What information should I include when I add a Phase Change in Progress Monitoring?
Include the date the adjustment was made and a brief narrative statement that describes what was adjusted, and why the change was necessary.
Include a level of detail that will inform fellow educators, the student’s family, and other interested parties about changes in the instructional approach used to support the student’s performance
Date Instructional Adjustment was Initialized
It is important to accurately reflect when the change was made. Doing this promptly makes it easier to track any change in the student’s performance.
Descriptive Narrative of Instructional Adjustment
There are three different methods most commonly used to intensify or individualize an instructional intervention.
Change Intervention Dosage or Time
- Frequency of interventions: Increasing the number of weekly intervention sessions from two to four
- Length of instructional sessions: Increasing the length of individual intervention sessions from 30 minutes to 45 minutes per session
- Duration of the intervention: Increasing the number of weeks the intervention lasts from 10 to 20
- Reducing group size: Decreasing the number of students from six to four or fewer
- Grouping students with similar abilities: Use homogenous grouping rather than grouping students of varying abilities (heterogeneous grouping)
Reducing classroom distractions: Promote engagement by reducing noise and other environmental distractions
Modify Delivery of Instruction
- Instructional approach
- Systematic and Explicit Instruction
- Precise, simple, and replicable language
- Student response
- Provide frequent opportunities for students to respond
- Opportunities to practice, build fluency, and review
- Teacher feedback and error correction
- Explain why the answer was incorrect
- Model the correct response
- Ask the student to provide a correct response before moving on
- Ask the student to explain his or her process for arriving at the correct answer (i.e., self-talk)
- Recheck for correct answers later in the lesson
The narrative explains the adjustments and the reasoning behind them. It shares key information useful to fellow educators, the student's family, and other interested parties.
Related Articles
How does Classworks indicate a Phase Change in Progress Monitoring?
Phase Change in Progress Monitoring notes a specific time when a significant change was made in the student’s intervention or instructional approach. In Classworks Progress Monitoring Phase Change is shown in two places, as a vertical line on the ...
How do I review previously completed progress monitoring sessions for my students?
Introduction Previously completed progress monitoring sessions can be accessed from the Student Detail Progress Monitoring screen. Access Previous Progress Monitoring Sessions for a Student Navigate to the Progress Monitoring page and select a ...
When should I add a Phase Change to Progress Monitoring?
To document an adjustment to the student’s intervention or instructional approach. When the student’s Progress Monitoring results indicate that the student isn’t responding When the approach being used to support the student has been changed. This ...
How do I start a Progress Monitoring session for my student?
To begin a Progress Monitoring Session for a student: 1. Using the toggle on the left-hand side, select the subject you want the student to begin Progress Monitoring (Mathematics or Language Arts) and then click the Start button. 2. Describe the ...
What is Progress Monitoring?
Overview While student progress monitoring sounds fairly self-explanatory, it has a distinct meaning when used in an MTSS model or as an element of a student's IEP. Student progress monitoring is a repeated measurement of performance, using ...