
Educational Interventions Forum
A National
Dialog on Interventions to Elevate Student Achievement
Hosted by Assessment Technology, Incorporated
Agenda
Shrewsbury, Massachusetts February
13, 2009
Proceedings, including instructional dialogs, videos from other forum sites, and white papers are now available.
To view the video for a presentation, please click the View Video icon.
To view the white paper related to the presentation, please click the View Paper icon. This will open a pdf document.
| 9:00 a.m. |
|
Welcome and Introduction
Jeanne Simons, Outside Field Services Coordinator,
Assessment Technology, Incorporated
|
| 9:15 a.m. |


|
Dynamic Intervention Systems
Presented by: Craig Mayhew, Field Services
Director, Assessment Technology, Incorporated
Summary: Click
to show/hide
It is well recognized that the American educational system must increase
student learning to remain competitive in the 21st century. The need
to increase learning will require dynamic intervention systems comprised
of interrelated research and management components. Research components
are needed to provide credible evidence of instructional effectiveness.
Management components are required to plan, implement, evaluate, and
adjust interventions. This presentation outlines a dynamic intervention
system integrating research and management to promote student learning.
|
| 10:10 a.m. |

|
Experimental Research in Standards-Based
Education
Presented by: Charles Brainerd, Ph.D., Professor,
College of Human Ecology, Cornell University
Summary: Click
to show/hide
The cornerstone of standards-based education is research that establishes reliable cause-effect links between specific learning practices and desired outcomes. Experimental research with randomized control-group (i.e., standard instruction) designs is necessary to establish those links, but most educational research does not use such designs and, hence, does not provide a firm footing for standards-based education.
In addition to providing a foundation for standards-based education, experimental research has several attractive properties. For example, such research is easy to conduct because it involves relatively small numbers of students (e.g., 25-30 per cell) who participate in brief but carefully controlled sessions. In addition, small-scale experimental research is more efficient and cost-effective than many other types of research (e.g., correlational multi-school studies involving thousands of students who participate over periods of weeks, months, or even years), and yet, it yields the most reliable data. Moreover, the findings of small-scale experiments are easily linked to lessons that quickly deliver effective learning methods because the same computer technology that is used to conduct such experiments can deliver the corresponding lessons.
For these reasons, there is an urgent national need for small-scale experimental studies of learning in elementary and high school students. This research will identify specific methods that are effective in learning particular material (e.g., the types of notation that allow children to understand mathematics), and it will identify the general cognitive principles that make specific methods effective. This research can build on technology that is already in place in schools.
|
| 11:05 a.m. |

|
Implementing Intervention through the Local
Accountability Professional Development Series (LAPDS)
Presented by: Stephen Hamilton, Director
District and School Services, Learning Innovations at WestEd
Summary: Click
to show/hide
WestEd
knows from research and decades of experience that a one-size-fits-all
approach does not work. That’s why the Local Accountability Professional
Development Series (LAPDS) team customizes the training to address
individual strengths and needs. While the implementation may differ
based on each district’s or school’s unique characteristics, the LAPDS
process remains the same.
WestEd’s services are based on the best available research in mastery
learning theory and the alignment of curriculum, lesson planning,
instruction, and assessment. This alignment provides students with
specific, immediate feedback and multiple opportunities to demonstrate
proficiency of the academic standards.
WestEd’s focus? To build your capacity to fully implement an accountability
system that will rapidly improve student achievement. The LAPDS system
uses rigorous standards and assessments fully aligned with the National
Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) item specifications and the
blueprints of the district’s or school’s state assessment.
|
| 11:50 a.m. |
|
Lunch
|
| 12:30 p.m. |

|
Designing an Intervention
Presented by: Craig Mayhew, Field Services
Director, Assessment Technology, Incorporated
Summary: Click
to show/hide
Designing
the sort of intervention system being presented in this forum requires
the close integration of three fundamental and familiar components.
Goal setting, implementation, and evaluation are familiar to everyone
in the educational world. This presentation will discuss how each
of these components can be designed in order to achieve the degree
of integration that will be needed in order to maximize the opportunity
to realize meaningful increases in student achievement and instructional
efficiency. Methods of organizing content that support easy tracking
of both the instructional material that has been delivered and the
outcome that has been achieved will be reviewed. Discussion will also
be focused on use of the evaluation data to make decisions about subsequent
instruction so that approaches that don’t work are addressed in a
timely fashion.
|
| 1:30 p.m. |

|
Breakout Session: One of the challenges today’s educators face is that of utilizing technology to support educational interventions. In this breakout session participants will have the opportunity to share their experiences in planning, implementing, and evaluating interventions. They will discuss the kinds of interventions most needed to elevate student achievement in their district, and they will examine the role of assessment in informing intervention initiatives. Participants will explore the application of technology in intervention implementation using a variety of tools, such as Galileo Dialog Resources, Promethean flipbooks, and technology utilizing district- or teacher-created activities and lesson plans. Participants will leave the breakout session with sample implementation plans utilizing intervention technology that may be leveraged for intervention instruction in the current 2008-2009 school year.
|
| 3:15 p.m. |

|
Closing Remarks
Presented by:
Craig Mayhew, Field Services Director, Assessment Technology, Incorporated
|