Since the Individuals With Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEA; 2004), more and more schools have implemented tiered systems to support academic, behavioral, and social needs of all students (Prasse et al., 2012; Sailor, 2015). Such tiered systems include academic response to intervention (RtI; Fuchs & Fuchs, 2006), positive behavioral interventions and supports (PBIS; Horner & Sugai, 2015), and comprehensive, integrated, three-tiered (Ci3T; Lane, Oakes, & Menzies, 2014) models of prevention, all working to intervene at the first sign of student difficulty using systematic data-based decision making. These graduated systems of support generally include three levels. At Tier 1, supports such as research-or evidence-based core curricula, effective classroom management and organization, and effective teaching strategies; school-wide expectations reinforced with behavior-specific praise; and validated social skills curricula (e.g., antibullying, antidrug, character building) are provided to all students. For students needing additional support as evidenced, for example, by scoring at moderate or high risk on a universal behavior screener (e.g., Student Risk Screening Scale; Drummond, 1994) or scoring below grade level during academic benchmarking, Tier 2 supports are available, usually within small groups or as other low-intensity interventions. Tier 3 supports are intensive, individualized interventions provided to the few students with the greatest risk elements, who need more than Tier 1 and Tier 2 provisions (Fairbanks, Sugai, Guardino, & Lathrop, 2007). Within tiered systems, many educators seek low-intensity strategies to support student academic and behavioral success, including instructional choice, scaffolding independent work, peer tutoring, increasing opportunities to respond, and behavior-specific praise (Niesyn, 2009; Simonsen, Fairbanks, Briesch, Myers, & Sugai, 2008), and student-level strategies such as self-monitoring and behavior contracts (Lane, Menzies, Bruhn, & Crnobori, 2011). Instructional choice is a versatile strategy that can be incorporated into daily planning at Tier 1 and be used as an intervention for students who need Tier 2 support (Lane, Menzies, Ennis, & Oakes, 2015). Instructional choice occurs when "the student is provided with two or more options, is allowed to independently select an option, and is provided with the selected option. .. within 688655B DXXXX10.