AI Article Synopsis

  • RTI has been used for nearly 20 years as a method to identify learning disabilities, but key questions about its effectiveness remain unresolved.
  • The study analyzed 229 diverse poor readers in Grades 4 and 5 to determine predictors of their response to a reading tutoring program and explored different methods of measuring this response.
  • The results showed that children's initial scores on various measures influenced how they were classified as responsive, indicating that "response" is highly context-dependent and raising doubts about the validity of RTI for identifying disabilities.

Article Abstract

Response to intervention (RTI) has been promoted for nearly 20 years as a valid supplement to or alternative method of learning disability (LD) identification. Nevertheless, important unresolved questions remain about its role in disability identification. We had two purposes when conducting this study of 229 economically and racially diverse poor readers in Grades 4 and 5 in 28 public elementary and middle schools in Nashville. First, we examined predictors of the children's response to a reading comprehension tutoring program. Second, we explored the utility of different methods (growth vs final status) and measures (near- and mid-transfer vs far-transfer) in operationalizing "response," and whether these contrasting methods and measures identified similar children. Findings indicated students with higher pretreatment scores on expressive vocabulary, nonverbal IQ, teacher ratings of attention, and reading comprehension measures were more likely classified as responsive with final status methods. Students with lower pretreatment comprehension scores were more likely identified as responsive with growth methods. These and other findings suggest "response" is strongly context dependent, raising questions about the validity of RTI as a means of disability identification.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022219420920379DOI Listing

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