ScholarGate
Asistente

Comparar métodos

Revisa los métodos seleccionados uno junto a otro; las filas que difieren aparecen resaltadas.

Response to Intervention×Single-Case Design in Education×
CampoEducationEducation
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen20062013
Autor originalSpecial education / school psychology field (Deno; Fuchs & Fuchs; Vaughn)Applied behavior analysis and special education (Baer, Wolf & Risley; Horner; Kratochwill)
TipoTiered framework for screening, intervention, and learning-disability identificationExperimental design establishing intervention effects within individual cases via repeated measurement
Fuente seminalFuchs, D., & Fuchs, L. S. (2006). Introduction to response to intervention: What, why, and how valid is it? Reading Research Quarterly, 41(1), 93–99. DOI ↗Kratochwill, T. R., Hitchcock, J. H., Horner, R. H., Levin, J. R., Odom, S. L., Rindskopf, D. M., & Shadish, W. R. (2013). Single-case intervention research design standards. Remedial and Special Education, 34(1), 26–38. DOI ↗
AliasRTI, RtI, Multi-Tiered System of Supports, MTSSSingle-Subject Design, Single-Case Experimental Design, SCED, N-of-1 Educational Design
Relacionados44
ResumenResponse to intervention (RTI) is a multi-tiered framework for preventing academic failure and identifying students with learning disabilities by their responsiveness to high-quality instruction. All students are screened and taught with evidence-based core instruction; those who fall behind receive progressively more intensive intervention while their progress is closely monitored. Students who fail to respond even to intensive, well-implemented intervention are flagged as needing further evaluation. RTI reframes disability identification from a static test discrepancy to a dynamic question of who does not respond to good teaching.Single-case experimental designs establish whether an intervention causes a change in behavior or learning by intensively studying individual cases over time rather than comparing groups. Each case serves as its own control: an outcome is measured repeatedly during a baseline phase and again under intervention, and the effect is demonstrated by replicating the change across phases or across cases. Central to special education and applied behavior analysis, and recognized by the What Works Clearinghouse and Horner and colleagues' standards, single-case design offers rigorous causal evidence when group experiments are impractical.
ScholarGateConjunto de datos
  1. v1
  2. 2 Fuentes
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Fuentes
  3. PUBLISHED

Ir a la búsqueda Descargar diapositivas

ScholarGateComparar métodos: Response to Intervention · Single-Case Design in Education. Recuperado el 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare