Challenging Behaviors

Have you ever wondered how schools decide which students need extra help? It's not as simple as waiting for a child to fail. Today's schools use Response to Instruction and Intervention (RtI2)—think of it as a safety net with different layers.

Imagine a three-tiered system. The bottom layer (Tier 1) supports everyone through high-quality teaching and clear expectations. The middle layer (Tier 2) provides targeted support like small group instruction or mentoring for students who need extra help. The top layer (Tier 3) offers intensive, personalized support, including specialized assessments and individualized plans.

What makes RtI2 powerful is that it's based on data, not guesswork. Schools regularly check how students are doing and adjust support accordingly. When something isn't working, they dig deeper to understand why through a process called functional assessment—essentially asking, "What's really going on here?" The answers guide what happens next.

Here's the best part: parents are partners every step of the way. When schools, families, and students work together, challenging behaviors become opportunities for growth rather than reasons for punishment.

References:

Knoff, H. M., Haley, L., & Gonzales, J. (2011). Integrating the School Prevention, Review, and Intervention Team (SPRINT) and Response-to-Instruction/Intervention (RtI²) process: A model implementation guidebook for schools and districts. Project ACHIEVE Press.

Sugai, G., & Horner, R. H. (2009). Responsiveness-to-intervention and school-wide positive behavior supports: Integration of multi-tiered system approaches. Exceptionality, 17(4), 223-237.

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