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“Mellard and Johnson not only help us understand what RTI is and why we need it, they go the next step and tell us how to make it happen.”

—Joseph Jenkins, Professor of Special Education

University of Washington

“This is a richly informative book on a most important and timely topic to hundreds of thousands of practitioners, parents, and policy makers.”

—Doug Fuchs, Nicholas Hobbs Chair in Special Education and Human Development

Vanderbilt University

The nuts-and-bolts handbook for implementing RTI schoolwide!

Written by leading special education researchers with the National Research Center on Learning Disabilities and the University of Kansas, this comprehensive yet accessible reference provides administrators with practical guidelines for launching RTI in their schools. Highlighting the powerful role that RTI can play in prevention, early intervention, and determining eligibility for special services, the authors cover the three tiers of RTI, schoolwide screening, progress monitoring, and changes in school structures and individual staff roles. The text includes:

Site-based examples and student case studies; A discussion of the challenges to successful implementation; A section on frequently asked questions

RTI: A Practitioner's Guide to Implementing Response to Intervention is an invaluable resource that helps administrators increase the likelihood of success for students at risk and meet the requirements of NCLB, Reading First, and the reauthorization of IDEA 2004.

Tier 2: Intervention

Tier 2: Intervention

As described in Chapter 5, RTI is conceptualized as a multitiered service-delivery model of prevention and intervention. In this conceptualization, secondary intervention (hereafter referred to as Tier 2) represents a critical juncture in the RTI process. Along with the scientifically based instruction at Tier 1, Tier 2 forms the school's line of defense for reducing the number of students who are low performing or inappropriately referred for special education programs. Providing timely and evidence-based instructional strategies to students at risk can be the difference between those at-risk students successfully returning to the general education classroom or being referred for special education evaluation (Compton, Fuchs, Fuchs, & Bryant, 2006). Therefore, a well-designed and well-implemented Tier 2 is essential to RTI, disability ...

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