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El. knyga: Reading Intervention in the Primary Grades: A Common-Sense Guide to RTI

4.38/5 (16 ratings by Goodreads)
(Radford University, United States), (Radford University, United States), (Virginia Tech, United States)

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This guide describes planning, implementing, and evaluating small-group interventions for struggling readers in preschool through second grade using response to intervention (RTI), drawing on components already in place at schools. The authors provide suggestions for each phase of the RTI process that take time, money, and meeting students' needs into account, and include suggestions for procedures before and during the process, and routines, timelines, and interventions specific to the primary grades, as well as fidelity checklists. They describe the key concepts and procedures of RTI, its process and framework, key steps, and examples and tips for putting components into action; the instructional intervention plan for the primary grades, focusing on Tier 2 intervention; content-specific guidelines for addressing literacy needs in letter naming and letter sounds, blending letters/sounds together to form words, and fluency, with sample lesson plans and suggestions for monitoring progress; and the problem-solving process for students who continue to struggle. Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Recenzijos

"'Must' reading for all primary grade classroom teachers, reading specialists, and interventionists. The book presents common-sense ideas that will enable teachers to develop effective differentiated instruction for their students. It's clear that the authors have worked closely with schools and understand their topic well; they share workable solutions to challenges and issues in RTI implementation. Instructors will find this book a useful tool for helping future teachers understand how to teach foundational skills in the early grades."--Rita M. Bean, PhD, Department of Instruction and Learning (Emerita), University of Pittsburgh

"An excellent resource for schools that are building a culture of RTI. Teachers, administrators, and school leaders will find many tools and insights, plus answers to questions they didn't know they had. The discussions of goal setting and intervention lesson planning are especially helpful. This book will greatly support my conversations with the schools I serve."--Kristen Jones, MS, REACH Instructional Coach for Oklahoma

"This book is about developing for all students what the Common Core State Standards call the foundations of reading. It offers workable and effective approaches for helping primary grade learners master critical skills. The authors have certainly done their homework in translating theory and research into productive practice. Written in a readable, conversational style, the book enables practitioners to design instruction that is based on state-of-the-art knowledge and that will make a difference in students reading lives."--Timothy Rasinski, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Literacy Education, Kent State University

"Classroom teachers, reading specialists, and school psychologists will find this book useful because it is grounded in evidence-based theories of how children learn to read and best practices for teaching them. Rather than adopting a prescriptive, deficit-based, programmatic approach to RTI, the authors advocate meeting childrens literacy needs through high-quality instruction and collaboration across tiers of instructional support. How refreshing to have such a practical resource for the general education classroom."--Marcia Invernizzi, PhD, Edmund H. Henderson Professor Emerita, School of Education and Human Development, University of Virginia

"This highly practical book provides research-based strategies and resources for all steps of the RTI problem-solving framework. The authors' years of experience in classrooms are evident in their attention to the details that matter. They supply lesson plans, checklists, and explicit instructional strategies. This is the book you will reach for again and again when you are working with struggling readers (or their teachers) in the real world!"--Brooke Blanks, PhD, Special Education Program, Radford University -

1 Response to Intervention: Basic Concepts and Definitions
1(27)
Guiding Questions
1(1)
What RTI Is and Why It Emerged
2(7)
Overview of Basic RTI Terms
9(14)
RTI and the Common Core State Standards
23(5)
Conclusion
27(1)
2 Putting the RTI Steps into Action
28(23)
Guiding Questions
28(1)
The Importance of Leadership
29(1)
Putting the Steps into Action
30(21)
Conclusion
50(1)
3 The Primary Grades Intervention Lesson Plan
51(26)
Guiding Questions
51(2)
Essential Elements of an Intervention Lesson
53(24)
Conclusion
73(4)
4 Interventions for Letter Instruction
77(31)
Guiding Questions
77(2)
Letter Knowledge: What Does the Research Say about Instruction?
79(1)
Letter Knowledge on the Developmental Continuum
80(2)
Diagnostic Assessments to Inform Intervention Goals
82(3)
Determining the Focus of the Intervention
85(4)
Letter Intervention Activities
89(10)
Goal Setting and Progress Monitoring
99(1)
Evaluating Interventions
100(8)
Conclusion
104(4)
5 Interventions for Decoding and Phonemic Segmentation
108(39)
Guiding Questions
108(1)
What Does the Research Say about Decoding Instruction?
108(1)
Decoding on the Developmental Continuum
109(3)
Diagnostic Assessments to Inform Intervention Goals
112(8)
Determining the Focus of the Intervention
120(6)
Decoding Intervention Activities
126(8)
Goal Setting and Progress Monitoring
134(4)
Evaluating Interventions
138(9)
Conclusion
142(5)
6 Interventions for Fluency
147(45)
Guiding Questions
147(1)
Fluency: What Does the Research Say about Instruction?
148(4)
Fluency on the Developmental Continuum
152(3)
Diagnostic Assessments to Inform Intervention Goals
155(12)
Determining the Focus of the Intervention
167(6)
Intervention Activities
173(8)
Goal Setting and Progress Monitoring
181(1)
Evaluating Interventions
181(11)
Conclusion
186(6)
7 What to Do When Interventions Don't Work: Problem Solving
192(22)
Guiding Questions
192(1)
What Is Problem Solving in RTI Models?
193(2)
The Problem-Solving Team
195(1)
The Problem-Solving Process and Phases
196(18)
Conclusion
213(1)
References 214(5)
Index 219
Heidi Anne E. Mesmer, PhD, is Associate Professor of Literacy in the School of Education at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg. A former third-grade teacher, she has held tenure-track positions at Virginia Commonwealth University and Oklahoma State University. Since 1999, Dr. Mesmer has studied beginning reading materials and text difficulty. She has worked extensively with schools and teachers in Virginia and Oklahoma, serving as co-principal investigator on a number of funded projects, and has published articles in a range of journals.

Eric Mesmer, PhD, NCSP, is Associate Professor of Psychology and the coordinator of the school psychology program at Radford University in Radford, Virginia. He has served as an RTI consultant to local school districts and worked as a practicing school psychologist for several years. His research interests include the application of behavioral generalization principles to the academic responding of students with behavioral and learning difficulties, school psychologists' involvement in RTI, and teacher interpretation and use of progress monitoring data. Dr. Mesmer served as co-principal investigator of a teacher training grant providing professional development in data-driven reading assessment and intervention practices.

Jennifer Jones, EdD, is Associate Professor of Literacy Education in the School of Teacher Education and Leadership at Radford University. She is an award-winning teacher educator and scholar whose research foci include RTI and core comprehension instruction in the elementary grades, and who works with teachers through ongoing, research-based professional development. A former classroom teacher, Dr. Jones has served in leadership roles in state and national literacy organizations, and her research has been published in research and practitioner journals.