Abstract
Once students meet exit criteria and Tier 2 reading supports are removed, many do not maintain their current progress and fail to meet future performance benchmarks. Although estimates of average growth during intervention exist, typical rates of growth after supports are removed are relatively unknown. In this research brief, we used segmented regression to quantify differences between students’ reading fluency progress during intervention and postintervention. Participants were second and third grade students, from 16 schools, who were receiving Tier 2 reading interventions targeting oral reading fluency. Once students met exit criteria, their progress was monitored weekly for the rest of the school year. The average rate of improvement was 3.50 words read correct in 1 minute (WRCM) per week (SD = 1.65) during the intervention and 0.09 WRCM (SD = 1.63) after exiting the intervention. Students who met exit criteria during the fall semester (i.e., fast responders) displayed significantly (p < .001) higher growth during the intervention (M = 4.32) compared to students who exited during the spring semester (i.e., slow responders; M = 2.69). Moreover, the average rate of postintervention growth was significantly (p < .001) higher for fast responders (M = 0.54) compared to slow responders (M = −0.35 WRCM improvement per week).
DISCLOSURE
The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Ethan R. Van Norman
Ethan R. Van Norman, PhD, is an assistant professor of school psychology at Lehigh University. His research interests include assessment practices within tiered systems of support and decision making frameworks that educators use to evaluate student response to instruction.
Peter M. Nelson
Peter M. Nelson, PhD, is director of research and innovation at ServeMinnesota. He has conducted research in reading and math interventions, classroom ecology, and professional development issues.
David A. Klingbeil
David A. Klingbeil, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Educational Psychology at the University of Texas at Austin. His research interests include evaluating methods to identify students in need of additional support and identifying and modifying evidence-based interventions to increase their usefulness for schools.