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RtI Family & Community Partnering Sample Stakeholder “Back-to School” Slides

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RtI Family & Community Partnering Sample Stakeholder “Back-to School” Slides
RtI Family & Community
Partnering
Sample Stakeholder “Back-to
School” Slides
2009-2010 School Year
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Purpose of Sample Slides
• As of August 15, 2009, all schools in Colorado must be
implementing a Response-to-Intervention (RtI) process as one
criterion in the identification of students with specific learning
disabilities.
• A “best practices” recommendation is that information about an
individual school’s specific RtI model be shared with all families
at the first of the school year. Specifically, it can be helpful to
share about screening, interventions, monitoring, tiers, and the
family role. Then if a child begins to struggle, a family is aware
of the tiered process in place at the school and how to work with
teachers.
• The following slides provide general background information
developed by the Colorado Department of Education. These
may be helpful to schools as they share RtI information with
their communities - in conjunction with specific school/district
details.
• Additional RtI family and community resources and tools can be
found at http://www.cde.state.co.us/rti/Family.htm.
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
2009-2010 School Year
{School Welcome, Specifics etc….}
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
RtI Defined
The overarching purpose
of RtI implementation
is to improve educational
outcomes for all students.
RtI in Colorado
Response to Intervention is an
approach that promotes a wellintegrated system connecting
general, compensatory, gifted, and
special education in providing high
quality, standards-based instruction
& intervention that is matched to
students’ academic, socialemotional, and behavioral needs.
A continuum of evidence-based,
tiered interventions with increasing
levels of intensity and duration is
central to RtI.
Collaborative educational decisions
are based on data derived from
frequent monitoring of student
performance and rate of learning.
(CDE, 2008b)
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Core Colorado RtI Principles
We Believe…
• ALL children can learn and achieve high standards as a result of effective
teaching.
• All students must have access to a rigorous, standards-based curriculum and
research-based instruction.
• Intervening at the earliest indication of need is necessary for student success
(Pre K-12).
• A comprehensive system of tiered interventions is essential for addressing the
full range of student needs.
• Student results are improved when ongoing academic and behavioral
performance data are used to inform instructional decisions.
(CDE, 2008b)
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Core Colorado RtI Principles
• Collaboration among educators, families, and community
members is the foundation to effective problem-solving and
instructional decision-making
• Ongoing and meaningful involvement of families increases
student success
• All members of the school community must continue to gain
knowledge and develop expertise in order to build capacity and
sustainability.
• Effective leadership at all levels is crucial for the implementation
of RtI.
(CDE, 2008b)
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Six Essential Components of
Colorado RtI
•
•
•
•
•
•
Leadership
Curriculum & Instruction
Problem-Solving Process
Progress Monitoring
School Culture & Climate
Family and Community Engagement
(CDE, 2008b)
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
RtI Sample Family
Slides CDE 4/09
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Colorado RtI Video
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
School Specifics
• {Universal tier operations, standard
prescribed interventions, teacher and
family communication, problem-solving
team name and process…}
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
RtI Problem-Solving Team and
Process
• When a student is struggling and needs targeted or intensive
intervention to succeed, a team of family members, teachers,
and specialists works to:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Identify and prioritize concerns
Develop shared measurable goals
Plan prescriptive interventions
Progress monitor
Evaluate effectiveness
Move students up and down tiers as needed
Refer for possible special education consideration if insufficient progress
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Problem-Solving Process
DEFINE
Directly Measure Behavior/Skill
EVALUATE
ANALYZE
Response to
Intervention
Validate Problem
Identify Contributing
Variables
IMPLEMENT
Develop Plan and Implement as Intended
Progress Monitor and Modify as Necessary
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Roles on Problem-Solving Team
• Facilitator
• Recorder
• Case Manager/Designated Consultant/
Coach
• Interventionist
• Progress Monitoring/Data Specialist
• Family Member
• Student (if appropriate)
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Family Role in Problem-Solving
Process
• Collaborate & communicate with teachers about student.
• Share information about child and family as appropriate.
• Support student learning at home.
• Attend problem-solving team meeting, if possible. If attending
isn’t possible, it is important to communicate before and after a
meeting. Partner in intervention planning and monitoring.
• Participate in decisions for any assessment and/or referral for
special education evaluation.
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Prescribing Interventions
• Interventions are prescribed based on data and resource
availability.
• About research-based instructional practice or interventions:
– are found to be reliable, trustworthy, and valid based on evidence
– ongoing documentation and analysis of student outcomes helps to
define effective practice
– in the absence of evidence, the instruction/intervention must be
considered “best practices” based on available research and
professional literature.
(CDE RtI Practitioner’s Guide to Implementation, 2008)
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Baselines and Goals
• What is the baseline, present level of performance,
current status?
– What is the number?
• What is OUR measurable goal, outcome, target?
– Is the goal observable?
– Is the goal measurable/quantifiable? Can it be counted?
– Is the goal both ambitious and realistic
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Monitoring Progress
• Progress monitoring is a research-based practice that
regularly (weekly, biweekly, or monthly) measures
students’ academic or behavioral progress in order to
evaluate the effectiveness of teaching practices and
to make informed instructional decisions. Progress
monitoring becomes more frequent with the intensity
of the intervention. The same tool is used over time.
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Families, Students and
Educators are“On the Team”
On a football team, every player has a job to do and a role
to play. Each player is respected for his/her unique
expertise. Each player practices and works to become
better at executing personal responsibilities. The team
works together to obtain the best results possible.
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
Families, Students, and
Educators are“At the Table”
Picture a table where people are discussing a problem.
– Respecting and listening
– Understanding different perspectives
– Focusing on positive outcomes
– Disagreeing at times
– Intentionally working to compromise
Each involved party has a place “at the table”, even if he/she
can’t attend. All voices are heard.
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
“…No matter how skilled professionals are, nor
how loving families are, each cannot achieve
alone, what the parties, working hand-in-hand,
can accomplish together.”
(Adapted from Peterson and Cooper as cited by the Futures in School
Psychology Task Force on Family-School Partnerships, 2007)
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
For More Information…
Please contact {your child’s teacher,
administrator…} for more information
about our Response-to-Intervention
(RtI) framework or if you have concerns
about your student.
Sample RtI Stakeholder Slides
CDE 6/09
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