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MVHS. K. Kevin Aten Chief Human Resources Officer katen@greeleyschools.org. Climate and Culture: Pathways to Student Achievement. The MVHS Story. New School PBIS was a slow start “5 years to implement-No way” Implementation is a process Ties into RtII and School Climate and Culture
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MVHS K. Kevin Aten Chief Human Resources Officer katen@greeleyschools.org • Climate and Culture: • Pathways to Student Achievement
The MVHS Story • New School • PBIS was a slow start “5 years to implement-No way” • Implementation is a process • Ties into RtII and School Climate and Culture • Let’s go back in time.....
MVHS —Years 1-2 • New school • Everything was new • Lots of excitement, not much focus • Student body was small • Master schedule was designed for adults • Achievement was low
MVHS—Years 2-12 • New principal arrives, focus on achievement • Hiring new teachers • Lots of staff issues had developed • Students behaviors were a problem and staff convinced, “...all these bad students” • Master schedule was for students • Achievement was low
MVHS—Now • 1,100 students 30% free and reduced, 15% ELA, 12% Exceptional Services (57% impact) • High student acheivement and growth—Colorado performance-rated high school • Staff who work together • RAMP-certified couseling program • Constistent systems, and PBIS was 94%/4%/1%
So What? • The climate and culture of a building will not change until you do • We must model positive behavior • Achievement will increase when we inspire students, not force them to comply (and get them involved) • Build a place where we all want to be!
MVHS...”PB...What?” • PBIS-Efforts are “slow” 2003-2004 • “PBIS is really no discipline, right!” • Staff hate PBIS...and each other “We own this school.” “Let’s get tough.” (Eliminated the handbook) • What does discipline mean...let me tell you...Mr. Aten.....
MVHS...”PB...What?” • What does discipline mean...let me tell you...Mr. Aten.....
MVHS—Years 2-12 • Middle English origin of the word discipline is Latin via Old French as it comes from the word disciplina, which means “knowledge or instruction.”
Eight Principles ofPositive Behavior Systems • Establish administrative leadership • Develop team-based implementation • Define behavioral expectations • Teach behavioral expectations
Eight Principles ofPositive Behavior Systems • Acknowledge and reward appropriate behavior • Monitor and correct behavioral errors • Use information and data for decision-making • Build parent collaboration
Behavior in Ecological Terms • Behavior: In a given time and place • Person: Influences interactions with the environment • Environment: Physical space, people present, social atmosphere, events and activities, rules and norms • Football game versus library (screaming is encouraged at one of these place)
Replacement Behaviors • Behavior fulfills….get into or out of ?! • Context Matters for behaviors • Replacement behaviors are: • Set of socially acceptable behaviors… • to achieve the same outcome! • • Teaches good examples of the “right thing”
2 Worries and Ineffective Responsesto Problem Behavior • #1--Get Tough (practices) • Label, suspend, remove, redo (wolfpack) • #2--Train-&-Hope (systems) • Do nothing and hope for the best
Worry #1“Teaching” by Getting Tough • Runyon: “I hate this &$@#% school, & you’re a dumb &$@#%.” • Teacher: “That is disrespectful language. I’m sending you to the office so you’ll learn never to say those words again….starting now!” • Principal: “Ugh...who is teaching behavior around here--me apparently?”
Immediate & seductive solution….”Get Tough!” • Clamp down & increase monitoring • The whole world is a nail.... • Re-re-re-review rules • Extend continuum & consistency of consequences • Establish “bottom line” • ...Predictable individual response is payback !!
Reactive responses are predictable…. • When we experience aversive situation, we select interventions that produce immediate relief • Remove student (for up to 10 days in Colorado) • Remove ourselves(sick days, no staff trust) • Modify physical environment (shorten passing) • Assign responsibility for change to student and/or others (an iron-clad duty schedule is developed)
When behavior doesn’t improve, we “Get Tougher!” • Zero tolerance policies (Colorado legislature) • Increased surveillance (iron-clad duty schedule) • Increased suspension and expulsion • In-service training by expert • Alternative programming • …..Get tougher systems response based on the wrong problem!
Worry #2“Train & hope” approach • React to identified problem • Select and add practice, more complex • Hire expert to train practice • Expect and hope for implementation • Wait for new problem…. • Hope it doesn’t happen in “front of me” • 7. Hope someone else will “do behavior” • NOTE: 6 and 7 are dangerous and illegal
Worry #2“Train & hope” approach • Hope it doesn’t happen in “front of me” • 7. Hope someone else will “do behavior” • Why are 6 and 7 dangerous and illegal??
Erroneous assumption that student… • Is inherently “bad” • Will learn more appropriate behavior through increased use of “aversives” • Will be better tomorrow……. • Someone will take his/her place...yes, it happens....gang behavior...
But….false sense of safety and security! • Fosters environments of control • Triggers and reinforces antisocial behavior • Shifts accountability away from school • Devalues child-adult relationship • Weakens relationship between academic and social behavior programming • Hurts student achievement—Students learn compliance and are not inspired to work hard • Is this an engaging place to be???
Science of behavior has taught us that students…. • Are NOT born with “bad behaviors” • Do NOT learn when presented contingent aversive consequences (triggers) • ……..Do learn better ways of behaving by being taught directly & receiving positive feedback….consider the functional behavior
Challenge… • We must work collaboratively to enhance schools’ capacity to respond proactively, effectively, efficiently, & relevantly to range of problem behaviors observed in schools--Every person who enters the school is part of the problem and part of the solution.
“Zero Tolerance” and “Train and Hope” Do Not Increase Student Achievement • Research reports it doesn’t work • Train and Hope “passes the buck” • 37 pages of rules-who cares? • Too many committees, too little action • Exclusionary and does not help adults • Reinforces bad behavior, cycle of “pay back” • What’s our goal for achievement? (high schools don’t see behavior=achievement) • What is Fair?
When a student says...“Hey, you’re not being fair.” (before you answer, assume the student is not whining)What does she mean?
School-wide Behavior Systems in Place School-wide Behavior Systems NOT in place Literacy Interventions in Place Improved Literacy NO Literacy Improvement Literacy Interventions NOT in Place NO Literacy Improvement NO Literacy Improvement (Kellem et al.)
MVHS—Years 2-12 • POWER is a napkin idea from Patty Cisneros, Campus Security • SAT Team--Nancy Meredith, Beth Dickson, and PE department make the difference • Staff issues • Achievement was low
MVHS—2003-2005 • PBIS vote failed, “It was sad, but good.” • Training and “one conversation at a time” • No Excuses Leadership, ”I quit a million times.” • Thanks to Nancy and Beth and our SAT team members, “Come on people....”
MVHS—2005-2006 • Teaching matrix v1.0 is introduced to students (some staff hate it) • POWER tickets begin (“stupid”) • New teachers have a district PBIS module, but no MVHS training
MVHS—2006-2007 • POWER in the hallways with banners and posters • A few teachers begin teaching behavior each class period • Students and parents on the PBIS Team
MVHS—2007-2008 • New teachers taught PBIS in the MVHS way • Office-versus-classroom-managed behaviors is introduced (quietly) • Attendance and Classroom Data • 5:1 began in some classrooms
MVHS—2008-2009 • PBIS PLC time • Sustaining PBIS is introduced • Staff awards introduced • Quarterly PBIS data chats with staff • Finally some staff depart... “I promised” • Freshman Parent Night begins
Freshman Parent Night • Welcome to MVHS!!! • We are glad to help • Not a 4-year race
MVHS—2009-2010 • MVHS is recognized as a top 10 PBIS high schools • PBIS team reorganized and meet monthly at lunch • Better prizes for students • Achievement improves • Matrix 2.0 introduced
MVHS—2010-2011 • Web site is the main communication tool • Office-vs-Classroom managed required • Friday awards for students from POWER ticket drawing • CHAMPS introduced and 73% of staff take summer voluntary training • POWER for Parents
MVHS—2011-2012 • MVHS is a 25% “choice-in” high school • Top achievement high school in Loveland • Friday awards for students from POWER ticket drawing and teachers • CHAMPS syllabus required • Facebook and Twitter are PBIS tools
MVHS—2012-2013 • Student of the Week continues • Students run the student award program • Student Input for rewards for student parking spot, first in the lunch line and free activity passes to all school events • Staff of the Week continues
School-wide Behavior Systems in Place School-wide Behavior Systems NOT in place Literacy Interventions in Place Improved Literacy NO Literacy Improvement Literacy Interventions NOT in Place NO Literacy Improvement NO Literacy Improvement (Kellem et al.)
Break • Heard the MVHS Story • Now see the specific examples (after break) • I was told, “you just can’t do it in a high school”...so many times.
Culture Questions • How do staff interact with students and each other? • Do you have bells and why? • How many pages of rules-Do students know them? • Are parents true partners in your high school?
Culture Questions • Do you have an RtII committee and plan? • What is the role of data in behavior and achievement? • Is your master schedule built for students or adults? • Does the principal offer “no excuses” leadership? REALLY?
MVHS PBIS MVHS PBIS • Mountain View High School MVHS PBIS MVHS PBIS
MVHS PBIS • What is one rule, process or system in which your staff has 100 percent agreement?
Mountain View High School • Loveland, CO