450 likes | 585 Views
Using Positive Behavior Support to Build Your Code of Student Conduct. Brandi Gonzales, LCSW Lafayette Parish School System Supervisor of Child Welfare & Attendance. Overview of Today’s Session. Establishing the Team Reviewing the Basics with Staff Expectations(Goals) Developed
E N D
Using Positive Behavior Support to Build Your Code of Student Conduct Brandi Gonzales, LCSW Lafayette Parish School System Supervisor of Child Welfare & Attendance
Overview of Today’s Session • Establishing the Team • Reviewing the Basics with Staff • Expectations(Goals) Developed • Evaluating Existing Data • Referral Process • Rules Developed • Effective Interventions for Rule Violators • Faculty/Staff Buy-In • Implementation Plan Established • Lesson Plans for Teaching • Evaluating Efforts
Lafayette Parish School System at a Glance2008-2009 • Total Students 29,643 • Total Schools 41 • Percentage White 51.81% • Percentage Minority 48.19% • Percentage “At Risk” 57.76% LADOE Multiple Statistics for Total Reported Public School Students, February 2009
Establishing the Team • Katherine Landry-Deputy Superintendent • Brandi Gonzales-Supervisor of Child Welfare & Attendance • Anne Smith-Special Education • Barbara Friedrichs-Coordinated School Health and Intervention Coordinator • Carolina Figueroa-Attendance Administrator • Rebecca Kreamer-Educational Consultant
Key Elements Present on Team • Administrative Support • Behavioral Expertise • Regular Education • Special Education • Legal Expertise
Reviewing Principles of Behavior • The Team reviewed the current Lafayette Parish Code of Student Conduct • LPSS used a punishment model. Punishment by definition is “the practice of imposing something unpleasant or aversive on a person or animal, usually in response to disobedience, defiance, or behavior deemed morally wrong by individual, governmental, or religious principles.” • Deputy Superintendent Landry posed the question “Is what we are doing changing behavior?” • Our punishment model was in many cases actually serving as positive reinforcement thus increasing the problematic behavior!
Expectations Developed:What do we want? • Superintendent Lemoine made three requests: • Be consistent • Design consequences that change behavior • Involve parents • What did administrators want? • Clarity • Preservation of instructional time • Immediate and effective consequences • Campus safety
Expectations Developed:What do we want? • What do parents want? • Increased communication • Fair outcomes-let the punishment fit the crime • Easy to understand • What do teachers want? • Classrooms free from disruption • Increased communication • Consequences that change behavior
Overall Goals of Redesign • Proactive • Data Driven • Consistent Application of Discipline across Schools • Increased Communication among Stakeholders • Effective Interventions/Consequences • Reduction in Out of School Suspensions and Expulsions (loss of instruction)
Evaluating Existing Data • Far to often districts revise their Codes of Student Conduct based on qualitative data rather than quantitative data. • The Discipline Matrix Committee did an in-depth study of not only school data but also community indicators of youth behavior.
PBS Trained Schools • All school trained in School Wide Positive Behavior Support • 14 in Year 1 of implementation • 11 In Year 2 of implementation • 16 in Year 3 (+) of implementation • 3 schools trained in Secondary PBS • 3 school labeled Demonstration Sites
Lafayette Parish School SystemSuspension and Expulsion Rates2001-Present Percentage of total Students
Lafayette Parish School SystemAlternative School Referrals Number of Students Referred School Year
Lafayette Parish School System Disciplinary Rates as compared to State Averages for 2007-2008 Percentage of total Students
Lafayette Parish School System Drop-out Data as compared to State Averages 2006-2007 Percentage of Students
Juvenile Justice Statistics • The Acadiana Region (Evangeline, Acadia, St. Landry, Vermilion, Lafayette, Iberia and St. Martin Parishes) ranks 3rdin Louisiana for number of youth in the criminal justice system. • Lafayette Parish was 1st in the region!
What we learned about our data: • Too complex (163 Behavior Infraction Codes and 68 Disposition Codes) • Unclear, Overlapping, Multiple Interpretations • Retrieval was time consuming and inaccurate • Useful data was not being collected correctly (time of day, location, referring staff)
Data Changes Proposed: • Create a new coding system which matches the state SIS codes • Reduce Infraction Codes from 163 to 49 • Reduce Disposition Codes from 68 to 32 • Operationally define behaviors using SWIS definitions as a guideline
Referral Process: What happens when students are disciplined? • We reviewed current processes in discipline-those outlined in policy and those actually used in practice • We reviewed state laws which govern the disciplinary process
Changes Made to the Referral Process-Minor vs. Major: • We required every school to have a documented Minor Infraction Policy through PBS • We required administrators to comply with the Minor Infraction Policy and educate teachers regarding this process when inappropriate referrals were made
Changes Made to the Referral Process-Parental Involvement: • Parental contact by phone (not notes, not a copy of the state form, not automated messages) is mandatory for detention, in school suspension, Saturday Intervention, out of school suspension, and recommended expulsion • Parents must come to school for a face to face conference for all students returning from out of school suspension • Parents are required to attend Saturday Intervention with students
Changes Made to the Referral Process-Threat Assessments: • Required for all incidences when a student or staff member has been threatened or school safety has been compromised (bomb threats) • Researched based tool used • Outcomes of assessment guide intervention (discipline, mental health, law enforcement) • Mental Health and School Staff complete jointly
Rules DevelopedA look at our History: • 2005-2006 and before • Behaviors were grouped into three Categories: A, B, or C • There were four Steps in the Discipline Process: • Step One-Behavior Clinic • Step Two-Discipline Center • Step Three-Suspension (1-3 days) • Step Four -Recommended Expulsion • Category A Behaviors were issued Step One • Category B Behaviors were issued Step Three • Category C Behaviors were issued Step Four
Some Examples from the 2005-2006 Policy • Violation of the Uniform Policy or tardiness were Category A offenses which resulted in Step 1-assignment to Behavior Clinic (detention) • Disrespect of Authority, disobedience, and displaying public affection were Category B behaviors that resulted in Step 3-assignment of Out of School Suspension • Verbal assault/threatening, fighting and vandalism were Category C behaviors that resulted in Step 4-Recommnded for Expulsion
Rules Developed A look at our History: • 2006-2007 Student Code of Conduct Revision: • Defined behaviors operationally • Created a range of consequences • Revised fighting policy to provide graduated consequences • Required implementation of PBS in all schools
Rules Developed: Introducing the Concept of a Discipline Matrix • Modeled from Broward County School District in Southern Florida • Creates a systematic application of discipline across schools • Individualizes the interventions and consequences to the behavior
Improvements from Prior Polices/Codes of Conduct: • Strengthened behavioral definitions • Gave step by step consequences rather than ranges • Tailored interventions to behavior infractions • Expanded what we think of as consequences • Accounted for progression within an infraction and across infractions with limits on interventions
Effective Interventions for Rule Violations: • New Interventions were developed based on the data analysis • Mindset shift from punitive to rehabilitative • Redesigned some existing interventions • Incorporated best practices into process
New Interventions: • Threat Assessments • Restitution/Apology • Saturday Intervention • Behavior Assessment Plan • School Specific Interventions • Loss of Privileges • Probation Card • Alternative to Suspension
Using the Data • Analysis of data indicated that Lafayette Parish students were referred to the office in three major areas: • Disobedience • Disrespect • Fighting/Physical Aggression
Saturday Intervention • Structured educational sessions for parents and students who are disciplined for willful disobedience or disrespect • Held at one site every Saturday from 8:00-12:00 • No transportation provided • Staffed with certified teachers and licensed mental health professionals
Alternative to Suspension • For students who are in a fight for the first time in a school year • Suspension off-site for one to three days • In lieu of an Out of School Suspension • Staffed by a Certified Teacher • Intensive interventions aimed at conflict resolution, anger management, and exercising self control
Refining Existing Programs • Purchased new intervention materials from Advantage Press at www.advantagepress.com/2007/discipline.html • Materials were aligned to the Discipline Matrix and given as assignments during Before or After School Detention and In School Suspension • Tailored the intervention to the behavioral violation
Parental Involvement • Return from Suspension Conferences now mandatory after out of school suspension • Parental participation mandatory at Saturday Intervention • Personal, direct parent contact now required for certain offenses-no messages, no notes
Faculty and Staff Buy-In • Buy-In was encouraged throughout the process by involving key groups: • Administrators at every level • Bus Drivers • School Counselors • District Discipline Committee • Superintendent • Teacher Organizations • School Resource Officers • Juvenile Court Judges • Youth Planning Board • Open Parent Meeting
Faculty and Staff Buy-In • Reminded everyone this was a process • Committed to a review following six months of implementation • Heard comments/input from ALL areas
Implementation Plan Established • Mid-year implementation beginning January 1, 2009 • Bus Matrix for all students • Middle and High School Matrices • Elementary Matrix planning for Fall 2009 • Training in December 2008 for all administrators, all teachers, all bus drivers, all clerical staff
Lesson Plans for Teaching • Video produced by Acadiana Open Channel • Power Point presentation developed for Middle and High School students • Hands on computer entry training for all staff • On-going technical assistance through Blackboard Discussion Boards, e-mail list serves
Evaluating Efforts • Reviews held with administration from every level, bus drivers, teachers, District Discipline Committee in spring/summer 2009 • Data reviewed (compliance reports) • Modifications made • Elementary Matrix developed • Modified district policy regarding cell phones
Preliminary Data:Semester 1 vs. Semester 22008-2009 Total # Assigned
Next Steps:On-going Evaluation and Progress Monitoring • On-going training planned for Fall 2009 • Data monitoring on monthly basis • Compliance monitoring
Contact Information Brandi Gonzales Lafayette Parish School System Child Welfare and Attendance bjgonzales@lpssonline.com To view the Matrix: www.lpssonline.com/site3746.php