tiered support
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 750
Author(s):  
Raisa Ahtiainen ◽  
Jonna Pulkkinen ◽  
Markku Jahnukainen

In recent decades, an essential global aim of the reforms of special education has been the promotion of inclusive education. This article discusses the implementation of reforms with a focus on tiered support systems in the context of Finnish comprehensive school education. Based on earlier literature, legislation, and administrative documents, we provide a background for Finnish education policy and special education reforms. The focus of this article is on the description of parallel reforms targeting the re-structuring of the systems around support for students and funding of education in the 2010s. We discuss the processes leading to these reforms and the reforms themselves. In addition, we discuss their implications for the organization of the tiered support system. Finally, we highlight some challenges of reform implementation and the current education policy’s movements towards inclusive education.


2020 ◽  
pp. 027112141989972
Author(s):  
Collin Shepley ◽  
Jennifer Grisham-Brown ◽  
Justin D. Lane

Multitiered systems of support provide a framework for matching the needs of a struggling student with an appropriate intervention. Experimental evaluations of tiered support systems in grade schools have been conducted for decades but have been less frequently examined in early childhood contexts. A recent meta-analysis of multitiered systems of support in preschool settings exclusively synthesized outcomes from group design studies. Our current review extends this review by synthesizing single-case research examining interventions implemented within tiered support system frameworks in preschool settings. Our data indicate that single-case evaluations of tiered support systems do not frequently meet contemporary standards for rigor nor consistently identify functional relations. Recommendations and considerations for future research are discussed. Copies of completed coding tables, syntax, and supplemental tables referenced throughout the manuscript may be obtained via Open Science Framework at https://osf.io/ghptw/ .


2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin A. Chaparro ◽  
Mike Stoolmiller ◽  
Yonghan Park ◽  
Scott K. Baker ◽  
Deni Basaraba ◽  
...  

Progress monitoring has been adopted as an integral part of multi-tiered support systems. Oral reading fluency (ORF) is the most established assessment for progress-monitoring purposes. To generate valid trend lines or slopes, ORF passages must be of equivalent difficulty. Recently, however, evidence indicates that ORF passages are not equivalent, potentially hindering our ability to generate valid student trend lines for decision making. This study examines passage and order effects on the estimation of ORF scores using a set of second-grade passages. A single group with counterbalancing design was employed to randomly assign 156 second-grade students to three different orders of passages. Scores from the passages were examined using growth curve modeling and empirical Bayes estimates. Results indicate that passage effects were substantial, but order effects were small but significant. The impact of passage and order effects on research design, equating methods, and measure development is considered.


2017 ◽  
Vol 56 ◽  
pp. 96-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mari-Pauliina Vainikainen ◽  
Ninja Hienonen ◽  
Risto Hotulainen

Author(s):  
Catherine B. Woahn ◽  
Benjamin S. Fernandez

This chapter provides a framework allowing school-based mental health practitioners to assess and track characteristics of grief in bereaved students. Several types of assessments and tools (observations, structured interviews, and a range of rating scales) are discussed as a part of a three-tiered support framework to assess and monitor student progress over time. Current approaches to assisting bereaved students vary widely and may over-serve or under-serve students based on limited understanding of grief. There are also individual differences in the grieving process. School-based professionals must conduct assessments that enable them to identify individual needs and potential symptoms of complicated grief that may affect a child’s functioning at school.


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