21
Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District Gifted Coordinator January 2013

Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence

Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings

Deborah L. HoltLBSD School DistrictGifted Coordinator

January 2013

Page 2: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District
Page 3: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

What Does RtI Mean for the Gifted Student?

TIER 1 is the foundation

or the core curriculum.

80-85% of students are

learning and growing

in a grade level

curriculum.

TIER 1

TIER 2

TIER 3

Tier 2 includes supplemental instruction and intervention in addition to the core curriculum.

Tier 3 consists of intensive instructional interventions in addition to the core curriculum. Students are identified for Tiers 2 and 3 through ongoing assessment. Data-based decision making is applied across the tiers.

Page 4: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Definition of Giftedness

• Children who possess:

• General intellectual ability

• Specific academic aptitude

• Creative and productive thinking

• Leadership ability

• Visual and performing arts, and/or

• Psychomotor ability (Marland 1972)

Page 5: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Most Recent Brain Research

Page 6: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

What Does This Mean?

• We need to pay close attention to what happens in the primary and intermediate grades. What happens in the classroom has the potential to raise or lower I.Q.

• A disturbing trend is the high number of gifted individuals who drop out of high school.

~Dr. David Sousa (2009)

Page 7: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

What Can We Do?

Offer:

Differentiated curriculum beyond grade-level standards

Differentiated instruction

Using a faster pace, greater independence in study and thought, and increased complexity and depth in subject content

A supportive learning environment also addressing social and emotional needs

Curriculum content initiatives for gifted learners including acceleration when needed, curriculum compacting, and flexible grouping

Page 8: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Also…

Instructional processes for gifted learners include:

Higher-level thinking

Creative thinking

Problem-based learning

Independent study

Tiered assignments

Discovery-based teaching that focuses on long term memory processing

Appropriate products for gifted learners

Page 9: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

The New RtI: Response to Intelligence

TIER 3

Intense individual interventio

nsLonger

duration

TIER 2

Small targeted group interventions

Supplemental to the core curriculum

TIER 1

Academic/Behavioral Universal

Interventions for

students who can master content WITH

teacher support

(differentiation in the regular

classroom)

TIER 2

Individual and/or small

groups of students who need

extra support for appropriat

e challenge

TIER 3

Individual students who need intense

support for growth

~Penny Choice (2008)

The goal of teaching is to constantly strive to move students to the right.

Page 10: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Tier 1

• This is where 80-90% of students will achieve high levels of growth at this stage in the regular classroom.

• Curriculum addresses what is the big picture and what is worth knowing and doing?

• There still needs to be differentiation at this tier-the more differentiation at Tier 1, the fewer provisions for students at Tier 2.

Page 11: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Differentiation Opportunities in Tier

1:• Thinking at different levels

• Open-ended opportunities for responses

• Tiered opportunities to respond based on prior knowledge (i.e., graphic organizers with varying degrees of difficulty);

• Product choices

• Primary sources

• Research studies

• Problem solving

• Cluster grouping of gifted students

Page 12: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Tier 2

• This tier is for students who need additional support and opportunities based on their learning needs and their rate of learning.

• Students to the left are not making adequate progress in the core curriculum, but students on the right find the core curriculum redundant. They need intensive instruction matched to their levels of performance and rates of progress.

Page 13: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Supplemental Opportunities for Tier 2

Right (Gifted)• Self-contained gifted class

• Replacement class (in a content area that is occurring at the same time in the regular classroom) Example: Accelerated math

• A separate school within a school (which would include cluster grouping, cooperative learning grouping, and cross-ability or age grouping)

Page 14: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Also…

• Concept-based curriculum for this group is desirable

• Right Tier 2 students can complete anchor activities and extensions while other learn basic curriculum.

• Right Tier 2 needs advanced resources available to them.

• Exposure to inquiry experiences, problem-based learning, debate, future studies, contracting through compacting, or competitions work well in Right Tier 2.

Page 15: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Tier 3

• This group should have very few students on the left and to the right. These students need intensive, more individualized attention.

• Students to the left are not making adequate progress in the core curriculum and need increasingly intensive instruction which is matched to their levels of performance and rates of progress. Students to the right also need their core curriculum replaced. Students at both ends deserve to have individual attention in order to have the opportunity to learn new content and to grapple with new, challenging information.

• Right Tier 3 students have intense needs that extend beyond the curriculum of that grade level.

Page 16: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Right Tier 3 Opportunities• Right Tier 3 need accelerated, concept-based content since they

already know the content of the curriculum. Their advanced mastery gives them time to devote to intensive study of an area.

• Independent Study

• Research

• Problem Solving

• Delving deeper into the content

• Exploration into related areas

• Acceleration opportunities such as grade advancement

• Dual enrollment

• Early Advanced Placement Classes

• Early college classes

Page 17: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Ways to Assess RtI Effectiveness

observations vocabulary lists experiments

book review problem solving graphic organizers

booklet portfolios oral summaries

charts questionnaires pre-tests

Checklists Class or small class discussions

Sample problems to solve diagram with labels concept map/web

Student-produced exhibits thumbs up/down Venn diagrams

KWL charts ticket out the door quizzes

Standardized tests and many more!

Page 18: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Development of Creativity and the New

RtI• Creativity is the highest form of

giftedness (Barbara Clark, 2005)

• Creativity belongs in all tiers of the New RtI, but is essential in Right Tier 2 and Right Tier 3.

• Underachievers are often very creative. This group may have high potential but not high performance.

Page 19: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Also…

Truly gifted and talented persons who make significant contributions to society have three characteristics:

Above average ability

Strong task commitment

High levels of creativity~Renzulli and Reis (2008)

Page 20: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

Curriculum Models That Provide

Appropriate Tier 1, 2, or 3 challenges • The Enrichment Triad Model-This model is appropriate

for any content area and grade level in multiple grouping arrangements. It is perfect for RtI because it consists of three enrichment levels. (Renzulli)

• Betts’ Autonomous Learner Model (1999)

• The Parallel Curriculum (Tomlinson 2002)

• Schlichter’s Talents Unlimited (1986)

• Dr. Calvin Taylor’s Multiple-Talent Totem Pole Model (1978)

Page 21: Response to Intervention: Response to Intelligence Meeting the needs of gifted learners in all educational settings Deborah L. Holt LBSD School District

“Until every gifted child can attend a school where the brightest are appropriately challenged in an environment with their intellectual peers, America can’t claim that it’s leaving no child behind.”

~Jan and Bob Davidson

Genius Denied