Tiered Interventions and Evidence- Based Strategies for Improving Student Outcomes in High School

Similar documents
Implementing an Early Warning Intervention and Monitoring System to Keep Students On Track in the Middle Grades and High School

NDPC-SD Data Probes Worksheet

Early Warning System Implementation Guide

Every student absence jeopardizes the ability of students to succeed at school and schools to

RtI: Changing the Role of the IAT

A Framework for Safe and Successful Schools

California Professional Standards for Education Leaders (CPSELs)

MIDDLE SCHOOL. Academic Success through Prevention, Intervention, Remediation, and Enrichment Plan (ASPIRE)

Dr. John D. Barge, State School Superintendent. graduate!!

PSYC 620, Section 001: Traineeship in School Psychology Fall 2016

INTENSIVE LEVEL WRAPAROUND. Day 2

Your Guide to. Whole-School REFORM PIVOT PLAN. Strengthening Schools, Families & Communities

Implementing Response to Intervention (RTI) National Center on Response to Intervention

RtI Meeting 9/24/2012. # (Gabel)

Positive Learning Environment

NTU Student Dashboard

Gifted & Talented. Dyslexia. Special Education. Updates. March 2015!

Restorative Practices In Iowa Schools: A local panel presentation

Peaceful School Bus Program

This document contains materials are intended as resources for the

South Peace Campus Student Code of Conduct. dcss.sd59.bc.ca th St., th St., (250) (250)

Section 1: Basic Principles and Framework of Behaviour

I. STATEMENTS OF POLICY

Manchester Essex Regional Schools District Improvement Plan Three Year Plan

The Talent Development High School Model Context, Components, and Initial Impacts on Ninth-Grade Students Engagement and Performance

Superintendent s 100 Day Entry Plan Review

About PACER PACER FACTS. What is PACER Center? Highlights from PACER programs:

Systemic Improvement in the State Education Agency

The 21st Century Principal

Lincoln School Kathmandu, Nepal

Second Step Suite and the Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child (WSCC) Model

SELF-ASSESSMENT EXTREMISM & RADICALISATION SELF-ASSESSMENT AND RISK ASSESSMENT

School Leadership Rubrics

BSP !!! Trainer s Manual. Sheldon Loman, Ph.D. Portland State University. M. Kathleen Strickland-Cohen, Ph.D. University of Oregon

Plans for Pupil Premium Spending

Alvin Elementary Campus Improvement Plan

Instructional Intervention/Progress Monitoring (IIPM) Model Pre/Referral Process. and. Special Education Comprehensive Evaluation.

Field Experience and Internship Handbook Master of Education in Educational Leadership Program

SPECIALIST PERFORMANCE AND EVALUATION SYSTEM

Getting Results Continuous Improvement Plan

NATIONAL CENTER FOR EDUCATION STATISTICS RESPONSE TO RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE NATIONAL ASSESSMENT GOVERNING BOARD AD HOC COMMITTEE ON.

Faculty Feedback User s Guide

IUPUI Office of Student Conduct Disciplinary Procedures for Alleged Violations of Personal Misconduct

Running Head GAPSS PART A 1

Arlington Elementary All. *Administration observation of CCSS implementation in the classroom and NGSS in grades 4 & 5

WARREN COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS CUMULATIVE RECORD CHANGE CHANGE DATE: JULY 8, 2014 REVISED 11/10/2014

Learn & Grow. Lead & Show

INDEPENDENT STUDY PROGRAM

K-12 Academic Intervention Plan. Academic Intervention Services (AIS) & Response to Intervention (RtI)

A Compendium of Practice & Findings

Expanded Learning Time Expectations for Implementation

SHARED LEADERSHIP. Building Student Success within a Strong School Community

University of South Florida 1

Clarkstown Central School District. Response to Intervention & Academic Intervention Services District Plan

1110 Main Street, East Hartford, CT Tel: (860) Fax: (860)

Data-Based Decision Making: Academic and Behavioral Applications

Pierce County Schools. Pierce Truancy Reduction Protocol. Dr. Joy B. Williams Superintendent

JANIE HODGE, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Special Education 225 Holtzendorff Clemson University

DISCIPLINE PROCEDURES FOR STUDENTS IN CHARTER SCHOOLS Frequently Asked Questions. (June 2014)

Laura A. Riffel

Strategy Brief, March, Ann O Connor, Reece L. Peterson & Jenna Strawhun, University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

ACCREDITATION STANDARDS

NORTH CAROLINA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Policy Manual

CURRENT POSITION: Angelo State University, San Angelo, Texas

Village Extended School Program Monrovia Unified School District. Cohort 1 ASES Program since 1999 Awarded the Golden Bell for program excellence

Approval Authority: Approval Date: September Support for Children and Young People

School Balanced Scorecard 2.0 (Single Plan for Student Achievement)

Coping with Crisis Helping Children With Special Needs

Effectiveness and Successful Program Elements of SOAR s Afterschool Programs

Safe & Civil Schools Series Overview

1GOOD LEADERSHIP IS IMPORTANT. Principal Effectiveness and Leadership in an Era of Accountability: What Research Says

The Oregon Literacy Framework of September 2009 as it Applies to grades K-3

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Online courses for credit recovery in high schools: Effectiveness and promising practices. April 2017

Emerald Coast Career Institute N

A Systems Approach to Principal and Teacher Effectiveness From Pivot Learning Partners

Executive Summary. Abraxas Naperville Bridge. Eileen Roberts, Program Manager th St Woodridge, IL

Guide for Fieldwork Educators

Executive Summary. Osan High School

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Exceptional Student Education Monitoring and Assistance On-Site Visit Report. Sarasota County School District April 25-27, 2016

Power of Ten Leadership Academy Class Curriculum

Katy Independent School District Davidson Elementary Campus Improvement Plan

Recent advances in research and. Formulating Secondary-Level Reading Interventions

SY School Performance Plan

Scholastic Leveled Bookroom

2016 School Performance Information

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra, by Elayn Martin-Gay, Second Custom Edition for Los Angeles Mission College. ISBN 13:

London School of Economics and Political Science. Disciplinary Procedure for Students

BSW Student Performance Review Process

ANNUAL SCHOOL REPORT SEDA COLLEGE SUITE 1, REDFERN ST., REDFERN, NSW 2016

The School Discipline Process. A Handbook for Maryland Families and Professionals

Special Educational Needs and Disabilities

Section 6 DISCIPLINE PROCEDURES

Welcome to the session on ACCUPLACER Policy Development. This session will touch upon common policy decisions an institution may encounter during the

Intensive English Program Southwest College

STUDENT ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATION POLICY

Prevent Teach Reinforce

MSW Field Placement Manual Foundation and Advanced

Identifying Students with Specific Learning Disabilities Part 3: Referral & Evaluation Process; Documentation Requirements

Xenia Community Schools Board of Education Goals. Approved May 12, 2014

Transcription:

Tiered Interventions and Evidence- Based Strategies for Improving Student Outcomes in High School Strand 6-Transition Application of Transition Strategies in Tiered Interventions David R. Johnson, Ph.D. February 25, 2010 Charleston, South Carolina 1

What is Check & Connect? Check & Connect is a comprehensive intervention designed to enhance students engagement at school and with learning. How Did Check & Connect Begin? 1990: Five-year development grant from the U.S. Department of Education, OSEP Purpose: Develop, implement, evaluate, and refine an intervention for reducing dropout rates among middle school youth with disabilities (LD and EBD specifically) Partnership for School Success - Planned with Minneapolis School District Personnel - Implemented with 2 cohorts of students over 2 years 2

Research Designs and Evidence Treatment-control differences for secondary students with disabilities in longitudinal designs: Improved attendance Improved social skills, ratings, and homework completion Enrolled in school and making progress towards degree (credits earned) Higher graduation rates for five years Components of Check & Connect Check refers to systematically assessing students connection to school. Connect refers to the timely response or intervention based on students education needs. 3

Student Engagement Student engagement is the key to preventing dropout (Alexander, Entwisle, & Horsey, 1997) and is the bottom line in school completion programs. (Grannis, 1994) Student engagement is defined as commitment to and investment in learning, and identification and belonging at school, and is associated with desired academic, social, and emotional learning outcomes. Process of Engagement Ongoing Participation Participation Identification with School Successful Performance 4

Observable Indicators: Four Indicators of Student Engagement 1. Academic engagement (e.g., time on task, credit accrual, homework completion) 2. Behavioral engagement (e.g., attendance, suspensions, classroom participation) Internal Indicators: 3. Cognitive engagement (e.g., perceived relevance of schoolwork, goal setting) 4. Psychological engagement (e.g., identification with school, sense of belonging) (Christenson et al., 2007) Engagement is Influenced by Three Contextual Factors 1. School (e.g., school climate, quality of teacherstudent relationship, effective instruction in academic, social, and emotional learning areas) 2. Family (e.g., academic and motivational support for learning) 3. Peers (e.g., expectations to graduate among peers, social networks) 5

What do we mean by RTI? Response-to-intervention (RTI) integrates assessment and intervention within a multi-level prevention system to maximize student achievement and to reduce behavior problems. With RTI, schools identify students at risk for poor learning outcomes, monitor student progress, provide evidence-based interventions, and adjust the intensity and nature of those interventions depending on a student s responsiveness, and identify students with learning disabilities or other disabilities. RTI Components Screening Tiers of instruction Progress monitoring Fidelity indicators 6

Check & Connect Referral Criteria Alterable predictors Participation attendance e.g., absenteeism, skipping classes, tardiness to school Social Behavioral Performance e.g., suspensions from school, dismissals, other consequences for inappropriate behaviors Academic Performance e.g., credit accrual, course failures (literacy) The Pyramid of Interventions The Pyramid of Interventions Universal Targeted Tertiary Tertiary Interventions Targeted Interventions Universal Interventions 7

Universal (School-Level) Interventions: Recommendations from Research Personalize the learning environment and instructional process. (IES, 2008) Provide rigorous and relevant instruction to better engage students in learning and provide the skills needed to graduate and to serve them after they leave school. (IES, 2008) Create cultural/relevance include strategies that are appropriate to student background and culture. (Alexander, Entwisle, & Kabbani, 2001; Christenson, Sinclair, Lehr, & Hurley, 2000; Cleary & Peacock, 1998; Cotton & Conklin, 2001; Finn, 1993; Payne, 2005) Universal or School-Level of Intervention Examples Student advisory programs that monitor academic and social development of middle or high school students Deliberate outreach efforts to involve students in extracurricular activities Systematic school-wide positive discipline and behavioral support programs 8

Targeted Level of Intervention Targeted level provides more intensive supports to some students who have been identified as being at risk of dropping out of school. Disengaging from school may have begun as evidenced by low or failing grades, poor attendance, or suspensions. Approaches may be implemented with small groups and may include skill building focused on conflict resolution, academic tutoring, or social skills to address factors that are associated with increased risk of dropping out. Targeted Level of Interventions: Examples from Research Assign adult advocates to students at risk of dropping out. (IES, 2008) Provide academic support and enrichment to improve academic performance. (IES, 2008) Implement programs to improve students classroom behavior and social skills. (IES, 2008) 9

Tertiary Level of Intervention Indicated or intense the intervention addresses the needs of a small percentage or a few students who are at high risk and are showing clear signs of leaving school early. Students have multiple risk factors. Interventions are designed to remediate established problems and are typically highly individualized. Approaches may include wrap-around services, individual functional behavior analysis, individualized behavior management plans, or intensive mentoring programs. Check & Connect Consists of Four Components 1. A mentor who keeps education salient for students 10

Check & Connect Consists of Four Components 2. Systematic monitoring (the check component) Number of absences Number of tardies Number of suspensions Number of expulsions Number of behavioral referrals Number of failing classes Number of credits accrued Check & Connect Consists of Four Components: 3. Timely and individualized intervention (the connect component) Tutoring After school activities Homework help 11

Check & Connect Consists of Four Components: 4. Enhancing home-school communication and home support for learning Seven Elements of Check & Connect 1. Relationships: Mutual trust and open communication, nurtured through a long-term commitment that is focused on student s educational success. 2. Problem solving: Cognitive-behavioral approach to promote the acquisition of skills to resolve conflict constructively, encourage the search for solutions rather than a source of blame, and foster productive coping skills 3. Individualized, data-based intervention: Support that is tailored to individual students needs, based on level of engagement with school, associated influences of home and school, and the leveraging of local resources. 12

Seven Elements of Check & Connect 4. Affiliation with school and learning: Student access to and active participation in school-related activities and event. 5. Persistence-Plus: A persistent source of academic motivation, a continuity of familiarity with the youth and family, and a consistency in the message that education is important for your future. 6. A focus on alterable indicators of disengagement: Systematic check of warning signs of withdrawal (attendance, academic performance, behavior) that are readily available to school personnel and that can be altered through intervention. 7. Following students and families: Following highly mobile youth and families from school to school and program to program. Check & Connect Information For more information about Check & Connect, including training options, contact the Institute on Community Integration, 866-434-0010 or e-mail checkandconnect@umn.edu To order a Check & Connect Manual go to: http://ici.umn.edu/checkandconnect/ 13