"Oh, there's a WONDERFUL amount of paperwork when it comes to RTI!"
In the Response To Intervention discussion group I was placed in on February 11, I learned the implications of RTI as far as it concerns me, the teacher, and other faculty and staff that are required for the method to work correctly. RTI is a deeply involved process that cannot be implemented in just one classroom, but rather, an entire school, as one teacher’s observations of select students who cannot meet the same standards as their peers must coincide with other teachers’ reflections of that student as well. RTI takes place in three tiers, wherein the first tier is a general education classroom, and all students who do not already have special education modifications or an IEP. If a student is consistently falling behind in his classes, then he will be moved up to tier two, where additional instruction and observation is required. That student may then move up to tier three if all other methods are not working, and this is where he may move into a special education classroom. The RTI process takes many weeks to implement – as well as a load of paperwork – and cannot just take place at the word of one teacher. In addition to the general education teacher, guidance counselors must also be involved, as well as the parents, members of the administration, possibly a school social worker, and an interventionist. In some cases, a school nurse may even be involved to advise others as to the effects of certain medication on the student and his schoolwork.
Our discussion of differentiated instruction, I have to say, was informative, if not frustrating, as this method of teaching seems to be the most complicated and in-depth process I’ve heard of so far in education school. The idea of separating all students into various learning types and interests in a formal and organized way – and in some cases even designing multiple lesson plans for all students – is just a little too much for me to take in before I have even become a hired professional. It is not to say that I am not resentful of having learned about it; I just don’t think it is a method I will be able to approach until I am much more comfortable in my teaching. Once again, differentiated instruction is something that an entire school must implement, and for a teacher to handle it alone seems counterproductive, because it is such an elaborate process and the strategies of teaching involved may get in the way of the actual lesson being taught – as I learned in Ms. Cosby’s class at Phillips Academy.
WHO CONTROLS CLIMATE GOD OR MAN? BY STEVE FINNELL
ReplyDeleteCan man control the earth's climate, or is God in control of the weather? Do man-made carbon dioxide emission control the climate of the earth or does God control the weather? Who created the weather, man or God?
Genesis 7:4 "For after seven more days I will cause it to rain on the earth forty days and forty nights, and I will destroy from the face of the earth all living things that I have made."(NKJV)
Question: Did man-made CO2 emissions cause it to rain forty days and forty nights, and destroy everything but what was on the ark with Noah?
Matthew 8:24-27......26 But He said to them, "Why are you fearful, O you of little faith? Then He arose and rebuked the winds and the sea. And there was great calm.........(NKJV)
Questions: Did man-made CO2 emissions cause the storm. Did man calm the storm by controlling their carbon footprint?
Job 37 1:24.... 6 For He says to the snow, 'Be on the earth': Likewise to the gentle rain and heavy rain of His strength......(NKJV)
Question: Do men have the ability to control the climate by controlling man-made CO2 emissions?
Psalm 135:6-7 Whatever the Lord pleases He does, In heaven and on earth, In the seas and in all deep places. 7 He causes the vapors to ascend from the ends of the earth; He makes lightning for the rain; He brings the wind out of His treasuries.(NKJV)
Question: Can men control the climate by controlling man-made CO2 emissions?
Who is in control of the climate, God in heaven or puny men on earth?
[NOTE: Carbon dioxide is not a pollutant; neither is oxygen nor water. CO2, O, and H2O are necessary to sustain life.]
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