statistician Dr. Richard Sanders analyzed
longitudinal data from Tennessee state
assessmentsby teacher and by student - Findings
15- Three consecutive years of first quintile
(least-effective) teachers in grades three-five
yield math scores from the 35th to 45th
percentile. Conversely, three straight years of
fifth quintile (most-effective) teachers result
in scores at the 85th to 95th percentile. - --USA Today, 2001 (Publication of the Society
for the Advancement of Education)
16Solving Student Academic or Behavioral Problems
A Four-Part Model
17- RTI a process that determines if the
student responds to scientific, research-based
intervention
The devil is in the details!
18Dual-Discrepancy RTI Model of Learning
Disability (Fuchs 2003)
19RTI School-Wide Three-Tier Framework
(Kovaleski, 2003)
Tier III Long-Term Programming for Students Who
Fail to Respond to Tier II Interventions (e.g.,
Special Education)
20Tier II Non-Responders to Universally
Available Instructional Support (Fuchs et al.,
2003 Kovaleski, 2003)
- Tier II assistance can be provided through
- Team-based support to the classroom teacher, or
- A short-term course of pull-out intervention
that is based on a standard protocol of
empirically validated instructional treatments
e.g., peer tutoring with fluency-building
procedures (Kovaleski, 2003)
21Curriculum-Based Measurement RTI
22http//www.interventioncentral.org/htmdocs/interv
entions/cbmwarehouse.shtml
23Using Data for Intervention (RTI) Team Referrals
Teacher Referral
Initial Meeting Held
Follow-Up Meeting Held
Intervention Started Monitored
24Formative Assessment to Monitor Response to
Intervention
- Definition Ongoing assessment of progress
toward a long-term or major objective. - Example Curriculum-Based Measurement in Reading
Fluency or Math Computation
25Formative Assessment Advantages
- Provides teacher with pulse measures ongoing
information about student progress - Permits teacher to see direct impact of teaching
strategies on student performance - Allows teacher to create local norms against
which to compare the academic performance of a
target student - Prevents instructor from spending too much time,
effort on strategies that are ineffective
26(No Transcript)
27 Curriculum-Based Measurement Defining
Characteristics
- Tests preselected objectives from local
curriculum - Has standardized directions for administration
- Is timed, yielding fluency, accuracy scores
- Uses objective, standardized, quick guidelines
for scoring - Permits charting and teacher feedback
28 CBM Techniques have been developed to assess
- Reading fluency
- Math computation
- Writing
- Spelling
- Phonemic awareness skills
29Implementing The RTI Model Next Steps for Schools
30Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Adopt evidence-based intervention strategies.
Academic interventions will have a higher chance
of success if they are based on sound empirical
research.
31Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Web resources for evidence-based intervention
strategies - Big Ideas in Beginning Reading (U of
Oregon)reading.uoregon.edu - What Works Clearinghouse (US Dept of Education)
www.w-w-c.org - Intervention Central www.interventioncentral.org
32Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Train staff to collect frequent
progress-monitoring data. Curriculum-based
measurement (CBM) can be used to assess a
students accuracy and speed in basic-skill areas
such as reading fluency, math computation,
writing, spelling, and pre-literacy skills.
Teachers also can measure the behavior of
struggling learners on a daily basis by using
classroom behavior report cards simple,
convenient rating forms to track a childs work
completion, attention to task, compliance with
teacher directions, and other behaviors that
influence learning.
33Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Web resources for progress-monitoring
- CBM Warehouse www.interventioncentral.org/htmdocs
/interventions/cbmwarehouse.shtml - The Behavior Reporter (Behavior Report Card
Generator) http//www.jimwrightonline.com/php/tb
rc/tbrc.php
34Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Develop building-level intervention programs to
address common academic concerns. When faced with
large numbers of students with shared academic
concerns (e.g., reading fluency), schools can
create a building-level intervention program to
meet this need. For example, older children could
tutor younger students by using simple,
research-based techniques to boost their tutees
reading fluency.
35Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Web resource for a building-level intervention
program peer-tutoring/reading fluency - Kids as Reading Helpers Peer Tutoring
Manualwww.interventioncentral.org/htmdocs/inter
ventions/rdngfluency/prtutor.shtml
36Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Establish a building intervention team. Made up
of teachers and support staff, the intervention
team can help referring teachers design feasible
strategies for struggling students.
Intervention teams also foster a sense of
collegiality and mutual support among educators,
promote the use of evidence-based interventions,
and assist busy teachers in carrying out
intervention plans.
37Strategies to Minimize Teacher Resistance to
Classroom Interventions (Kovaleski, 2003)
- Collaborative team problem-solving process in
which the referring teacher is an active and
equal participant - Peer-coaching format for introducing
intervention to classroom--with modeling of
intervention for teacher - Ongoing consultation with referring teacher to
embed intervention into classroom routine
38Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Web resources on building intervention teams
- Screening to Enhance Educational Performance
STEEP (Joe Witt, Ph.D.)http//www.joewitt.org/st
eep.htm - Instructional Consultation Teams (Sylvia
Rosenfield, Ph.D.)http//www.icteams.umd.edu/ - School-Based Intervention Teams (Syracuse City
Schools)http//www.interventioncentral.org/htmdo
cs/interventions/sbit.shtml
39Implementing RTI Next Steps
- Align Current Intervention Assessment Efforts
With 3-Tier Model. Many schools already have
intervention assessment initiatives in place.
Mapping out those initiatives, standardizing
their content, and tying them to the appropriate
level of the 3-tier intervention framework can
help schools to better coordinate intervention
programming.
40RTI Response By Levels Examples
Tier I
Tier II
Tier III
41References
- Fuchs, D., Mock, D., Morgan, P.L., Young, C.L.
(2003). Responsiveness-to-Intervention
Definitions, evidence, and implications for the
learning disability construct. Learning
Disabilities Research Practice, 18(3), 157-171. - Fuchs, L. (2003). Assessing intervention
responsiveness Conceptual and technical issues.
Learning Disabilities Research Practice, 18(3),
172-186. - Kovaleski, J. F. (2003). The three-tier model of
identifying learning disabilities Critical
program features and system issues. Paper
presented at the National Research Center on
Learning Disabilities Responsiveness-to-Interventi
on Symposium, Kansas City, MO. - Vaughn, S., Fuchs, L.S. (2003). Redefining
learning disabilities as inadequate response to
instruction The promise and potential problems.
Learning Disabilities Research Practice, 18(3),
137-146.