How MTSS Supports College and Career Readiness for All Students

    Academics, MTSS for Secondary

    “Wait... what’s CCMR?”

    That was the question I should have asked on day one as a brand-new Assistant Principal in Dallas, TX. But as a Chicago transplant eager to prove myself, I faked it, for three awkward days. When I finally asked my principal what CCMR meant, his answer, College, Career, and Military Ready, came with a side of skepticism, as if to say, How did we hire someone who doesn't know this? But once I realized CCMR was just Texas’s spin on CCR, a concept I was familiar with, I was ready to hit the ground running. I didn’t need to know every acronym to make an impact. I brought something powerful to the table: expertise in MTSS. 

    Because no matter what we call it, CCR or CCMR, the mission remains the same: to ensure every student is prepared for life beyond high school. And MTSS? That’s the roadmap that gets us there.

    3 Tips for an Effective Secondary School Literacy Plan

    MTSS Practice, Academics, MTSS for Secondary

    “Literacy is the foundation of all learning. When students struggle with reading, they struggle with everything else in school,” Dr. Katherine McKnight 

    Standards-Based Grading and MTSS: A Perfect Match

    MTSS Practice, Academics, Data-Driven Decisions

    During a parent-teacher conference, as I was explaining a child's assessment scores and grades, the parent interrupted me in confusion.  “I don’t understand. They have an A in your class but can barely write a sentence, and their reading score isn’t that high.” As a young teacher, I stumbled through my answer, realizing that the way that we weighted grades meant that the work that students did in class was graded based on completion and re-takes. These grades often did not align with the results of the standardized assessments we gave. I knew at that moment that my grade book needed a revamp to reflect mastering the standards for the grade level.

    Get Student Buy-In for Accelerated Learning: How to Use Proficiency Scales

    MTSS Practice, Academics, Interventions and Learning Supports' Strategies

    As a teacher in a Title 1 school, many of my students lagged behind in meeting benchmarks each year. To teach them my grade level standards, I began by attempting to remediate missed learning. However, their progress was limited. Attempting to backtrack to their level just took too much time and resulted in frustration and disengagement. In order to achieve more within the year, I began to use the accelerated learning approach by integrating the required concepts for specific standards into the current lesson. I saw increased student engagement and achievement. And when I started using Proficiency Scales, my students’ motivation soared!

    The Power of Strength-Based Instruction

    SEL and Mental Health, Academics

    We all have strengths and weaknesses, but in K-12 education, student weaknesses are often a focus of attention, while strengths fade into the background. Over the past decade, there has been a movement in education to capitalize on student strengths while using instructional practices that promote growth in areas that might need improvement. 

    How To Select the Right Interventions To Boost Accelerated Learning

    MTSS Practice, Academics, Interventions and Learning Supports' Strategies

    Accelerated learning is currently one of the hottest keywords in education. It is hailed as the hero to address “learning loss” and large instructional gaps. Some states have even gone as far as adopting it into their educational policies, hoping to help students catch up to grade-level benchmarks.

    MTSS in Alternative Learning Settings: Building Long-Term Engagement With Short-Term Victories

    MTSS Practice, Academics

    We have all heard the analogy that teaching is like juggling. As educators, we are responsible for keeping many balls in the air. Now, imagine you’re juggling all those balls in the air, and then new balls keep getting thrown in while you’re simultaneously sending other balls out of your cycle. In juggling, this is called passing. Who knew this was its own category in juggling?

    The Executive Function Toolkit

    Academics, Interventions and Learning Supports' Strategies

    Executive functioning in the educational setting is often used synonymously with skills associated with focus and organization. While this can be true in some circumstances, executive functioning skills are defined as “the mental processes that enable us to plan, focus attention, remember instructions, and juggle multiple tasks successfully.” (Harvard University) In order to find success with these skills, it is important to have the tools to filter distractions, prioritize tasks, set and achieve goals, and regulate impulses. The complexity of executive functioning and the interconnectedness of the associated soft skills are essential for academic achievement.

    How Universal Design for Learning Connects With MTSS

    MTSS Practice, Academics

    As a middle school teacher, I tapped into every creative avenue for presenting information to my students. My students were diverse, not only culturally but also with different interests, strengths, and challenges. Hooking them on a concept was hard work! I was competing with their phones and social lives. Even so, I wanted to ensure the skills and concepts covered in my English class stuck in their brains for a long time. 

    6 Daily Engagement Practices for Every MTSS Tier

    MTSS Practice, Academics

    Student engagement remains a consistent topic of interest for educators. How do educators and schools compete with all the other entertainment forms that captivate students? As a former middle school teacher, I often felt like I needed to be a circus performer to capture students' attention, standing on my desk and keeping a continuously high-energy environment. However, that isn’t the case. Engagement within the classroom often starts at a simpler level, by meeting the needs of students and building an environment they want to be a part of each day.