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Secondary Interventions. Function-based Strategies to Support At-Risk Students. Acknowledgements. Rob Horner, Leanne Hawken, Rob March Fern Ridge Middle School, Clear Lake Elementary, Templeton Elementary, …. Objectives. To understand the components necessary for secondary interventions
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Secondary Interventions Function-based Strategies to Support At-Risk Students
Acknowledgements • Rob Horner, Leanne Hawken, Rob March • Fern Ridge Middle School, Clear Lake Elementary, Templeton Elementary, …
Objectives • To understand the components necessary for secondary interventions • To preview an example of a secondary intervention: the Check-In Check-Out system • To have the information necessary to strengthen secondary interventions that are currently in place in your school
What is a Secondary Intervention? • An intervention (or set of interventions) known by all staff and available for students during the school day • Interventions that provide additional student support in academic, organizational, and/ or social support areas
Academic Systems Behavioral Systems • Tertiary Interventions • Individual Students • Assessment-based • High Intensity • Tertiary Interventions • Individual Students • Assessment-based • Intense, durable procedures • Secondary Interventions • Some students (at-risk) • High efficiency • Rapid response • Secondary Interventions • Some students (at-risk) • High efficiency • Rapid response • Primary Interventions • All students • Preventive, proactive • Primary Interventions • All settings, all students • Preventive, proactive Designing School-wide Systems for Student Success 1-5% 1-5% 5-10% 5-10% 80-90% 80-90%
Prerequisites • Effective & proactive School-wide system in place • Team-based problem solving • Local behavioral capacity • Functional assessment-based behavior support planning • Social skills programming • Behavioral interventions • Administrator participation
School-wide discipline is… 1. Identify a common purpose and approach to discipline 2. Define a clear set of positive expectations and behaviors 3. Implement procedures for teaching expected behavior 4. Differentiate supports from a continuum of procedures for encouraging expected behavior 5. Differentiate supports from a continuum of procedures for discouraging inappropriate behavior 6. Implement procedures for on-going monitoring and evaluation
Tier 2/3 Team membership: Critical features • Someone skilled in function-based assessment, behavior support planning & implementation • Someone skilled in data-based decision making for individual student progress • Administrator • Staff who know the student(s) • Family members
No heroes……. thanks anyway • Do not try to provide support in isolation • We do not want heroes, • We want self-managers; work your way out of the manager role • It takes a team • If you already know it, challenge yourself to explain or teach it to someone else.
Create Templates for Tier 2 • Starting with a template makes frequent tasks more efficient • Form letter (document template) • Business form • Stencil
Defining Secondary Interventions at your school • Not all students require an intensive, individualized intervention • Basic rule: do the least amount to produce the biggest effect! • We can match students w/ pre-existing programs that can address the function the problem behavior is serving for a student • Check-In Check-Out is a common, comprehensive Tier 2 Intervention framework
Tier 2: Small Group Intervention Examples • Social Skills Groups • Check In/Check Out • Academic Support Groups • Self-Monitoring Program
Think Functionally When Choosing Interventions • “Problem Behaviors” are functional skills • Interventions must consider the purpose of behavior (from student’s perspective) • Seek a match from intervention menu for the needs of each individual student
Requirements • Secondary, individualized, small group interventions • Based on functional behavioral assessment information • Social skills instruction • Behavioral programming • Multiple opportunities for high rates of academic success
Daily behavioral monitoring • Self and/or adult • Regular, frequent opportunities for positive reinforcement • Tangible to social • External to internal • Predictable to unpredictable • Frequent to infrequent • Home-school connection
Other Strategies • Behavioral contracts • Adult mentor/monitor • Secondary social skills instruction • Problem solving • Conflict management • Self-management programming • Academic restructuring
Critical Features • Intervention is continuously available • Rapid access to intervention (less than a week) • Very low effort by teachers • Positive system of support • Students agree to participate • Implemented by all staff/faculty in a school • Flexible intervention based on assessment • Functional behavioral assessment
Critical Features • Adequate resources allocated (admin, team) • Continuous monitoring for decision-making • Administrative support • Time & money allocated • No major changes in school climate • E.g., teacher strikes, administrative turnover, major changes in funding • Plan implementation a top priority
Working with Schools Interested in Implementing Secondary Interventions • Provide Overview to Behavior Team • Provide Overview to all staff • Faculty vote • 1-2 Professional development days for behavior team to develop intervention to fit school culture • See BEP Development & Implementation Guide (Hawken, 2004) for training content • After development, gather feedback from all staff on format/structure • Ongoing coaching and feedback
APPROPRIATE Low-level problem behavior (not severe) 2-5 referrals Behavior occurs across multiple locations Examples talking out minor disruption work completion INAPPROPRIATE Serious or violent behaviors/ infractions Extreme chronic behavior (6+ referrals) Require more individualized support FBA-BIP Wrap Around Services Who is Appropriate for Secondary Intervention?
Which Schools Would Benefit From a Secondary Intervention? • How many students does your school have in the range of 2-5 referrals? • If > 10 students- secondary intervention may be appropriate • If < 10 students- implement individualized interventions • The secondary intervention should be able to reasonably accommodate 15-30 students/year
Conduct Brief Functional Assessment Is the behavior maintained by peer attention Is the behavior maintained by escape from social interaction? Is the behavior related to lack of academic skills? • Escape Motivated Secondary Intervention • Reduce adult interaction • Use escape as a reinforcer • Secondary Intervention + Academic Support • Increase academic support • Peer Motivated Secondary Intervention • Allow student to earn reinforcers to share with peers
Implement Basic Secondary Intervention • Continue with Basic Secondary Intervention • Transition to self- management Is Is it Working? Yes No • Conduct Brief Functional Behavioral Assessment • Where does the problem behavior occur/not occur? • Why does the problem behavior keep happening? • Develop summary statement of problem behavior and meet with team to determine plan
Obstacles to Implementation • Administrator not on the team that develops the plan and looks at data for decision making • Plan used as punishment rather than prevention program • Plan coordinator lacks skills to implement the program (e.g., behavior intervention, computer) • Schools expecting plan to solve all behavior problems • Fitting plan and data evaluation into existing teams
Defining Secondary Interventions at your school • Not all students require an intensive, individualized intervention • Basic rule: do the least amount to produce the biggest effect! • We can match students w/ pre-existing programs that can address the function the problem behavior is serving for a student • Check-In Check-Out is a comprehensive Secondary Intervention
Big Ideas • Schools need different systems to deal with different levels of problem behavior in schools. • Secondary group interventions are efficient systems for supporting students at-risk for more severe forms of problem behavior. • Up to 30 students (depending on school size/resources) can be served using a secondary intervention. • Some students are going to need more intensive support than the secondary intervention can provide.
Research Articles Hawken, L. S. & Horner R. H., (2003) Implementing a Secondary Group Intervention Within a School-Wide System of Behavior Support. Journal of Behavioral Education, 12, 225-240. March, R. E. & Horner, R. H. (2002) Feasibility and contributions of functional behavioral assessment in schools. Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders,10, 158-70.
Manual on how to Implement the BEP Crone, D. A., Horner, R. H., & Hawken, L. S. (2010). Responding to problem behavior in schools: The behavior education program (2nd ed.). New York: Guilford Press.