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SIB-R Scales of Independent Behavior Revised. TRAINING April 2013. Agenda. Introduction of Presenter Essential Knowledge Interview - Administrative Procedure SIB-R Full Scale Adaptive Adaptive Rating Scale Adaptive Tips SIB-R Full Scale Problem Behavior Scale
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SIB-R Scales of Independent Behavior Revised TRAINING April 2013
Agenda Introduction of Presenter Essential Knowledge Interview - Administrative Procedure SIB-R Full Scale Adaptive Adaptive Rating Scale Adaptive Tips SIB-R Full Scale Problem Behavior Scale Behavior Rating Scale Behavior Tips Guidelines for Completing SIB-R Problem Behavior Scale
ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE Reason for following the steps: If called to testify in a Fair Hearing and you are asked on how you administered the SIB-R, you want to be able to say you followed protocol. If you do not follow protocol and the child is determined not eligible based on the SIB-R and the family appeals the decision to Fair Hearing the SIB-R results are null and void. Face-to-face interview. DO NOT INTERPRET THE QUESTIONS: 1. If parent is on the fence on how to rate a particular question-rate down. 2. Slow down and listen to what parent is saying.
Interview – Administration Procedure Full Scale Set up – Interview Book – Response Booklet We read the statement/question & the parent follows along with the interview book. Usually Best to Use A Table Place free of noise / distractions One respondent – One interviewer Respondent should be someone who is familiar with the rating scales & the person being assessed. Follow directions Starting point is first item
SIB – R – Full Scale - Adaptive • 14 Sub scales organized into 4 adaptive domains • Motor Skills • A) gross motor • B) fine motor • Social Interaction and Communication • C) Social interaction • D) Language Comprehension • E) Language Expression
SIB – R – Full Scale - Adaptive • Personal Living • F) Eating and Meal Preparation • G) Toileting • H) Dressing • I) Personal Self Care • J) Domestic Skills • Community Living • K) Time and Punctuality • L) Money and value • M) Work Skills • N) Home / Community Orientation
Adaptive Rating Scale for SIB-R • Does (or could do) Task completely without help or supervision: 0 1 2 3 Never or Rarely Even if Asked Does, but not well or About ¼ of the time may need to be asked Does fairly well or about ¾ of the time may need to be asked Does very well always or almost always with out being asked
Adaptive Tips You can stop asking the questions after 3 zeros of the last 5 questions. For example: 1. 0 1. 1 2. 0 2. 1 3. 1 3. 0 4. 1 4. 0 5. 0 5. 1 6. 1 7. 0
SIB-R- Problem Behavior Scale • Three Broad Maladaptive indices organized into 8 problem behavior areas • Internalized #1 Hurtful to self #5 Unusual or repetitive habits #7 Withdrawal or inattentive • Asocial #6 Socially offensive #8 Uncooperative
SIB-R- Problem Behavior Scale, cont. • Externalized #2 Hurtful to others #3 Destructive to property #4 Disruptive Behavior
Behavior Rating Scale • Frequency How Often? 1 2 3 4 5 Less than once a month 1 to 3 times a month 1 to 6 times a week 1 to 10 time a day 1 or more times an hour
Behavior Rating Scale • Severity How Serious? 0 1 2 3 4 Not Serious Not a problem Slightly Serious A mild problem Moderately Serious Moderate problem Very Serious Severe problem Extremely Serious A critical problem
Behavior Tips DO NOT DEVIATE FROM THE STANDARD QUESTION. DO NOT lead the parent. DO NOT give the parent the answer. If you have seen a behavior & mom has not said it is a problem or she forgot the behavior, discuss the behavior with mom. If you have seen the behavior, write in the protocol section what you observed by examiner (your name).
Behavior Tips - continued The examples listed are only to explain what the category means. Look at behaviors from the last 1 – 2 months. Inability to learn, or simple lack of adaptive behavior, should not be considered to be a behavior problem. Behavior problems do not include chronologically age appropriate behaviors, such as crying or a saying no. Behaviors that typically occur together or within a few minutes of each other should be considered to be a single problem. If a child has more than one behavior within a single category, specify the behavior that causes the most problem, then rate this behavior for frequency and severity. Rate the behavior’s frequency based on its frequency during the most recent month.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I must acknowledge those who helped me put this training together: For starting the process for the training: Liz Larsen. For his time, guidance, & mentoring: Robert Card. For helping me through the learning curve of Power Point: Tandy Gilbert, Tara Burrell, & Brenda Nickell. For previewing the presentation and her encouragement: Bonnie Jones. For consulting with me about the format of the handouts: Margaret Cuoio & Tandy Gilbert. Thanks to all of you who have attended this training. I hope it was beneficial to you. Please contact me with any questions.