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Question. What happened to the woman with pica?. 36. Questions. How often do you recommend sending out newsletters, and is it possible to get samples?How can Mental Health agencies effectively collaborate with SWPBS?. Questions. What you said about 8th grade students is true with regard to they
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1. Function - based Behavior Support at the Team, School and District Levels Rob Horner, and George Sugai
University of Oregon and University of Connecticut
www.pbis.org
2. Question What happened to the woman with pica?
3. Questions How often do you recommend sending out newsletters, and is it possible to get samples?
How can Mental Health agencies effectively collaborate with SWPBS?
4. Questions What you said about 8th grade students is true with regard to “they don’t need it”…but what about teachers to think kids should already know how to behave…if we coddle them will they be ready for high school?
5. Goals Define the critical features of a team implementing individual behavior support plans.
Define the role of functional behavioral assessment in the design of behavior support.
Define the features of individual student behavior support plans.
Define a system for monitoring behavior support efforts.
6. Positive Behavior Support Defined “Positive behavior support” is the rational integration of:
(a) valued outcomes,
(b) behavioral and biomedical science,
(c) validated procedures, and
(d) systems change
… to enhance quality of life, and minimize/prevent problem behaviors.
7. A Context for PBS Behavior support is the redesign of environments, not the redesign of individuals
Positive Behavior Support plans define changes in the behavior of those who will implement the plan. A behavior support plan describes what we will do differently.
8. Major Changes in Behavior Support Prevention
Teaching as the most effective approach
Environmental redesign, Antecedent Manipulations
Function-based support
Functional assessment
Team-based design and implementation of support
Comprehensive Interventions
Link Behavior Support to Lifestyle Plan
Multi-component interventions
Linking behavioral, educational, mental health strategies
Systems Change
Intervention at the “whole-school” level
Systems that nurture and sustain effective practices
Systems that are durable
10. “Reiko” Assessments indicate that Reiko performs in average to above average range in most academic areas. However, her teacher has noticed Reiko’s frequent talking-out & asking & answering questions without raising her hand has become an annoying problem to other students & to teacher.
11. “Seth” Seth is a highly competent student, but has a long history of antisocial behavior. He is quick to anger, & minor events quickly escalate to major confrontations. He has few friends, & most of his conflicts occur with peers in hallways & cafeteria & on bus. In last 2 months, he has been given 8 days of in school detention & 6 days of out of school suspension. In a recent event, he broke the glasses of another student.
12. “Mitch” Mitch displays a number of stereotypic (e.g., light filtering with his fingers, head rolling) & self-injurious behaviors (e.g., face slapping, arm biting), & his communications are limited to a verbal vocabulary of about 25 words. When his usual routines are changed or items are not in their usual places, his rates of stereotypic & self-injurious behavior increases quickly.
13. “Rachel” Rachel dresses in black every day, rarely interacts with teachers or other students, & writes & distributes poems & stories about witchcraft, alien nations, gundams, & other science fiction topics. When approached or confronted by teachers, she pulls hood of her black sweatshirt or coat over her head & walks away. Mystified by Rachel’s behavior, teachers usually shake their heads & let her walk away. Recently, Rachel carefully wrapped a dead squirrel in black cloth & placed it on her desk. Other students became frightened when she began talking to it.
14. Assumptions about problem behavior Problem Behavior (Aggression, Disruption, Insubordination, Withdrawal, Defiance) is a major barrier to BOTH social and academic success in school.
Problem behavior arises from an interaction between biology, context and learning.
Problem behavior can be changed.
15. Assumptions about behavior support Context matters
Combining social, behavioral, psychopharmacological, and educational variables is appropriate
All elements of a multi-component intervention need to be consistent with assumptions about the mechanisms sustaining problem behavior.
Understanding behavioral function is essential
Implement effective practices WITH the systems that will support and sustain those practices
16. Steps in Building a Behavior Support Plan Defining the Challenge
Assessment
Design of support strategies
Implementation of strategies
Evaluation and adaptation
17. Behavior Support Elements
18. Behavior Support Planning Define the challenge
Establish a functional team
Define behaviors of concern
Define outcomes (behavioral, educational, lifestyle)
Person-centered planning
Functional Assessment
Support Plan Design
Implementation
Evaluation and modification
19. Defining the Challenge Valued outcomes
Not just reduction of problem behavior
Focus on credible lifestyle, learning, social outcomes
Technical soundness of plan
Procedures are consistent with (a) laws of human behavior, (b) functional behavioral assessment outcomes
Contextual fit of plan
Procedures are consistent with the values, skills, resources and administrative support of those who will implement the plan
Knowledgeable team process
Team needs to be composed of people with the knowledge needed to build an individualized intervention.
20. Technically Sound Plan of Support The elements of the plan are consistent with basic laws of behavior
The elements of the plan are consistent with basic laws of physiology
The elements of the plan are consistent with the summary statement(s) from the functional behavioral assessment.
21. Contextual Fit The people who will implement a BSP:
Are knowledge about elements of the BSP
Have the skills required to implement BSP
Are comfortable with the procedures (Values)
Have administrative support to implement BSP
Have the expectation that the BSP will be effective
Believe that BSP is in the best interest of focus person
Have the resources (time, materials) to implement are available and efficiently used.
22. Establish a Functional Team Knowledge about the individual
His/her behavior, interests, strengths, challenges, future
Knowledge about the context
Instructional goals, curriculum, social contingencies, schedule, physical setting.
Knowledge about behavioral technology
Elements of behavior
Principles of behavior
Intervention strategies
23. Which team is more likely to bring the three sources of knowledge? Team A
Child
Parent
Teacher
Coordinator
Behavior specialist
Friend Team B
School Psychologist
Counselor
Teacher
24. Importance of Team Composition Leah Bennazi (University of Oregon)
How does the composition of a behavior support team affect:
(a) the technical soundness of the behavior support plan, and
(b) the contextual fit of the behavior support plan selected for implementation.
25. Systems for Individual Behavior Support Administration
Team-based Coordination
Specialist
26. Administrative Systems Establish commitment with the whole faculty
Priority for educating all children (with or without IEPs)
Written feature of school improvement plan
Administrative leadership
Regular review with faculty
Regular review by administrator
Allocation of adequate resources
Team, Coordinator, Specialist, Implementation
Implementation of School-wide PBS Expectations
School-wide foundation in place
27. Team systems Purpose is to organize local assistance
Not test and place elsewhere
Team meeting schedule and procedures
Efficient
Documented
Teacher request for assistance system
Request for assistance form (provided)
Team-based evaluation
Does system work for faculty and staff?
Does system work for children and families?
28. Specialist Capacity Assist in defining school-wide commitment
Conduct Functional Behavioral Assessment
Person-center planning, wraparound, FBA
FACTS (provided)
Teach others to conduct FBA
Lead the design of behavior support plan
Comprehensive
Contextual Fit
Write plan
29. Specialist Capacity Develop system for active evaluation
Is support being delivered
Is support making a difference
Coordinate implementation
Plan for implementation
Lead interpretation and adaptation
Assist in organizing information for regular reports to administration and faculty
30. Functional Behavioral Assessment: Defined Functional behavioral assessment is a process for identifying (a) observable problem behaviors, (b) the contexts or routines where the problem behaviors are most likely, (c) the specific antecedent events within a context or routine that reliably predict occurrence of problem behaviors, and (d) the consequences that appear to maintain the problem behavior.
31. Functional Behavioral Assessment:Purpose The primary purpose of a functional behavioral assessment is to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of a behavior intervention plan.
An FBA that does not affect the content of a BIP is not useful.
Multiple levels of FBA are needed. Most schools should have at least three approaches to FBA.
32. The importance of functional behavioral assessment Behavioral Function
The consequence that maintains a behavior.
Obtain/Get positive (events, objects, activities, sensations)
Avoid/Escape negative (events, objects, activities, sensations)
The effectiveness and efficiency of behavior support is improved with knowledge of behavioral function.
Developing support without regard for behavioral functional will result in plans that are as likely to make problem behavior WORSE as to produce improvement.
33. Defining Behavioral Function Define the behavior
Be specific, and operational (what you can count)
Define the routine/context
Place the behavior in a context.
In that context, that behavior, by that student is most likely maintained by ????
Focus on the single most controlling consequence
Use three-step logic model
34. Identifying Behavioral Function: Maintaining Consequences
35. Video Define Behavior
Define Context/ Routine
Define behavioral function
Get/Obtain vs. Escape/Avoid
Social/Object/Activity/Sensation?
Specific Event
36. Using Behavioral Function School-wide/Classroom Prevention
Targeted Interventions
Individual Student Interventions
Functional Behavioral Assessment
37. Moving from FBA to Behavior Support Plan
38. Behavior Support Elements
40. Main Themes of Effective Interventions Make the problem behavior irrelevant
Change the context so the problem does not arise
Make the problem behavior inefficient
Teach alternative skills that produce same effect as problem behavior
Exaggerate rewards for appropriate behavior
Make the problem behavior ineffective
Minimize the likelihood that a problem behavior will be rewarded.
42. Summary Focusing on the “behavioral function” of problem behavior places the challenge in the context rather than in the student.
Behavioral function affects how we organize support at all levels of SWPBS.