Skip to main content

Breadcrumb

Home arrow_forward_ios Resource Librar ... arrow_forward_ios Self-study guid ...
Home arrow_forward_ios ... arrow_forward_ios Self-study guid ...
Resource Librar ...
Report Descriptive Study

Self-study guide for implementing high school academic interventions

REL Southeast
Author(s):
Anna-Marie Cote,
Jennifer L. Dombek,
Barbara Foorman,
Karl Hook,
Laurie Lee,
Israel Sanabria,
Kevin Smith,
Tammy Stafford
Publication date:
January 2016

Summary

While academic interventions can be implemented in any grade, focusing on interventions in high school is critical because it is often a student's last chance to become ready for the academic demands of postsecondary education and careers. States across the country are implementing large-scale initiatives focused on delivering academic interventions in the high school grades. This self-study guide provides a template for data collection and guiding questions for discussion that may improve the implementation of high school academic interventions and increase the number of students meeting college and career readiness standards. This guide is intended to help district- and school-based practitioners conduct self-studies for planning and implementing high school academic interventions. Self-study is a process of using a guide with predetermined focus areas and questions to collect, share, and discuss data with stakeholders. The process can include teachers, instructional coaches, guidance counselors, school-based administrators, district administrators, and chief academic officers knowledgeable in high school academic interventions. It may help educators ensure strong implementation of interventions and document current practices in implementing a specific academic practice, multi-tiered system of support, or response to intervention policy. An ideal time for conducting a self-study of implementation of academic interventions is the beginning or end of the school year so that prior-year implementation can be considered and planning can occur for implementation for the next school year. States, districts, and schools that are implementing or planning to implement high school academic interventions may find this guide helpful as they consider which types of evidence to collect and which components of high school academic interventions are important for evaluating implementation. This "Self-Study Guide for Implementing High School Academic Interventions" consists of the "Scoring Guide," "Implementation Consensus Rating Form," and "Planning Next Steps Form." Support for "Scoring Guide" areas is appended.

Download, view, and print

Descriptive Study
REL Southeast

Self-study guide for implementing high school academic interventions

By: Anna-Marie Cote, Jennifer L. Dombek, Barbara Foorman, Karl Hook, Laurie Lee, Israel Sanabria, Kevin Smith, Tammy Stafford
Download and view this document

Share

Icon to link to Facebook social media siteIcon to link to X social media siteIcon to link to LinkedIn social media siteIcon to copy link value

Tags

Data and Assessments

You may also like

Zoomed in IES logo
Workshop/Training

Innovation Science for Education Analytics (ISEA)

January 01, 2026
Read More
Rectangle Blue 1 Pattern 1
Blog

Concerned About Kindergarten Readiness? Informed D...

November 17, 2025 by Sheresa Blanchard
Read More
Zoomed in IES logo
Fact Sheet/Infographic/FAQ

Assessing Readiness and Capacity for Effective Res...

Author(s): U.S. Department of Education
Read More
icon-dot-govicon-https icon-quote