Tier 2 and Tier 3 Intervention (2024)

Mastering ‘Silent e’ and Becoming More Fluent with Michael, Third Grader

[Music]

Michael: I couldn’t find my house.

Linda Farrell: When you went back, you couldn’t find your house?

Michael: No.

Michael is in third grade at Windy Hill Elementary School in Calvert County, Maryland. Reading expert Linda Farrell will be helping him work toward mastering the ‘silent e’ letter pattern. It’s part of a plan to speed up his reading.

Linda Farrell: When we assessed Michael, I found him to be a very interesting student. He’s in the third grade, and he’s a very slow reader. He was quite accurate … not perfectly accurate, but he did pretty well in text. And he understood what he read.

Linda Farrell: Just start reading right here, and you’re gonna read right to the number, okay?

Michael: Don was a lad. Pip was a pup. Don and Pip had a run. The sun was hot.

Linda Farrell: Okay …

Linda Farrell: And when we dug deeper into Michael, what we found is that he has almost mastered basic skills. But it’s the almost that’s keeping him from being faster and more accurate. The good thing about him is that he’s not a guesser. That’s why he’s slow. He’s trying to get it right. He’s not trying to race through and guess.

Michael can read many words accurately. But he reads slowly. To find out why, Ms. Farrell first checks to make sure that Michael knows his vowel sounds, both long and short.

Linda Farrell: What’s the short ‘a’ sound?

Michael: Short ‘a’ … /a/.

Linda Farrell: /a/. What’s the short ‘e’ sound?

Michael: /eh/

Linda Farrell: What’s the short ‘i’ sound?

Michael: /i/

Linda Farrell: The short ‘o’ sound?

Michael: /ah/

Linda Farrell: And the short ‘u’ sound?

Michael: /u/

Linda Farrell: You do know your vowel sounds — your short vowel sounds. Do you know your long vowel sounds?

Michael: [nods]

Linda Farrell: What are they?

Michael: /ay/, /ee/, /eye/, /oh/, and /you/

Linda Farrell: You got it. Okay.

Then she checks Michael’s phonemic awareness. That’s his ability to notice, to think about, and to work with the individual sounds in words.

Linda Farrell: Now we’re gonna stretch a couple of words, okay? The way you stretch words is you go like this. Get ready. Okay, sit up straight and get ready. Okay? I’ll say a word and you repeat it. Bake.

Michael: Bake.

Linda Farrell: Okay. Now we stretch it. /b, ay, k/ … bake. You stretch it.

Michael: /b, ay, k/ … bake

Linda Farrell: Okay. And I’m gonna ask you what’s the vowel sound in bake. Do you know the vowel sound in bake?

Michael: /ay/

Linda Farrell: /ay/. And what do we call that vowel sound? Short ‘a’ or long ‘a’?

Michael: Long ‘a.’

Linda Farrell: Great. Ready? Back. Repeat?

Michael: back

Linda Farrell: Stretch back.

Michael: /b, a, k/ … back

Linda Farrell: What’s the vowel sound in back?

Michael: ‘a’

Linda Farrell: ‘A’ is the name of the letter. Can you stretch back?

Michael: /b, a/ …

Linda Farrell: Stop right there. What’s that sound right there?

Michael: /a/

Linda Farrell: /a/. When I ask you for a sound, it has to be one of the sounds on your fingers. So the vowel sound in back is what?

Michael: /a/

Linda Farrell: What do we call that sound?

Michael: Short ‘a.’

Linda Farrell: Ready?

Linda Farrell: Even though Michael knew his short vowel sounds and he knew his long vowel sounds when I asked — pretty well for somebody who hadn’t really been having phonics lessons. And he could, I’d say stretch the sounds, /b/ /i/ /t/. He could stretch that. “What’s the vowel sound in bit?” “‘I.’” He wanted to go and give me the letter, which tells me he’s not thinking in terms of sounds. We have to straighten out all that. What’s the sound? What’s the name of the letter? What do we call the sound? And we worked with some of that with him so that when I went to this is an /a/, and this is an /ay/, he could think in terms of sounds.

Linda Farrell: Tight. Repeat.

Michael: Tight.

Linda Farrell: Stretch.

Michael: /t, eye, t/ … tight

Linda Farrell: What’s the vowel sound in tight?

Michael: /eye/

Linda Farrell: What do we call it?

Michael: A long ‘i.’

Linda Farrell: Ready? Fish.

Michael: /f, i, sh/ … fish

Linda Farrell: Vowel sound?

Michael: /i/

Linda Farrell: What do we call it?

Michael: Short ‘i.’

Linda Farrell: You got it. You’re getting it aren’t you?

Next Ms. Farrell has Michael read a passage containing consonant-vowel-consonant words like hat and ran, further checking that short vowel knowledge.

Linda Farrell: Try the gray box.

Michael: Don got a tan hat. He sat on a log. He had a nap in the sun.

Linda Farrell: I think this is just a little teeny tiny bit too easy for you. So we have to get harder.

Michael: Yeah, it was really easy.

Linda Farrell: It was.

But when Ms. Farrell gave Michael a passage with the ‘silent e’ vowel pattern – including words like ‘luke’ and ‘rice’ – his accuracy fell off.

Linda Farrell: Now I’m just gonna ask you to read this right here. Okay?

Michael: Mike went to a lake with luck. They rode, rode their bikes to the lake. They had rick, I mean, rike, lim, limes, chips, and cake in a blackpack.

Linda Farrell: A student who can tell you /i/ is the short ‘i’ sound, /eye/ is the long ‘i’ sound, can tell you all the rules, and yet they don’t read it correctly, the word correctly — that’s often a result of a slow print processor. What happens is … when print gets there, they have a slow reaction time to pulling out what that print is trying to say, whatever sound, whatever word.

Michael can get faster by fully absorbing and mastering the ‘silent e’ spelling pattern, so that when he sees a word with a vowel, a consonant, and an ‘e’ at the end – such as lake — he automatically knows that the vowel will be long. How can he master this?

Linda Farrell: Not teaching him rules. He knows the rules. I didn’t ask him, but he could have told me the rule that ‘e’ jumps over. What we do is get him to recognize the pattern. If it’s one letter, it’s a short sound. If it’s that letter plus an ‘e,’ it’s a long sound. And we’re trying to get him to recognize the pattern.

Linda Farrell: Now I’m going to do some teaching. And I’m gonna see if you can get this 100% next time, if you can get all the words right. And here is the teaching we’re gonna do. We are going to learn about ‘silent e.’ I bet you’ve heard ‘silent e’ before, haven’t you. Okay. So we’re gonna learn something called two-finger touch and say. So when you touch with one finger, you’re gonna say /a/. That’s the short ‘a’ sound, so touch with one finger. Are you — if you were to write your name, yeah. So touch with this finger, okay?

Michael: Okay. /a/

Linda Farrell: Okay. When we touch like this, we’re gonna say /ay/. When it’s an ‘a’ and an ‘e’ together, go /ay/. Can you do that?

Michael: /ay/

Linda Farrell: Okay, so go …

Michael: /a/, /ay/

Linda Farrell: Now watch me touch and say this word. /M, a, d/ … mad. You do it.

Michael: /M, a, d/ … mad.

Linda Farrell: So I used one finger to touch that ‘a.’ Now watch this. I have an ‘a’ and an ‘e’ here. So I’m gonna use two fingers, so watch me. /M, ay, d/ … made. You do it.

Michael: /M, ay, d/ … made.

Linda Farrell: Okay, and you go like this: /m, ay, d/ … made. You do it.

Michael: /M, ay, d/ … made.

Linda Farrell: Okay. So you know about two-finger touch and say.

Ms. Farrell thinks this multisensory technique will help Michael internalize his ability to recognize the ‘silent e’ letter pattern. It takes a while to learn this approach, but it will be worth it.

Linda Farrell: Now, we’re gonna just practice, right here. So I want you to practice saying /ay/, /a/, /ay/, /a/, /a/, /ay/. Okay.

Michael: /ay/, /a/, /ay/, /a/, /a/, /ay/

Linda Farrell: Let’s do this one again. Okay?

Michael: /a/, /ay/, /a/, /a/, /a/, /ay/, /ay/, /a/, /ay/, /a/

Linda Farrell: Ten out of 10. Okay. Now what we’re gonna do is we are gonna practice touch and say. So can you touch and say that word?

Michael: Rat.

Linda Farrell: Okay. And here’s how we touch and say. /R, a, t/ … rat. /R, ay, t/ … rate. You do it.

Michael: /R, a, t/ … rat.

Linda Farrell: Touch and say that one. Now what do you do when you have an ‘a’ and a …

Michael: /R, ay, t/ … rate.

Linda Farrell: Okay. Touch and say that one again.

Michael: /R, a, t/ … rat.

Linda Farrell: Okay.

Michael: /R, ay, t/ … rate.

Linda Farrell: Try that one again.

Michael: /R, ay, t/ … rate.

Linda Farrell: Okay. Now we’re gonna try something a little different. This time I’m just gonna go /a/, rat, /ay/, rate. You do it.

Michael: /a/, rat, /ay/, rate

Linda Farrell: Okay. Try it again.

Michael: /a/, rat, /ay/, rate

Linda Farrell: Okay. Now you’re gonna do these. Just like you did rat and rate, do these. Okay.

Michael: /a/ …

Linda Farrell: Watch me. I’m gonna do this. /Ay/, mate, /a/, mat, /ay/, tape, /a/, rack, /a/, tap, /ay/, rake. You do it.

Michael: /Ay/, matmate, /a/, mat

Linda Farrell: One finger. Do two fingers.

Michael: /Ay/, mate, /a/ …

Linda Farrell: [whispering] One finger.

Michael: /Ay/, tape, /a/, rack, /a/, tap, /ay/, rake.

Linda Farrell: You just got all those right. We’re gonna try something a little different this time. I just want you to touch the vowel sound. Say it. Don’t even read the word. So you’ll go like this: /ay/, /a/. Okay? You do it.

Michael: /ay/, /a/, /ay/, /a/, /a/, /ay/

Linda Farrell: Okay. Can you do that one more time? I wanna make sure you’re touching with one finger when you should and two fingers …

Michael: /a/ …

Linda Farrell: Wait, wait.

Michael: /Ay/. Wait. /Ay/, /a/, /ay/, /a/, /a/, /ay/.

Linda Farrell: Oh! It was perfect. Okay. Now go back and touch with two fingers and then read the word. Okay. And, uh, down here.

Michael: /Ay/, mat — mate.

Linda Farrell: Start again.

Michael: /Ay/, mate

Linda Farrell: Go /ay/, mate

Michael: /Ay/, mate, /a/, mat

Linda Farrell: [whispering] One finger. One finger.

Michael: /A/, mat, /ay/, tape, ra- … /a/, rack, /a/, tap, /ay/, rake.

Linda Farrell: Okay …

Linda Farrell: That skill is recognizing spelling patterns. It is incredibly important, because many people will tell you the English language is nutso. It — sometimes a letter is spelled this way and sometimes the letter is spelled that way. And the English language is not nutso. It follows patterns. It follows lots of patterns. Most of the time in a one syllable word when you have a vowel and then you have a consonant and an ‘e’ at the end, that vowel is going — with that ‘e’ — is going to spell the long vowel sound. It’s not random. It is absolutely not random. Strong readers — and especially strong spellers — pick up these patterns automatically. Those who struggle to learn to read or look like they’re struggling, who need more practice really, they don’t pick them up on their own; and that’s where we come in. We’re teachers. That’s when we get to teach as opposed to just guide. So understanding the spelling patterns in English will tell you with about 80% accuracy what that vowel sound should be.

Linda Farrell: See if you can do that whole row … 10 words. And you’re gonna do /ay/ and then read the word. Okay? And make sure you get your fingers right. You can go slowly. I don’t care how fast you go.

Michael: /a/, stack

Linda Farrell: Let’s try that — what happened? What happens when you …

Michael: …/ay/, stake, /a/, stack …

Linda Farrell: [whispering] Touch that with one finger.

Michael: … /a/, stack …

Linda Farrell: What?

Michael: … /a/, mad, /ay/ — wait, I mean /a/, fat, /ay/, made.

Linda Farrell: You would see, even though he knew the word was shake, he would read shack, then he’d say, “No, shake,” because he wants that word to come out before his brain has processed. One of the things we would want to do if we were working with him long term is get him to slow down first, because if he’d slow down, he would eventually get faster, because he would be in the habit of doing things accurately. And he would be using the patterns. He has every ability to be an accurate reader if he can recognize the patterns — and to read at a reasonable rate.

So Ms. Farrell focuses on accuracy, knowing that speed will come later, once Michael has really mastered the skill.

Linda Farrell: That was 100% perfect. High five on this one, too. Okay, now you’re gonna read some — you don’t have to do the /ay/, /a/. You just read the words.

Michael: Okay.

Linda Farrell: Okay? Okay. So what, what line do you wanna do?

Michael: I wanna do that one.

Linda Farrell: Okay. Do number four.

Michael: Shad, glade, same, Sam, pane.

Linda Farrell: Okay. Now we’re gonna go back to that passage that we just read. Let’s see if you can read it again. Go.

Michael: Mike went to a lake with Luke. They rode their bikes to the lake. They had rice.

Linda Farrell: What you saw is that once we taught Michael how to read long and short ‘a,’ he applied it in the paragraph the next time. And we didn’t have him read a new paragraph. We had him read the same paragraph. Once he reads that paragraph accurately, we’re going to go to another one. But if it takes him 10 times to read that paragraph accurately, we’re going to keep reading that paragraph accurately, applying his new skill that he had used.

Michael: They also had co*ke to drink.

Linda Farrell: 30 out of 30. You got 30 out of 30

Linda Farrell: He made an improvement. And had we had more time, I think we would have seen him making even more improvement as he practiced. Michael was a real good example of the importance and necessity of practicing to mastery. Even though he’s in the third grade, we need to make sure that we get his basic phonics and his even advanced phonics straightened out and that he’s accurate at those, automatically.

[Music]

We’d like to thank the wonderful students and families at Windy Hill Elementary School in Calvert County, Maryland. We hope that sharing these experiences will help other children who are learning to read.

Special thanks also to Kelly Cleland, Julie Donovan, Joanne Harbaugh, and their outstanding colleagues at Windy Hill Elementary … and to Leanne Meisinger at Calvert County Public Schools.

We are deeply grateful to Linda Farrell, Michael Hunter, and Nicole Lubar of Readsters for their invaluable contributions to this project.

Produced by Noel Gunther

Edited by Christian Lindstrom

Graphic Design: Tina Chovanec

Camera: Richard Chisolm

Audio: Dwayne Dell

For more information about teaching reading, please visit

www.ReadingRockets.org (opens in a new window)

Reading Rockets is a service of WETA, Washington, D.C.

© 2019, WETA, Washington, D.C.

Tier 2 and Tier 3 Intervention (2024)

FAQs

What are Tier 2 and 3 interventions? ›

Reducing the number of students in learning groups provides them more opportunities to practice new skills and respond to what they are learning. Tier 2 provides instruction to small groups of three to four students, while Tier 3 offers even more intensity through daily one-on-one tutoring.

What is the difference between Tier 2 and 3? ›

Tier 2 provides small-group targeted support and Tier 3 provides intensive individualized intervention.

What is the difference between Tier 2 and Tier 3 behavior? ›

There are three tiers of support: Tier I: Strong school values and policies, as well as healthy classroom practices (all students) Tier II: Targeted support to groups of students that need alternative strategies to support their behavioral success (subset of students) Tier III: Individualized support (student-specific)

What are Tier 2 interventions examples? ›

Examples of Tier 2 Practices
  • Academic Interventions. Interventions in which students are provided instruction on missing academic skills. ...
  • Check-In/Check-Out. ...
  • Check and Connect. ...
  • Check, Connect, and Expect. ...
  • Classwide Interventions. ...
  • Mentoring. ...
  • Service Learning Programs. ...
  • Setting-based Interventions.

What is the difference between Tier 1 2 & 3 behavior interventions? ›

Tiers of intervention are a useful way of identifying the group of students that may benefit from a given intervention, from all students (tier 1), to students at-risk or showing signs of behavior difficulty (tier 2), to students with chronic or intense behavior needs (tier 3).

What is a tier 2 intervention? ›

Tier 2 intervention offers more focused instruction than does the typical classroom reading instruction. It does so in order to: Remediate skill deficits. Preteach and review skills for Tier 1 lessons. Provide multiple opportunities to practice.

What are Tier 3 interventions in schools? ›

At Tier 3, these students receive more intensive, individualized support to improve their behavioral and academic outcomes. Tier 3 strategies work for students with developmental disabilities, autism, emotional and behavioral disorders, and students with no diagnostic label at all.

What are tier 2 intervention strategies? ›

Tier 2 provides intervention and support for up to 15% of students who need additional help in developing positive behaviors. In this tier, interventions include increased instruction, supervision, positive reinforcements, academic support, pre-corrections, and focus on finding the function of the behavior.

What is a Tier 3 behavior intervention? ›

Tier 3 systems build upon Tiers 1 and 2 and becomes an additional layer of support for students in both general and special education who need more individualized interventions to achieve positive outcomes. This may involve conducting Functional Behavior Assessments and developing Behavior Intervention Plans (FBA/BIP).

How long should Tier 3 interventions be? ›

Time – Depending on the age of the student, instruction should be provided daily, ranging from 40 to 60 minutes, which must be taken from the daily schedule. Two options to consider are: Providing Tier 3 intervention twice a day (e.g., 20 minutes in the morning and 20 minutes in the afternoon)

Is Tier 3 higher than Tier 2? ›

Tier 3 provides intensive supports for individual students with more significant needs or whose needs are not sufficiently met by Tier 2 supports. There are two reasons for a student to be referred to receive Tier 3 supports: The student is not benefiting sufficiently from Tier 2 interventions.

Who usually provides Tier 3 interventions? ›

In a three-tiered model, a special education teacher provides the intervention, which is guided by data, individualized, and recursive. In this context, recursive refers to a “test-teach-test-teach” process through which an instructor uses student performance data to fine-tune his or her instruction.

What does Tier 3 behavior look like? ›

The array of behavior problems requiring Tier 3 supports may include externalizing behavior problems (e.g., disruptive behaviors, aggression) and internalizing behavior problems (e.g., suicidal ideation, depression, anxiety).

What instructional strategies should Tier 3 students use? ›

Tier 3. Instruction should be intensified by focusing on fewer high priority reading skills during lessons and scheduling multiple and extended instructional sessions. One-on-one or small group instruction also provides intensity as students have more opportunities to practice and respond.

What is a Tier 2 intervention? ›

Tier 2 intervention offers more focused instruction than does the typical classroom reading instruction. It does so in order to: Remediate skill deficits. Preteach and review skills for Tier 1 lessons. Provide multiple opportunities to practice.

What are Tier 2 intervention strategies? ›

Tier 2 Behavior Interventions
  • Increased Instruction and Practice with Self-Regulation and Social Skills.
  • Increased Adult Supervision.
  • Increased Opportunity for Positive Behavior Supports.
  • Increased Pre-Corrections.
  • Increased Focus on Possible Function of Problem Behavior.
  • Increased Access to Academic Supports.
Jun 16, 2022

What is a Tier 3 learning intervention? ›

Tier 3 can mean small group work, or it can mean individual lessons. Most kids who get this support still spend a lot of their day in a general education classroom. Yet they may spend bigger parts of the day in a resource room. Because kids in Tier 3 are the most at-risk students, schools keep a close eye on them.

What is a Level 3 intervention? ›

Interventions and supports provided at the tier 3 level are highly individualized and are used with students who exhibit the most significant, severe challenging behavior. Typically, tier 3 interventions are provided to a very small percentage of the student population (approximately 3-5%).

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