7 Miss. Code. R. 3-41.1 - Intervention
Adoption Date: January 21, 2005
Revisions: August 18, 2016; December 20, 2018
1. The purpose of this policy is to ensure
that the behavioral and academic needs of every student are met through an
instructional model that is designed to address student learning with quality
classroom instruction and opportunities for intervention. The Mississippi
Department Education (MDE) shall require every school district to follow the
instructional model, which consists of three (3) tiers of instruction:
a. Tier 1: Quality classroom instruction
based on Mississippi Curriculum Frameworks
b. Tier 2: Focused supplemental instruction
c. Tier 3: Intensive interventions
specifically designed to meet the individual needs of students
2. If strategies at Tier 1 and
Tier 2 are unsuccessful, students must be referred to the Teacher Support Team
(TST). The TST is the problem-solving unit responsible for interventions
developed at Tier 3. Each school must have a Teacher Support Team (TST)
implemented in accordance with the process developed by the MDE. The
chairperson of the TST shall be the school principal as the school's
instructional leader or the principal's designee. The designee may not be an
individual whose primary responsibility is special education. Interventions
will be:
a. designed to address the deficit
areas;
b. evidence based;
c. implemented as designed by the
TST;
d. supported by data regarding
the effectiveness of interventions.
3. Teachers should use progress monitoring
information to:
a. determine if students are
making adequate progress,
b.
identify students as soon as they begin to fall behind, and
c. modify instruction early enough to ensure
each student gains essential skills.
Monitoring of student progress is an ongoing process that may be measured through informal classroom assessment, benchmark assessment instruments, and large-scale assessments.
4. After a referral is made, the TST must
develop and begin implementation of an intervention(s) within two weeks. No
later than eight weeks after implementation of the intervention(s) the TST must
conduct a documented review of the interventions to determine success of the
intervention(s). No later than 16 weeks after implementation of the
intervention(s), a second review must be conducted to determine whether the
intervention(s) is successful. If the intervention(s) is determined to be
unsuccessful, then the student will be referred for a comprehensive assessment.
5. In accordance with the
Literacy-Based Promotion Act of 2013, each public school student who exhibits a
substantial deficiency in reading at any time, as demonstrated through:
a. performance on a reading screener approved
or developed by the MDE, or
b.
locally determined assessments and teacher observations conducted in
Kindergarten and Grades 1 through 3, or
c. statewide end-of-year assessments or
approved alternate yearly assessments in Grade 3, must be given intensive
reading instruction and intervention immediately following the identification
of the reading deficiency. A student who was promoted from Grade 3 to Grade 4
under a good cause exemption of the Literacy-Based Promotion Act must be given
intensive reading instruction and intervention. The intensive intervention must
include effective instructional strategies and appropriate teaching
methodologies necessary to assist the student in becoming a successful reader,
able to read at or above grade level, and ready for promotion to the next
grade.
6. A dyslexia
screener must be administered to all students during the spring of their
kindergarten year and the fall of their first-grade year. The screening must
include the following components:
a.
Phonological awareness and phonemic awareness;
b. Sound symbol recognition;
c. Alphabet knowledge;
d. Decoding skills;
e. Encoding skills; and
f. Rapid naming (quickly naming objects,
pictures, colors, or symbols (letters or digits) aloud.
7. All students in Kindergarten and grades 1
through 3 shall be administered a state- approved screener within the first 30
days of school and repeated at mid-year and at the end of the school year, to
identify any deficiencies in reading. EXCEPTION: Students in grade 3 who are
not identified for intervention on mid-year screeners are not required to be
screened again at the end of the school year. In addition to failure to make
adequate progress following Tier 1 and Tier 2, students will be referred to the
TST for interventions as specified in Response to Intervention guidelines
developed by MDE if any of the following events occur:
a. Grades K-3: A student has failed one (1)
grade;
b. Grades 4-12: A student
has failed two (2) grades;
c. A
student failed either of the preceding two grades and has been suspended or
expelled for more than twenty (20) days in the current school year;
d. A student scores at the lowest level on
any part of the Grade 3 or Grade 7 statewide accountability assessment; or
e. A student is promoted from
Grade 3 to Grade 4 under a good cause exemption of the Literacy-Based Promotion
Act.
8. Referrals to the
TST must be made within the first twenty (20) school days of a school year if
the student meets any of the criteria a-e stated above in Paragraph 7.
9. School districts must complete,
at a minimum, documentation as required for all students in Tier 2 or Tier 3.
All Tier 3 documentation must accompany the student's cumulative folder upon
promotion or transfer to a new school.
Notes
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No prior version found.