RTI and Poor Reader Profiles: Two Big Ideas for Helping Struggling Readers - Brookes Blog

RTI and Poor Reader Profiles: Two Big Ideas for Helping Struggling Readers

January 26, 2023

Effective support for struggling readers is a high priority for every K-12 educator who wants to ensure their students’ long-term success. Today we’re welcoming Louise Spear-Swerling, Ph.D., author of the book The Power of RTI and Reading Profiles , to talk about two big ideas that can be used in tandem to help your students strengthen their reading skills.

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Years ago, when my state first began using response-to-intervention (RTI) models, I solicited teachers’ opinions about RTI. Using open-ended, anonymous questions, I asked them to specify both the positives and negatives of RTI that they were encountering. Teachers’ negative feedback often involved the challenges of implementing RTI—lack of time, inadequate training, and inadequate resources, for example. But most teachers provided some version of the same positive feedback: It’s really good for the kids.

Many American schools have now implemented RTI, sometimes termed multi-tiered systems of support (MTSS). As noted by the teachers on my anonymous questionnaire, RTI models can be challenging for schools to put in place, and RTI practices sometimes fall far short of ideal; however, these models also have the capacity to greatly benefit students. Therefore, trying to meet the challenges of implementing RTI is worthwhile.

RTI is one “big idea” in reading: a broad, practically meaningful concept. Another involves poor reader profiles, which describe common types of reading problems encountered by teachers throughout the K-12 grade range. If these two ideas are combined, they can have an enormous impact. Let’s consider each idea individually, and then why combining them can be so beneficial.

The First Idea: Using RTI Practices

The details of RTI models, as well as their quality of implementation, can vary substantially across schools. Nevertheless, key features of RTI include all the following:

The Second Idea: Poor Reader Profiles

The second big idea, poor reader profiles, is based in the Simple View of Reading. This says that good reading comprehension depends on two broad abilities: 1) word recognition and 2) oral language comprehension. To read well, a student must be competent in both areas. Poor readers can have a weakness in just one area, or in both of them, as outlined below:

A variety of causes can underlie an individual student’s poor reader profile. A child might have specific word recognition difficulties due to dyslexia or insufficient attention to phonics instruction in the core general education reading curriculum. Specific reading comprehension difficulties can sometimes be associated with autism spectrum disorders, but can also be based in limited exposure to vocabulary or academic language.

Still, a student with poor word recognition or limited vocabulary knowledge needs intervention in these areas, regardless of the underlying cause of the student’s reading problem. Moreover, besides their value for planning interventions, poor reader profiles have practical implications for many other areas, including selecting assessments for screening and progress monitoring, grouping students for intervention, and designing accommodations for students with disabilities.

Why is Combining Both Ideas So Valuable?

Either big idea can be very helpful by itself, but combining them is even better:

In short, combining both ideas—RTI practices and poor reader profiles—provides a valuable blueprint for addressing a wide range of reading difficulties in K-12 schools.

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Thanks to Louise Spear-Swerling for being on the blog today to introduce these two big ideas for helping struggling readers. Keep the learning going—add her practical book, The Power of RTI and Reading Profiles, to your professional library!

The Power of RTI and Reading Profiles

A Blueprint for Solving Reading Problems

By Louise Spear-Swerling, Ph.D.

Get a complete, evidence-based blueprint for using RTI and reading profiles in tandem to plan effective core literacy instruction and help struggling readers in Grades K-6—whether they have disabilities or issues related to experience (e.g., ELLs, children from poverty backgrounds).

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