SEVERAL
YEARS AGO, AS TENNESSEE ROLLED out new academic standards, the state confronted
a two-part problem.
First,
there was ample evidence that lower-per-forming students were not making the
progress they needed to access grade-level material, an issue that was only
likely to worsen given the more rigorous demands of the new standards.
Second,
data suggested that a large contingent of struggling students were being
identified with a specific learning disability (SLD) for reasons that were as
likely to be related to unmet instructional needs as they were to any definite disability.
The result was that poor, minority, and male students were highly
overrepresented in the special education population, and they were disproportionately
likely to receive a disability label that would then stick with them through-out
their school career.
These
two concerns led the Tennessee State Board of Education to adopt Response to
Instruction and Intervention (RTI²) in July 2014.
RTI²
is a framework for teaching and learning that in-cludes regular screenings to
identify student areas of need and a tiered model of intervention for those
that need additional help. In Tennessee, it is also used to determine the
eligibility of students to receive special education services for specific
learning disabilities (SLD).
Thisreport describes the Tennessee Department of Education’s reflections and
conclusions from the last several years of RTI² in Tennessee.
Since
RTI² was first implemented in Tennessee, there have been significant drops in
the number of students identified with an SLD and a substantial rise in the equity
of identification across different student subgroups. However, there has been
considerable variation in the quality of implementation across the state.
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