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SWPBS: Reducing Effectiveness of Bullying Behavior

SWPBS: Reducing Effectiveness of Bullying Behavior. Dan Maggin & George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS Center for Behavioral Education & Research University of Connecticut April 26, 2011 www.pbis.org www.cber.org. PURPOSE

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SWPBS: Reducing Effectiveness of Bullying Behavior

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  1. SWPBS: Reducing Effectiveness of Bullying Behavior Dan Maggin & George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS Center for Behavioral Education & Research University of Connecticut April 26, 2011 www.pbis.orgwww.cber.org

  2. PURPOSE To improve our understanding of & responding to bullying behavior from perspective of school-wide positive behavior support.

  3. Bullying Program Component Review Purpose

  4. Search Methodology (Independent Coders)

  5. Inclusion Criteria

  6. Main Program Questions

  7. Program Materials • Total programs identified = 51 • Total programs reviewed = 44 • Program materials non-English = 6 • Manual for purchase only = 1

  8. Preliminary Results – Key Groups * 33 (75.00%) of programs required curriculum implementation

  9. Examples of NonobservableBehaviors for Initiators

  10. Preliminary Results – Systems Logic

  11. Preliminary Results -- RTI

  12. Preliminary Conclusions

  13. SWPBS: Basics

  14. SWPBS is

  15. Reducing Bullying RtI

  16. 23 Continuum of Support for ALL Few Some All Dec 7, 2007

  17. ESTABLISHING CONTINUUM of SWPBS • TERTIARY PREVENTION • Function-based support • Wraparound • Person-centered planning • TERTIARY PREVENTION ~5% ~15% • SECONDARY PREVENTION • Check in/out • Targeted social skills instruction • Peer-based supports • Social skills club • SECONDARY PREVENTION • PRIMARY PREVENTION • Teach SW expectations • Proactive SW discipline • Positive reinforcement • Effective instruction • Parent engagement • PRIMARY PREVENTION ~80% of Students

  18. 23 RTI Continuum of Support for ALL Few Some All Dec 7, 2007

  19. Continuum of Support for “Manuella” Physical Intimidation Harassment Literacy Social Studies Adult Relations. Computer Lab Attendance Label behavior…not people Dec 7, 2007

  20. Integrated Elements Supporting Social Competence & Academic Achievement OUTCOMES Supporting Decision Making Supporting Staff Behavior DATA SYSTEMS “BULLY BEHAVIOR” PRACTICES Supporting Student Behavior

  21. SWPBS look at bullying behavior

  22. Our Starting Point

  23. Victim attention • Bystander attention • Self-delivered praise • Tangible access

  24. PREVENTION De-emphasis on adding consequence for problem behavior

  25. Target Initiator Context or Setting Continuum of Behavior Fluency Staff Bystander

  26. Is Behavior an Issue?

  27. Reconceptualizing Bullying from Behavior Analytic Perspective for SWPBS

  28. Three basic strategies….if you do nuthin’ else….

  29. Doesn’t Work Works • Label student • Exclude student • Blame family • Punish student • Assign restitution • Ask for apology • Teach targeted social skills • Reward social skills • Teach all • Individualize for non-responsive behavior • Invest in positive school-wide culture

  30. MUST….. • Be easy & do-able by all • Be contextually relevant • Result in early disengagement • Increase predictability • Be pre-emptive • Be teachable • Be brief

  31. www.pbis.org

  32. 1.88 .88 3.14 Baseline Acquisition Full BP-PBS Implementation Rob School 1 Number of Incidents of Bullying Behavior Bruce Cindy School 2 Scott Anne School 3 Ken Scott Ross, University of Oregon 72% 37 School Days

  33. 22% decrease 21% increase Scott Ross, University of Oregon 38 BP-PBS, Scott Ross

  34. 2. Precorrect

  35. Allday & Pakurar (2007)

  36. Non-Classroom Management: Self-Assessment

  37. PBIS Prevention Goals & Bullying Behavior

  38. George.sugai@uconn.edu Dan.maggin@uconn.edu Robh@uoregon.edu pbis.orgswis.orgcber.org

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