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This article explores the importance of effective classroom management and provides evidence-based practices for designing classroom supports in line with Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (PBIS). The article also discusses how to identify areas of strength using the Classroom Management Self-Assessment and emphasizes the benefits of well-managed classrooms on student outcomes.
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Connecting SW-PBIS to the Classroom: Designing Classroom Supports Patti Hershfeldt, Ed.D. Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health Center for Prevention of Youth Violence phershfe@jhsph.edu
Objective • Identify actions for a school-wide team to improve the quality of classroom management throughout their school
Big Idea • We often assume green zone is in place everywhere • But what about the classroom? • How is PBIS being used in the classroom to prevent yellow zone behaviors? • By fortifying the green zone, we can reduce need for yellow zone
Today’s Questions • How important is classroom management? • How can teachers ‘grow the green’? How can we identify areas of strengths using the Classroom Management Self Assessment? • Classroom behavior support practices blend with school-wide systems • As a team, how will you work to make all classrooms effective settings?
What the Research Says about Classroom Management • Linked with positive student outcomes (academic and behavior) • Increased risk of preventing more serious problems among at-risk kids • Supports all students in the prevention of possible current and future behavior problems. • Strong management signals to kids that the class is a safe place to learn. • Well managed classrooms are rated as having more positive climates. (Aber et al., 1998; Mitchell, Bradshaw & Leaf, 2009)
What the Research says about Classroom Management • Greater student engagement (Morrison, 1979) • Friendlier peer interactions and helpful behaviors, more attentive, less aggression (Susman, Husten-Stein & Friedrich-Coffer, 1980). • Teachers experience greater efficacy (Woolfolk, 2002) • Increased student achievement • Creative and flexible instructional delivery • Teacher longevity
In a Well-Managed Classroom • Students are actively involved in their work • Students know what is expected of them and are generally successful • There is relatively little wasted time, confusion, or disruption • The climate of the classroom is work-oriented, but relaxed and pleasant
In Classrooms that were IneffectiveWehby, Symons, & Shores (1995) • Less than half of student’s hand raises or correct academic responses were acknowledged by teachers • Less than 2 praise statements per hour • Most academic work consisted of independent seatwork • Inconsistent distribution of teacher attention • Compliance to a command generally resulted in the delivery of another command
5 Key Features of Classroom Management • Review each feature • Consider a system for taking this information to the whole faculty • Build a “measure” of school-wide classroom management • Use this measure for action planning and continuous improvement
Evidence Based Practices in Classroom Management 1. Maximize structure in your classroom. 2. Establish, teach, prompt, monitor, and evaluate a small number of positively stated expectations. 3. Maximize academic engaged time 4. Establish a continuum of strategies to acknowledge appropriate behavior. 5. Establish a continuum of strategies to respond to inappropriate behavior. (Simonsen, Fairbanks, Briesch, Myers, & Sugai, 2008)
1. Maximize Structure • Develop Predictable Routines • Teacher routines • Student routines • Design an environment that.. • elicits appropriate behavior • minimizes crowding and distraction
Design a Functional Physical Layout for the Classroom • Different areas of the classroom designed for different purposes • Traffic Patterns • Visual access • Teacher access to students at all times • Student access to instruction • Density • Teacher desk
Questions for Planning Physical Space • How many students will you have in the room at one time? • How should your pupil’s seats be grouped? • What kinds of activities will be taking place in your classroom? • Do any students need to be isolated? If so, is it for certain activities or for most of the day? • How is movement in the classroom to be regulated? • What can you do to create a sense of well-being and safety for your students in your classroom?
2. Establish, teach, prompt, monitor, and evaluate a small number of positively statedexpectations
Establish Behavioral Expectations/Rules • A small number (i.e., 3-5) of positively stated rules. Tell students what we want them to do, rather than telling them what we do not want them to do. • Publicly post the rules. • Should match SW Expectations
Teach rules in the context of routines • Teach expectations explicitly. • Define rule in operational terms—tell students what the rule looks like within routine. • Provide students with examples and non-examples of rule-following. • Actively involve students in lesson—game, roleplay, etc. to check for their understanding. • Provide opportunities to practice rule following behavior in the natural setting.
Teach the rules • Define and teach classroom routines • How to enter class and begin to work • How to predict the schedule for the day • What to do if you do not have materials • What to do if you need help • What to do if you need to go to the bathroom • What to do if you are handing in late material • What to do if someone is bothering you. • Signals for moving through different activities. • “Show me you are listening” • How to determine if you are doing well in class • Establish a signal for obtaining class attention • Teach effective transitions.
Prompt or remind students of the rules • Provide students with visual prompts (e.g., posters, illustrations, etc). • Use pre-corrections, which include “verbal reminders, behavioral rehearsals, or demonstrations of rule-following or socially appropriate behaviors that are presented in or before settings where problem behavior is likely” (Colvin, Sugai, Good, Lee, 1997).
Monitor students’ behavior • Active supervision • Move around • Look around • Interact with students • Reinforce • Correct
Evaluate the effect of instruction • Collect data • Are rules being followed? • If not ask.. • who is making them? • where are the errors occurring? • what kind of errors are being made? • when are they being made? • Summarize data (look for patterns) • Use data to make decisions
Establish, Teach, Review, Monitor, and Reinforce a small number of positively statedexpectations.
3. Maximize academic engaged time The Effective Teacher Teaches students not a subject or a grade level Maximizes academic learning time Has students earning their own achievement Keeps the students actively engaged in learning - Wong, 1998
Wong: The 4 kinds of time at school • Allocated Time 100% • Total time kids are in class • Instructional Time 90% • Total time you can observe a teacher teaching • Engaged Time 75% • Total time a student is involved in the learning • Academic learning time 35% • Time during which a student can demonstrate their learning.
Maximize Academic Engaged Time: Instruction Influences Behavior • Pacing • Opportunities for student responses • Acquisition vs Practice • Student feedback from teacher • Student choice • Sequence activities so preferred activities follow more demanding activities • Re-package it
4. Establish a continuum of strategies to acknowledge appropriate behavior. • Five instances of praise for every correction. • Begin each class period with a celebration. • Provide multiple paths to success/praise. • Group contingencies, personal contingencies, etc
Increasing Positive Interactions • Use individual conferences to provide specific praise • “Search” for reinforceable behaviors • Reduce attention to misbehavior and increase time rewarding positive behaviors • Praise should be… – contingent: occur immediately following desired behavior – specific: tell learner exactly what they are doing correctly and continue to do in the future
5. Establish a continuum of strategies to respond to inappropriate behavior. • Apply consistently • Immediate feedback (when possible) • Plan consistent with school-wide plan • Define the school-wide “rule” for what is managed in the classroom and what is sent to the office • Consequence linked to context • Establish predictable consequences • Establish individual consequences AND group consequences
Alpha vs. Beta COMMANDS • Alphacommands are short and clear; neutral tone (e.g., “Stay on topic -- Columbus Day”) • Beta commands are wordy, vague and often convey a feeling of frustration (e.g., If you won’t listen, you won’t learn a darn thing. You aren’t trying. Pay attention and keep up”) (Annemieke Golly)
Resources on Classroom Management • CHAMPs: A proactive and positive approach to classroom management • Sprick, R. Garrison, M., & Howard, L. (1998). Pacific Northwest Publishing. • Coaching Classroom Management: Strategies and Tolls for Administrators and Coaches • Sprick, R., Knight, J., Reinke, W.M., & McKale, T. (2006). Pacific Northwest Publishing.
Classroom Check-up • A consultation model designed to increase behavior management • Conduct observations • Assess critical classroom variables • Provide feedback • Collaboratively design individualized intervention plan • Teachers self-monitor/ and are receive ongoing feedback and support (Reinke et al., 2008)
Classroom Check-Up Observation Form Step 1 • Opportunities to respond • Correct academic responses • Disruptions • Ratio of Interactions • Specific praise • General praise • Reprimands
Classroom Check-Up Observation Form Step 2 For the next 5 minutes, focus on a different student every 5 seconds. Record a “+” symbol to indicate on-task or engaged behavior and a “–” symbol to indicate off-task behavior. When each student has been observed, begin the progression again. Continue until 5 minutes has elapsed.
Divide the number of on-task (+) marks by the total number of marks (60). Time on task (academic engagement) =__________ percent. 44 /60 = 73%
CCU Feedback Form • Calculate your data/tallies • Fill into the feedback columns (by looking at the benchmarks) • Choose ONE goal! • Watch your students succeed! • A few notes • These are determined by ideal research conditions • Special education considerations
ClassroomManagement: Self Assessment Simonsen, Sugai, Fairbanks, & Briesch, 2006 http://www.pbis.org/pbis_resource_detail_page.aspx?Type=4&PBIS_ResourceID=174
Resources • Coaching Classroom Management: Strategies and Tolls for Administrators and Coaches • Sprick, R., Knight, J., Reinke, W.M., & McKale, T. (2006). Pacific Northwest Publishing. • CHAMPs: A proactive and positive approach to classroom management • Sprick, R. Garrison, M., & Howard, L. (1998). Pacific Northwest Publishing. • Function Based Thinking: A systematic way of thinking about function and its impact on classroom behavior. Beyond Behavior (in press) • Hershfeldt, P.A., Rosenberg, M.S., & Bradshaw, C.P. • Good Behavior Game Implementation & Procedures Manual • Anderson, C,M. & Rodriguez, B.J.