School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools

The purpose of this study was to measure the association between school-wide student achievement on the English and mathematics Standards of Learning (SOL) tests and the degree of implementation and length of time implementing Response to Intervention (RTI) in Virginia middle schools. Recognizing th...

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Main Author: Daniel, David S.
Other Authors: Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64281
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-642812020-09-29T05:36:30Z School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools Daniel, David S. Educational Leadership and Policy Studies Price, Ted S. Cash, Carol S. Hedrick, Sandra I. Mallory, Walter D. Response to Intervention Middle School Secondary Schools School Improvement Achievement Gap The purpose of this study was to measure the association between school-wide student achievement on the English and mathematics Standards of Learning (SOL) tests and the degree of implementation and length of time implementing Response to Intervention (RTI) in Virginia middle schools. Recognizing that RTI is a complex process (Fuchs and Deshler, 2007; Mellard, Frey, and Woods, 2012; Mellard, McKnight, and Jordan, 2010; VanDerHeyden, Witt, and Barnett, 2005), some middle schools may experience uneven degrees of implementation in their attempts to adopt the RTI model (Mellard, Frey, and Woods, 2012). Principals serving grades 6 through 8 exclusively in Virginia were surveyed using an adapted version of the Self Assessment of Problem Solving Implementation (Castillo, J., Batsche, G., Curtis, M., Stockslage, K., March, A., and Minch, D., 2010), a Likert-like scale, to determine the degree of RTI implementation and the length of time the school had been implementing RTI. The school's implementation score and the number of years the schools had been implementing RTI were regressed against the school's school-wide scaled scores on the Standards of Learning (SOL) tests in English and mathematics. Analysis of the association between Response to Intervention implementation levels and the number of years a school had implemented Response to Intervention failed to reveal significant findings on student achievement in reading. RTI implementation levels showed a significant negative association with mathematics SOL scaled scores in the participating middle schools. Ed. D. 2015-12-04T09:00:42Z 2015-12-04T09:00:42Z 2015-12-03 Dissertation vt_gsexam:6406 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64281 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Response to Intervention
Middle School
Secondary Schools
School Improvement
Achievement Gap
spellingShingle Response to Intervention
Middle School
Secondary Schools
School Improvement
Achievement Gap
Daniel, David S.
School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools
description The purpose of this study was to measure the association between school-wide student achievement on the English and mathematics Standards of Learning (SOL) tests and the degree of implementation and length of time implementing Response to Intervention (RTI) in Virginia middle schools. Recognizing that RTI is a complex process (Fuchs and Deshler, 2007; Mellard, Frey, and Woods, 2012; Mellard, McKnight, and Jordan, 2010; VanDerHeyden, Witt, and Barnett, 2005), some middle schools may experience uneven degrees of implementation in their attempts to adopt the RTI model (Mellard, Frey, and Woods, 2012). Principals serving grades 6 through 8 exclusively in Virginia were surveyed using an adapted version of the Self Assessment of Problem Solving Implementation (Castillo, J., Batsche, G., Curtis, M., Stockslage, K., March, A., and Minch, D., 2010), a Likert-like scale, to determine the degree of RTI implementation and the length of time the school had been implementing RTI. The school's implementation score and the number of years the schools had been implementing RTI were regressed against the school's school-wide scaled scores on the Standards of Learning (SOL) tests in English and mathematics. Analysis of the association between Response to Intervention implementation levels and the number of years a school had implemented Response to Intervention failed to reveal significant findings on student achievement in reading. RTI implementation levels showed a significant negative association with mathematics SOL scaled scores in the participating middle schools. === Ed. D.
author2 Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
author_facet Educational Leadership and Policy Studies
Daniel, David S.
author Daniel, David S.
author_sort Daniel, David S.
title School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools
title_short School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools
title_full School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools
title_fullStr School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools
title_full_unstemmed School-Wide Effects of Implementing Response to Intervention in Virginia Middle Schools
title_sort school-wide effects of implementing response to intervention in virginia middle schools
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64281
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