From Struggle to Strength |
{Blog Post Title}Posted by Melissa Hannah, CCC-SLP | 3/6/2015 0 Comments RTI: Response to InterventionOften when people say "RTI" (Response to Intervention) you might hear a chorus of groans followed by a lot of opposition. However, those are often the responses obtained because there is not a clear understanding of its purpose and how it is supposed to be implemented. If implemented properly it is a vital approach to identify children who have a true neurological learning disability from those who just need extra help, support, or remediation of specific skills.
Ten years ago when I was working in public schools this was the new "thing". Prior to a special education referral some type of intervention was to be attempted in order to differentiate those with a true learning disability from those without since special education services are for those children with a specific disability, which requires specialized instruction and often times a more restrictive learning environment. After meeting with some educators and parents I was reminded of how misunderstood this process is and because of that it is being implemented incorrectly. This process should be an opportunity to remediate specific areas of deficit in order to measure how the child responds to that specific intervention. Response should be quick IF the intervention is specific and accurately addressed in the designed intervention. If an intervention is NOT providing the expected result the intervention team should regroup and determine why. Maybe the intervention is not specifically matched to the skill identified as needing intervention. Maybe there is a foundation or prerequisite skill that is weak and therefore interfering with the child's "response". Maybe the intervention is not being provided frequently enough to result in a measurable change. When I am asked to review the interventions being provided or review RTI process for school here are some of the issues I have identified that are interfering with the effectiveness of this process.
This is certainly not an all inclusive list but just a few of the issues I have witnessed. As a therapist it is easier for me to implement a RTI program because it is very similar to speech and language therapy. As a SLP I have to interpret test data, identify specific measurable goals, and then design activities that target these goals during each therapy session. I must measure the effectiveness of the intervention/activity and the child's response after each session. Depending on the child's response I have to design an appropriate intervention for the following therapy session. Maybe the child struggled and I need to adjust how I am intervening with a specific concept. Maybe the child responded beautifully and I need to increase the level of difficult of the intervention for the following session. Unfortunately RTI has gotten a bad reputation not because it is an ineffective program but because we are not implementing it correctly simply because we don't understand it's purpose. If you are interested in learning more about the RTI process or how to make this a more effective process for your school please contact me at [email protected]. Often times there are steps that can be taken that can make a tremendous difference not only in the effectiveness of the program but also in the performance of the children!!! mailto:[email protected]
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