1、Academic Literacy Community of Practice Webinar #5:,Current and Ongoing Research on Academic Literacy in a Secondary RTI ContextHosted by the Center on Instruction June 10, 2010,Funded by U.S. Department of Education,The Center on Instruction is operated by RMC Research Corporation in partnership wi
2、th the Florida Center for Reading Research at Florida State University; Instructional Research Group; the Texas Institute for Measurement, Evaluation, and Statistics at the University of Houston; and The Meadows Center for Preventing Educational Risk at the University of Texas at Austin. The content
3、s of this PowerPoint were developed under cooperative agreement S283B050034 with the U.S. Department of Education. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policy of the Department of Education, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government. 2010 The Center on Instr
4、uction requests that no changes be made to the content or appearance of this product. To download a copy of this document, visit www.centeroninstruction.org,Center on Instruction Staff,Angela Penfold, Director Ruth Dober, Deputy Director of Communications Andrea Reade, Research Associate Mabel River
5、a, Deputy Director (ELL Strand) Debby Miller, Deputy Director (Reading Strand) Christy Murray, Deputy Director (Special Ed Strand) Erika Soucy, Technical Assistance,Academic Literacy Webinar Series Schedule of Events,Todays Agenda,Formal presentation Question and answer session Evaluation,Funded by
6、U.S. Department of Education,Current and Ongoing Research on Academic Literacy in a Secondary RTI Context Greg Roberts, Ph. D University of Texas at Austin The Meadows Center for Preventing Educational Risk June 10, 2010,Why Focus on Academic Literacy?,Too many students still struggle with reading C
7、ontent area texts place increasing demands on already struggling students Renewed sense of urgency and new federal requirements/expectations: Common Core Standards Four ARRA priority areas Federal initiatives,COI Academic Literacy Community of Practice,Presented latest research in a variety of areas
8、 from a variety of academic perspectivesEffective science and social studies instruction for ELLs Teaching students how to read social studies and history texts Content-literacy continuum Academic Language for ELLs,NOW WHAT?,How do we help content-area teachers help students? How do we begin to rais
9、e achievement for the students who struggle the most in middle and high schools? How do we make all students “college and career-ready?”,Todays Objectives,Present basic info on RTI at the secondary level Review ongoing research efforts on instructional components of RTI Present what we know about ef
10、fective instruction and intervention for adolescents Discuss some challenges with implementing RTI at the secondary level,RTI in Secondary Schools vs. Elementary Schools,SAME critical components: Core Instruction Universal Screening Ongoing Progress Monitoring Tiered Interventions Data-Based Decisio
11、n Making,(National High School Center, National Center on Response to Intervention, & Center on Instruction, 2010),RTI in Secondary Schools vs. Elementary Schools,DIFFERENT purpose(s) Remediation of academic difficulties (vs. prevention of academic difficulties) Prevention of high school dropout Inc
12、reased academic performance and graduation rates Increased attendance Note: RTI for the purpose of LD identification MAY apply at the secondary level, but high schools do not seem focused on this.,(National High School Center, National Center on Response to Intervention, & Center on Instruction, 201
13、0),RTI in Secondary Schools vs. Elementary Schools,DIFFERENT implementation strategies and challenges How do we handle course credits? How do we schedule interventions? Where can we find appropriate screening/progress monitoring tools What kind of intervention strategies are most effective and where
14、 can we find materials?,(National High School Center, National Center on Response to Intervention, & Center on Instruction, 2010),Research on Secondary RTI,Proposed as a POSSIBLE framework for increasing student outcomes No firm evidence that RTI (as a framework) is effective or ineffective,What we
15、DONT know,Is RTI a powerful enough framework and strategy to significantly reduce the achievement gaps of students who are the furthest behind? What is the best way to allocate school resources to achieve the largest gain amongst struggling students?,What we DO know,Research exists on effective inst
16、ructional strategies for older students,Eight Elements of High School Improvement,Rigorous Curriculum and Instruction Teacher Effectiveness Stakeholder Engagement Organization and Structure,Assessment and Accountability Student and Family Supports Leadership and Governance Resources for Sustainabili
17、ty,(National High School Center, 2008 & 2010),Some Current and Ongoing Research Efforts in RTI at the Secondary Level,CREATE Project Texas Center for Learning Disabilities (TCLD) Florida Center for Reading Research (FCRR) Education and Brain Research Program at Kennedy Krieger Institute,CREATE Proje
18、ct,Center for Research on the Educational Achievement and Teaching of English Language Learners www.cal.org/create Addressing the challenges of educating English language learners (Grades 4-8) and focused on instruction in science and social studies classrooms Develop research-based interventions Te
19、st these interventions using controlled experiments/randomized field trials with classroom teachers Combine them into a comprehensive package Test the effectiveness of the combined package using randomized experiments,Texas Center for Learning Disabilities (TCLD),www.texasldcenter.org Investigating
20、the classification, early intervention, and remediation of learning disabilities Project I- Classification Project II Early Intervention (elementary school students) Project III Remediation (middle school students) Project IV Magnetic Source Imaging,Funded by U.S. Department of Education,Florida Cen
21、ter for Reading Research (FCRR),www.fcrr.org Conducting research on reading, reading growth, reading assessment, and reading instruction that will contribute to the scientific knowledge of reading Disseminating information about research-based practices related to literacy instruction and assessment
22、 for children in pre-school through 12th grade “Home” of the Reading Strand of the Center on Instruction,Funded by U.S. Department of Education,Education and Brain Research Program at Kennedy Krieger Institute,www.readingresearch.kennedykrieger.org Investigating the educational and neurobiological u
23、nderpinnings of reading disabilities in adolescents Learning Disabilities Research Center Project I: Reading Comprehension: Sources of Difficulty and Neurocognitive Correlates Project II: Validity of Response-to-Intervention for Identifying Reading Disability beyond the Primary Grades Project III: T
24、he Effects of ADHD (Beyond Decoding Accuracy) on Reading Fluency and Comprehension Project IV: Prevalence of Reading Difficulties: Fourth through Eighth Grade,Effective Instruction Across the Tiers,What does effective Tier 1 instruction look like?What kind of intervention strategies are most effecti
25、ve with students in middle and high school?,Tier 1: What Level of Support Can Content-Area Teachers Provide to Struggling Readers?,Content-area teachers are not necessarily teachers of reading. However, there are some simple strategies that can be embedded in all classrooms and integrated with the t
26、eaching of conceptual and domain knowledge in content-area classrooms that SUPPORT reading.,Tier 1: Features of Effective Instruction Across All Content Areas,Provide explicit instruction and supportive practice in the use of effective comprehension strategies Increase the amount and quality of disc
27、ussion of content Establish high standards for text, conversation, questions, & vocabulary Increase motivation and engagement with reading Teach essential content knowledge,(Torgesen et al., 2007),Content-area teachers can,Have students record major milestones of the Civil War on a timeline while re
28、ading a chapter in their history book Pre-teach the most important vocabulary words through simple definitions, examples and non-examples before reading a new chapter Hold meaningful student discussions about character development to support understanding while reading a novel Teach students specifi
29、c strategies for identifying the main idea and writing summaries Provide students with texts written about the same topic but written from three different perspectives and teach them to critique and analyze the writers intent,Additional Tier 1 Resources,Center on Instruction Resources Bringing Liter
30、acy Strategies into Content Instruction Brand New! Effective Instruction for Adolescent Struggling Readers: A Practice Brief Effective Instruction for Adolescent Struggling Readers PD Module Adolescent Literacy Resources: An Annotated Bibliography Academic Literacy Instruction for Adolescents Series
31、 of Academic Literacy webinars Instructional Models and Strategies for Teaching English Language Learners Language Development for English Language Learners Professional Development ModuleAll available on www.centeroninstruction.org NOTE: Math and Science resources are also available on the COI webs
32、ite,Other Resources Doing What Works website www.dww.org Improving Adolescent Literacy: Effective Classroom and Intervention Practices (IES Practice Guide) http:/ies.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=WWC20084027,Academic Interventions,SOME students will need more support than what can be provided
33、by a general education teacher in the content-area classLack of research on interventions in specific middle and high school content areas (algebra, chemistry, economics, etc.)Some research on more intensive reading interventions for older students Much of this research focuses only on grades 6 - 9
34、even though we apply it to grades 4 - 12.,What Kind of Support Can Specialized Teachers Provide to Struggling Readers?,Specialized teachers (e.g., intervention teachers, reading specialists, special education teachers) can use strategies with struggling students during small-group instruction or int
35、ervention classes. Specialized teachers can also coordinate with content-area teachers to provide guidance on instructional strategies that may assist struggling readers in their content-area classes as they learn to read expository text.,Intensive Reading Interventions,Fundamental principle: Instru
36、ction must simultaneously improve reading levels while also providing access to a range of genres of print (e.g. information text)Reading interventions can be conceptualized in terms of “layers”,(Reed & Vaughn, 2010),Layers of Reading Interventions From Reed & Vaughn, 2010,Phonemic Awareness/Phonics
37、 Interventions,Applies to the smallest percentage of students beyond grade 3 Direct instruction of phonemes and graphemes supplemented with high-frequency sight words and irregular words Provide many practice opportunities that incorporate specific feedback and self-correction strategies,(Reed & Vau
38、ghn, 2010),Structural Analysis Interventions,Appropriate for students who have adequate phonological processing and decoding single-syllable words but cannot read multisyllable words quickly and accurately Focus on identifying syllable types, morphemes, syllabic analysis Practice generalizing skills
39、,(Reed & Vaughn, 2010),Fluency Interventions,VERY limited research with high school students Instruction should include: Prosodic features of language Expert modeling of fluent reading Opportunities for students to apply skills to authentic texts through assisted and repeated readings (not to exceed
40、 three repetitions) Immediate instructional feedback related to students individual goals for rate, accuracy, and expressions,(Reed & Vaughn, 2010),Narrative Text Comprehension Interventions,Appropriate for students who have not acquired an awareness of narrative stories structural pattern Instructi
41、on should include: Explicit instruction on story grammar, identifying main ideas and themes Collaborative work with peers to read and summarize text Students have difficulties generalizing knowledge to unfamiliar texts and novel situations,(Reed & Vaughn, 2010),Expository Text Comprehension Interven
42、tions,Worthwhile components of instruction include:,Summarizing Paraphrasing Self-questioning Reciprocal teaching Strategy generalization Building background knowledge Self-monitoring,Semantic mapping Visual displays Mnemonic illustrations Text structure identification Cognitive mapping Identifying
43、main ideas,(Reed & Vaughn, 2010),Vocabulary Interventions,Most effective strategies include: Semantic maps Semantic feature analysis Fostering relational connections Word associations Mneumonic pictures,(Reed & Vaughn, 2010),Academic Engagement,Students report being more engaged when teachers: Do mo
44、re listening than talking Make material personally relevant Allow some choice in texts or strategies Genuinely respond to student questions or opinions Set an appropriate level of challenge Explain the purpose of activities and goals for the lesson,Additional Resources on Academic Interventions,Cent
45、er on Instruction Resources Interventions for Adolescent Struggling Readers: A Meta-Analysis with Implications for Practice Effective Instruction for Adolescent Struggling Readers PD Module Academic Literacy Instruction for Adolescents A Summary of Nine Key Studies: Multi-Tier Intervention and Respo
46、nse to Interventions for Students Struggling in Mathematics Effective Language and Reading Interventions for English Language Learners and English Language Learners with DisabilitiesAll available on www.centeroninstruction.org,Other Resources Doing What Works website www.dww.org Improving Adolescent
47、 Literacy: Effective Classroom and Intervention Practices (IES Practice Guide) http:/ies.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=WWC20084027 Key syntheses and meta-analyses Edmonds et al., 2009 Scammacca et al., 2007 Wexler et al., 2008 Florida Center for Reading Research-www.fcrr.org Meadows Center for
48、 Preventing Educational Risk-www.meadowscenter.org,High School Tiered Interventions Initiative (HSTII),Collaboration among three national technical assistance centers Center on Instruction www.centeroninstruction.orgNational Center on Response to Intervention www.rti4success.orgNational High School
49、Center www.betterhighschools.orgGoal is to enhance the understanding of how tiered intervention models are emerging in high schools,Factors that Support Implementation of the Essential Components,Leadership Intervention Providers Professional Development/Coaching Evaluation(National High School Cent
50、er, National Center on Response to Intervention, & Center on Instruction, 2010),Common Implementation Challenges,Staff Capacity Scheduling Resources Fidelity(National High School Center, National Center on Response to Intervention, & Center on Instruction, 2010),Additional Resources on RTI in Middle and High Schools,
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