Educator Resources

Academic Intervention Toolkits

Interventionists require the use of state-of-the-art, research-based methods and tools to promote achievement in hard-to-move students.  To support this work, we encourage each school to create a customized academic intervention toolkit.  To start this work, we have created several draft documents which are frequently updated to serve as models.  Within reading and writing, we have elementary, middle and high school academic toolkits created by our office.  For mathematics, a team of local math specialists has created a matheamtics intervention toolkit under the direction of the mathematics department.  We also share a useful mathematics toolkit from Washington State.  To access these documents, please go to the relevant link(s) below:

Elementary Academic Intervention Toolkit for Literacy,
click here
Middle School Academic Intervention Toolkit for Literacy, click here
High School Academic Interventio Toolkit for Literacy,
click here
NYCDOE Mathematics Toolkit,
click here
Washington State Mathematics Tookit,
click here

Note that our local toolkits are revised periodically to reflect new trends in the research literature as well as newly evaluated programs.  Look for updated toolkits in literacy and mathematics by the beginning of the school year.


Publications

The office of Academic Intervention produces a fact-filled newsletter in the fall and late spring entitled Sharing What Works. To see the current issue, access the link below:

http://schools.nycenet.edu/offices/teachlearn/SharingWhatWorksNOV07.doc

You will find regularly-featured authors, as well as a 'keynote' author in each issue.  In this particular issue, Dr. Katherine Garnett of Hunter College provides an in-depth piece on methods to build vocabulary in struggling students.


Web-Based Resources for Educators

Teachers today enjoy a treasure trove of resources on the internet.  The following are a few worth-a-look links by category.

Early and Elementary Grades Literacy Links

Adolescent Literacy Links

  • A very useful link for those interested in this area is the web site of the Alliance for Excellent Education which you can link by clicking on http://www.all4ed.org/.  In addition to a variety of publications (including Reading Next, Writing Next, and Content Area Literacy), be sure to look at their 'events' section for full video footage of their conference presentations. 
  •  Visit the Study Guides and Strategies website http://www.studygs.net/ and its latest developments helping learners to succeed.
    The resource is freely accessible and includes 120 topics are divided into 15 sections:  Learning; learning with others; study and classroom skills; reading, writing, and testing guides; project management; etc.

Mathematics Links

  • Secondary-level students in need of mathematics intervention can benefit from seeing repetitions of models of mathematics concepts. By accessing http://www.csm.astate.edu/algebra/qform.html you can provide students with an animation of the derivation of the quadratic formula fo rthe roots of ax2 + bx + c =), an essential building block in the teaching and learning of algebra. This brief animation is best supported when teachers review the properties at each step.  Special attention should be provided for those steps where the student is asked to complete the square.
  • The National Library of Virtual Manipulatives at Utah State University has interactive, Web-based K-12 math manipulatives: http://nlvm.usu.edu/en/nav/vlibrary.html

Content Area Links

  • Here's a useful site for building fund of knowledge and doing some armchair traveling at the same time.  The link below will provide you with maps from all regions of the earth.  Pick a region you wish to investigate, click your mouse on any city and the local newspaper's front page will pop up.  Double click and the page gets larger.  Then you can either read the pdf version or click through the paper itself by 'turning the pages' in the upper right hand corner.  This site changes daily with the publication of new editions of the paper.  Thie site will prove useful for all students and will be particularly motivating tostruggling readers. http://www.newseum.org/todaysfrontpages/flash/
  • By way of Kevin Feldman, here is a really useful tool for building academic vocabulary developed by Kenji Hakuta and colleagues at Stanford. Kevin calls this "VERY cool vocabulary tool" a "wonderful teaching tool, teacher preparation tool, and one that is fun for students to explore." It contains resources for teachers such as tiered lists of academic vocabulary and a special opportunity to work with the Visual Thesaurus (which is not typically free, but is through this link). And have some fun with the Visual Thesaurus yourself. It’s quite incredible and contains a lot of supports for students – including a reader that will vocalize any word the student clicks on. Access this site by clicking on:
    http://wordsift.com/
  • How do you build fund of knowledge and vocabulary? Through motivational and intriguing tidbits such as those your students will discover on this interesting U.S. government web site offering 1300 pages of "kid-friendly web pages." Your students will break secret codes, discover and reconstruct prehistoric fossils, trek the Appalachian Trail, and build their fund of knowledge. http://kids.gov/

Other Resources 

Harvard University offers an excellent resource cache of full video footage of recent lectures on various thought-provoking topics in education.  The forums can be viewed online through the following link:
http://www.gse.harvard.edu/news_events/webcasts/index.html 

Dr. Esther Klein Friedman, director of the Office of Academic Intervention, hosts a listserv for individuals interested in topics within academic intervention, including research and resource links in diverse content areas.  These are sent out as mailings, typically a few each week. The large list of members includes administrators, teachers, inquiry team members, UFT Teacher Center staff, coaches, members of academia and other educational organizations, and staff at Central,  If you would like to be placed on this mailing list, please send an e-mail to Dr. Friedman at efriedm@schools.nyc.gov requesting to be placed on this listserv.  Please specify your full name, affiliation and the e-mail address where you would like the mailings to be sent.

Open Courseware and Other Web Links

Open courseware is the new frontier in web-based resources.  Essentially these are on-line professional development resources which you can use as needed by individuals, study groups, or as professional development content for schools. A large variety of open-courseware options exist and can provide rich resources for professional development both for schools and for individual educators.  Open courseware is typically free. As with any information provided in such a way, we encourage you to be critical consumers.  A few interesting new links offering open
courseware include the following:

  • IRIS Center at Vanderbilt University creates instructional modules for universities to use as part of a course syllabus, but these modules can also be valuable for in-service professional development and typically focus on methodology useful for both intervention and special education needs.  You can access a wide range of modules by clicking on (http://iris.peabody.vanderbilt.edu/ ). If you have any questions concerning the IRIS materials, please contact Kim Skow at 866-626-4747, kimberly.a.skow@vanderbilt.edu, or iris@vanderbilt.edu.
  • You can access a comprehensive, no-fee course in reading called, aptly, Free Reading.  This course targeted towards teachers of the early grades provides a full course in beginning reading that might be particulary useful for academic intervention providers.  This course particulary emphasizes activities that teach phonological awareness and decoding skills.  Actual video training modules demonstrate the methodology.  To explore this course, point your browser to http://www.freereading.net/index.php?title=Main_Page

We will be sharing other open courseware resources with you periodically.