Summary
Contents
Subject index
A straightforward, how-to guide to creating a school-wide RTI team and implementing RTI, Response to Intervention: Basic Steps to Campus Implementation fills a gap in the RTI literature. Books on the topic range from broadly theoretical to single-student intervention strategies, but no single volume exits that presents in clear, accessible language exactly how a school should set up their RTI team, how that team will facilitate teacher training, and how to support instruction and assessment within the RTI framework, complete with tools. Extensive in its coverage and logically organized, this book will be an essential and accessible guide for any school implementing RTI. Key Selling Points • You've read about RTI, maybe you've received some training, and you're primed for implementation…now what? Response to Intervention: Basic Steps to Campus Implementation walks school administrators and other RTI team members through basic RTI program development with ready-to-use, step-by-step processes and implementation tools. • You've started to implement RTI but you've hit a roadblock. Your approach lacks cohesion, with the primary focus being placed on instruction, intervention, and student monitoring without the foundational administrative support. This book will give your RTI program the reboot it needs, helping educational leaders clearly define the crucial structure of the RTI program to ensure its success and longevity. • But why do you have to implement RTI at all? Because it has been shown to be the most effective method of improving student achievement and identifying struggling learners. This book puts the focus back where it belong, on the students.
Forms and Documentation Examples
Forms and Documentation Examples
Documentation of student information and progress can be very frustrating, if the RTI committee is not sure what is needed. However, in the previous chapters, interventions and tier levels are discussed, and examples are given. This information is the meat of what is used for documentation. Although RTI is not intended to be used only for special education referral, it is necessary to provide the documentation throughout a student's RTI history in order to truly determine if a student is in need of special education services that cannot be provided in the regular education curriculum. The supporting documentation needed for RTI includes research-based interventions used, assessment screenings, progress monitors, the frequency of the programs used, the duration ...
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