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RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

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RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention. Organization. Overall structure. RtII occurs during designated times Some students work in skill-based groups Other students work on enrichment activities. Management of Skill Groups. 3-5 students in skill-based groups - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

RtIIResponse to Instruction and

Intervention

Page 2: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Organization

Page 3: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Overall structure

RtII occurs during designated times

Some students work in skill-based groups

Other students work on enrichment activities.

Page 4: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Management of Skill Groups

3-5 students in skill-based groups

Groups meet at least 3 days per week

Students may move across the hall in order to join a specific skill group in another classroom

Skill groups are taught by classroom teachers, learning support teachers, Title I teachers, instructional aides, and specialists.

Page 5: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Forming Groups

Page 6: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

How are RtII groups formed?

•Data is analyzed by all teachers to help determine instructional groups.

•Some students may need back-testing (This is done by the Instructional Coach or Title I teacher.)

•The Instructional Coach will assist in forming RtII groups by matching students with similar needs into groups.

Page 7: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Are all students in a group?

No

This is a designated time where teachers can hone in on a specific skill(s) that students need to remediate in order to become proficient readers.

Page 8: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

So what are the “other” students doing?

Students not assigned to an RtII group may be in their seats working (independently, with a partner, or in a small group) on enrichment activities.

Gifted support teacher may offer suggestions for enrichment lessons for students

Page 9: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Instruction

It is important that you:

know and understand the

specific focus/goal(s) of your

RtII group.

Page 10: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Planning / Instruction

Teachers: classroom, Title I, learning support, and the coach all participate in developing and sharing lessons (plans and materials).

Page 11: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Assessments

Page 12: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Progress Monitoring

Students are progress monitored frequently to ensure instruction is working. (Frequency is determined by severity)

Title I and learning support teachers work together to

progress monitor students.

This data is shared with the classroom teachers, and then used to refine groups.

Page 13: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

How are groups refined?

During morning PLC meetings, in conversations led by the Instructional Coach, data (mostly progress monitoring data) is presented, discussed, and used to refine either:

teacher’s focus/goalstudent placementInstructionmaterials.

If little progress is evident, check your instruction and materials.

Page 14: RtII Response to Instruction and Intervention

Get to know the DIBELS assessments, language, and benchmark goals.

I ’m excited for you to experience this journey.

Final thoughts…