About the Book
Multi-Tiered Systems of Support (MTSS) is a framework for delivering effective and efficient services and supports to meet the needs of all young children and their families so they can achieve essential developmental and early academic learning outcomes. With this evidence-based planning book and video set, you'll discover how to design, implement, and monitor successful MTSS for children ages 3-5 across various early learning environments, including classrooms, programs, districts, and the state level. LEARN HOW TO
- assess readiness for systems-level change including modifying existing practices
- employ shared-leadership and Implementation Science (IS) strategies for shifting into MTSS
- set up a successful system of data-based decision making to ensure childrenâ (TM)s needs are met
- identify children who need additional supports and provide targeted or intensive interventions
- develop, provide, and evaluate evidence-based primary, secondary and tertiary programming
- provide effective instruction in key areas, including language, early literacy, and social-emotional skills
- use MTSS to meet the needs of dual language learners and children with disabilities
- engage families in designing a MTSS built on their strengths and needs
- scale up MTSS implementation across a state
- evaluate how well your MTSS is working and determine how to make improvements
Filled with the wisdom and research findings of more than 25 experts, this book brings you foundational information about MTSS plus concrete guidance on creating a system to help all learners reach their potential. Practical tools (reproducible and available online) help your team with key steps of MTSS implementation, and six videos (available online) enhance your application of important concepts covered in the book.
The ultimate MTSS guide for leaders at all system levels--and a visionary textbook for tomorrow's professionals--this book will help early childhood education professionals usher in big-picture change that will benefit all young learners.
Practical tools and resources
- Six videos (available online) illustrating an Instructional Leadership Team coming to consensus and using Implementation Science to shift into MTSS and application of a four-step, data-based, decision-making process at the program/school, classroom and individual-child levels
- Language Exposure Evaluation Report
- Self-Assessment of Family Engagement Practices
- Home-School Plan
- Tune-Up Checklist
About the Author:
Ruth A. Kaminski, Ph.D. is Director of Research and Development for Dynamic Measurement Group. Dr. Kaminski's academic background includes degrees in Speech Pathology, Early Intervention, and School Psychology. For over 20 years she has conducted research on assessment and preventative interventions for preschool and early elementary age children. Dr. Kaminski is a co-author of
Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills (DIBELS) and of
Reading Ready, a tier-3 intervention for early literacy skills in preschool.
Dr. Lisa L. Knoche is an applied developmental psychologist with expertise in the design, development, and evaluation of early childhood intervention and prevention programs implemented to support healthy development in young children and support family engagement in early learning. Dr. Knoche is particularly experienced in issues of implementation science and is interested in identifying and supporting effective professional development strategies for early childhood professionals serving children birth through age five years in home- and center-based settings. She has extensive experience in implementing collaborative research programs with community partners.
Scott R. McConnell, Ph.D., is Scott McConnell is Professor of Educational Psychology and Fesler-Lampert Chair in Urban and Regional Affairs at the University of Minnesota. His research focuses primarily on preschool-aged children, and the skills and competencies that will enable them to learn and participate in school and other settings. He and his colleagues at IGDILab are developing and testing applications for Individual Growth and Development Indicators of language and early literacy development for preschoolers. He also is involved in several efforts, locally and nationally, to eliminate the word gap-language disparities that occur early in young children's lives.
Dr. Allison J. Metz is a developmental psychologist, Director of the National Implementation Research Network (NIRN), and Senior Implementation Specialist at the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Metz specializes in the implementation, mainstreaming, and scaling of evidence to achieve social impact for children and families in a range of human service and education areas, with an emphasis on child welfare and early childhood service contexts. Her work focuses in several key areas including the development of evidence-informed practice models; the use of effective implementation and scaling strategies to improve the application of evidence in service delivery systems; and the development of coaching, continuous quality improvement, and sustainability strategies. She is Co-Chair for the Global Implementation Conference, a part of the Global Implementation Initiative. Dr. Metz is co-editor of
Applying Implementation Science in Early Childhood Programs and Systems (with T. Halle & I. Martinez-Beck; Paul H., Brookes Publishing Co., 2013).
Arnold Olszewski is an Assistant Professor and speech-language pathologist in the Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology at Miami University. His research focuses on developing feasible, evidence-based language and literacy interventions for young children. Dr. Olszewski's research has been published in various journals and presented at national conferences.
Deanna Pearce Law has served as a school psychologist since 2005 in a number of schools across Canada and in the U.S. She completed her M.Ed at the University of British Colombia in Vancouver, Canada. Deanna continued her studies in early childhood at the University of Colorado Denver where she completed her doctorate in Education Leadership for Educational Equity. Her dissertation research focused on multi-level systems implementation of evidence-based practices in early childhood education and the Pyramid Model for Supporting Social Emotional Competence in Infants and Young Children. She is currently working as an independent consultant in Omaha, NE and enjoys time with her 18 month old daughter Laya Faye, and husband Derek Law.
Lindsey Peters-Sanders is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of South Florida. Her research focuses on implementing supplemental language and early literacy instruction that applies a Multi-tiered System of Support framework in preschools serving at-risk children.
Joy C. Polignano, Ph.D., NCSP, earned her doctoral degree and national certification in school psychology from Lehigh University before completing a U.S. Department of Education Institute of Education Sciences (IES) postdoctoral fellowship with the Anita Zucker Center for Excellence in Early Childhood Studies at the University of Florida. She has worked as an early care and education teacher and has been actively involved in the implementation of four, large-scale IES randomized-controlled efficacy studies designed to promote the social-emotional competence and pre-academic skill development of young children with or at risk for disabilities. She currently serves as an early intervention school psychologist in Pennsylvania.
Kelly A. Powell-Smith, Ph.D., NCSP, is Vice President and Associate Director of Research & Development at Dynamic Measurement Group. Dr. Powell-Smith, a nationally certified school psychologist, obtained her doctorate in school psychology from the University of Oregon. She is a former Associate Professor of School Psychology at the University of South Florida. She was a faculty associate of the Florida Center for Reading Research (FCRR) and a consultant with the Eastern Regional Reading First Technical Assistance Center (ERFTAC). She has provided training in formative assessment and academic interventions in 22 states and Canada. Over the past 25 years, Dr. Powell-Smith has conducted research related to children with various learning and behavioral difficulties and has conducted over 225 national, state, and regional workshops and presentations.
Dr. Jennifer Schroeder is a clinical child psychologist with over 15 years of experience consulting to nonprofit, education, government, and philanthropic organizations to improve and sustain effective programs and services for children, youth, and families. She is the founder and president of The Implementation Group, a strategic planning and evaluation firm that supports effective implementation practices in human services and education. She holds a doctorate in clinical child psychology from Bowling Green State University and completed pre- and postdoctoral fellowships at Yale University.
Susan M. Sheridan, Ph.D., is Director of the Nebraska Center for Research on Children, Youth, Families and Schools (CYFS), and a George Holmes University Professor of Educational Psychology at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Dr. Sheridan&s research is focused on parent-teacher relationships; the development of meaningful home-school partnerships; early childhood education and interventions; rural education; and interventions promoting childrenâ (TM)s social skills, social-emotional development and behavioral competencies. Dr. Sheridan has published more than 100 books, chapters, and refereed journal articles on these and related topics. Noteworthy awards include the American Psychological Associationâ (TM)s Division 16 (School Psychology) Lightner Witmer Award (1993) for early career accomplishments and the Senior Scientist Award (2015) for distinguished career-long scholarship, the 2005 Presidential Award from the National Association of School Psychologists, and the 2014 University of Nebraskaâ (TM)s Outstanding Research and Creativity Award.
Dr. Smith received her master's degree in early childhood special education and doctorate in special education and public policy from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her areas of interest include early childhood special education/early intervention policies, systems and program development; leadership and collaboration; and the scaling up of evidence-based practices.
Dr. Smith has held early childhood and early childhood special education positions for the past thirty five years including early childhood teacher, Executive Director of the Division for Early Childhood (DEC) of the Council for Exceptional Children; Policy Specialist, Council for Exceptional Children (CEC); and Program Specialist, Office of Special Education Programs, US Department of Education. She has served as a consultant on state and national early childhood policy, expert witness in right to treatment litigation, prepared and delivered legislative testimony to the Congress as well as state legislatures, and has worked with many parent and professional groups in their state policy efforts.
In an effort to help shape quality inclusive early childhood environments for all children, including those with special needs, she has worked closely for many years with NAEYC and other early childhood leadership organizations including serving on the NAEYC Commission to develop the current program accreditation criteria. Dr. Smith has authored over 20 peer-reviewed journal articles, and 15 books and chapters one of which was the first book for administrators on preschool inclusion: The Administrator's Policy Handbook for Preschool Mainstreaming (1993). She also chaired the most recent effort to establish the DEC Recommended Practices in Early Intervention/Early Childhood Special Education to help guide the field in improving services for young children with special needs, their families and those who work with them.
She is currently Co-Principal Investigator of an OSEP funded doctoral program at UCD in early intervention and early childhood special education policy and collaborative leadership, and is involved in the OSEP funded national Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center (ECTA). She is the recipient of several awards and honors.
Xigrid Soto is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of South Florida. She works under the mentorship of Dr. Howard Goldstein, whose area of specialty includes the provision of preventative early literacy and language interventions to at-risk preschoolers living in poverty. Her research focuses on the delivery of early literacy interventions for Latino preschoolers who are Dual Language Learners.
Phillip Strain, Ph.D., Professor, School of Education and Human Development, University of Colorado at Denver, 1380 Lawrence Street, Suite 650, Denver, Colorado 80204-2076
Dr. Strain is a professor of Educational Psychology and Psychiatry at the University of Colorado at Denver. He is the author of more than 250 scientific papers and he serves on the editorial boards of more than a dozen professional journals. Dr. Strain has worked in the field of early intervention since 1974, and he serves as a science advisor to the Institute of Medicine, the National Institute of Mental Health, and the U.S. Department of Education. His primary research interests include intervention for young children with early-onset conduct disorders; remediation of social behavior deficits in young children with autism; design and delivery of community-based, comprehensive early intervention for children with autism; and analysis of individual and systemic variables affecting the adoption and sustained use of evidence-based practices for children with severe behavior disorders.
Alisha Wackerle-Hollman, Ph.D. is an educational psychologist whose research addresses both development of English, Spanish and Hmong early literacy and language measures for preschool age students, as well as the design and evaluation of parent education programs. She is the co-director of the IGDIlab, a research lab at the University of Minnesota where she has secured over $5M in funding since 2012. Dr. Wackerle-Hollman's work focuses on measurement systems designed to evaluate progress on language and literacy in English and Spanish speaking preschoolers, and the adaptation of these measures for use on tablet devices. She is specifically interested in using data from these measurement platforms to support effective data-based decision making in the context of multi-tiered systems of support.
Judith J. Carta, Ph.D., is a Senior Scientist in the Institute for Life Span Studies, Professor of Special Education, and the Interim Director of the Juniper Gardens Children's Project at the University of Kansas. Her research focuses on developing strategies to minimize the effects of poverty on children's outcomes, designing practices that teachers and parents can use to promote children's early learning and social-emotional development, methods for monitoring the progress of young children, and strategies for promoting family engagement in early intervention programs. She has been the PI of several multi-site research projects and centers funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Institute of Educational Sciences, and the Administration on Children and Families. She currently co-directs an IES-funded project to develop the Infant-Toddler Pyramid Model, a three-tiered model to promote social-emotional outcomes for infants and toddlers, based on the TPITOS. She was a member of the Federal Advisory Panel on Head Start Research and Evaluation, Division of Early Childhoodâ (TM)s Commission on Recommended Practices, and served as the Editor of
Topics in Early Childhood Special Education as well as the boards of numerous scientific journals. She received the Mary E. McEvoy Service to the Field Award from the Division for Early Childhood.
Robin Miller Young, Ed.D., NCSP is currently an Assistant Professor of Early Childhood Education at Northern Illinois University where she prepares future teacher leaders to employ evidence-based practices to identify assets and meet the needs of children and families. Prior to her present position, Dr. Young guided development of MTSS frameworks while serving on classroom and administrative leadership teams at Prairie Children Preschool (Aurora, IL). The community preschool has operated as an ECE/ECSE blended program since 1998 and has won awards for developing and operating system-wide practices that effectively integrate early learning and social-emotional tiered-instructional models. Her professional partnership work includes direct services and consultative supports for moving programs into MTSS frameworks, and ensuring professional pre-service and in-service training and licensure efforts to create a workforce prepared to provide effective and efficient services in this framework. Dr. Young's scholarship includes grant-funded work resulting in numerous presentations, published curricula, book chapters, and data-based and practitioner-oriented articles. She is currently examining methods to prepare EC educators to design and deliver multi-week, inter-disciplinary instructional units that develop childrenâ (TM)s vocabulary skills within proactive social-emotional settings. Dr. Young is also examining preparation of directors/principals and teacher-leaders who can engage in leadership behaviors that will continue moving early learning programs into effective and efficient MTSS frameworks.
Dr. Mary Abbott is a research scientist focusing in areas of literacy instruction. Her research areas of interests include: preschool, K-12, and adult literacy instruction and implementation, literacy assessment, RTI/MTSS, and teacher professional development.
Katherine Bravo Aguayo is a professional development specialist and senior research assistant with Dynamic Measurement Group. She has worked with students in grades pre-K through high school in a variety of research and educational settings for the past decade and is co-author of the Preschool Early Literacy Indicators (PELI), a measure of early literacy skills. She earned her master's degree in special education with an emphasis in early intervention from the University of Oregon where her research interests included dual language development and educational supports for children with autism spectrum disorder.
Lynette retired from Northern Illinois University where she taught courses in early intervention (EI) and early childhood special education (ECSE) and served as the Program Coordinator for Special Education. She currently works as a consultant for a variety of EI/ECSE grant-funded projects. She is a past-president of the Division for Early Childhood and serves as a member of the Editorial Board for several EI/ECSE focused journals.
Lillian Durán, has a Ph.D. in Educational Psychology from the University of Minnesota and is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Special Education and Clinical Sciences at the University of Oregon. Her research focuses on improving instructional and assessment practices with preschool-aged dual language learners (DLLs). She is currently a Co-Principal Investigator on an IES Goal 5 measurement grant to develop a Spanish version of the Individual Growth and Development Indicators (S-IGDIs) an early language and literacy general outcome measure for screening and progress monitoring in preschool.
Dr. Lise Fox is a professor in the Department of Child and Family Studies of the University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida and the Co-Director of Florida Center for Inclusive Communities: A University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities (www.flcic.org ). Lise was the Principal Investigator of the Technical Assistance Center for Social Emotional Intervention (www.challengingbehavior.org) funded by the Office of Special Education Programs. Dr. Fox is engaged in research and training efforts related to the implementation of the Pyramid Model in early education and care classrooms, program-wide models of implementation, and positive behavior support. She received the Mary E. McEvoy Service to the Field Award from the Division for Early Childhood.
Howard Goldstein, Ph.D., CCC-SLP, is a nationally known scholar in the field of child language intervention research and the author of two books and more than 100 scholarly articles. His recent work has sought to enhance the language and literacy development of students in high poverty schools who are at high risk for language and reading disabilities. A certified speech-language pathologist and former ASHA Vice President for Science and Research, Dr. Goldstein is currently Associate Dean of Research and Professor of Communication Sciences and Disorders in the College of Behavioral and Community Sciences at University of South Florida in Tampa.
Charles Greenwood is a doctoral graduate of the University of Utah. Former Director of the Juniper Gardens Children's Project, he is an accomplished researcher and author of behavioral and educational research and practice focused on children and families in low income communities. His current research is focused on early childhood applications and issues of the MTSS/RTI approach to instruction and services.
Dr. Jessica K. Hardy is currently Assistant Professor of Special Education, and her primary research interests including evidence-based instructional practices and early childhood coaching. She also has extensive experience working with teachers and coaches in using the Pyramid Model in early childhood classrooms to support young childrenâ (TM)s social-emotional development and address their behavioral needs. She was formerly a Head Start teacher and a preschool special education teacher.
Christa D. Haring, Ph.D., CCC-SLP served as a special educator, speech-language pathologist, and teacher educator for ten years in public schools spurring her interest in identifying ways to measure and improve outcomes for low-performing teachers and students. Currently, she teaches educator preparation courses centered on instructional practices to improve reading skills for students with dyslexia. Her research focuses on language and literacy interventions for parents, teachers, and innovative community programs supporting children from high-poverty areas.
Mary Louise Hemmeter, Ph.D., is a professor in the Department of Special Education at Vanderbilt University. She teaches courses, advises students, and conducts research on early childhood issues. She is the cofaculty director of the Susan Gray School for Children, which is an early childhood program for children with and without disabilities. Her research focuses on effective instruction, social-emotional development and challenging behavior, translating research to practice, and effective approaches to professional development.
Currently, she directs an Institute of Education Sciences-funded research project focused on the efficacy of implementing the Teaching Pyramid in classrooms, and she works on the National Center on Quality Teaching and Learning and the Office of Special Education Programs-funded Technical Assistance Center on Social Emotional Interventions. She is a coeditor of the Journal of Early Intervention and serves on the editorial boards of other major journals in early childhood special education. She served as President of the Council for Exceptional Childrenâ (TM)s Division for Early Childhood (DEC) and received the Merle B. Karnes award from DEC.
Robin Hojnoski is an associate professor in school psychology at Lehigh University. Her research centers on applying school psychology principles and practices to support trajectories for early school success. She has conducted work specifically in the areas of assessment and intervention in early mathematics.
Jaclyn (Jackie) D. Joseph, Ph.D., BCBA, is project coordinator for the randomized controlled trial of Prevent Teach Reinforce for Young Children (PTR-YC) at the Positive Early Learning Experiences (PELE) Center of the University of Colorado, Denver. She has co-authored articles and book chapters and conducted dozens of training sessions and workshops on PTR-YC. Prior to working at the PELE Center, Jackie was primarily involved with supporting families of young children with disabilities. Jackie's professional and research interests include evidence-based interventions for reducing the challenging behaviors and improving the social-emotional competence of young children in home settings and in early education and care classrooms.