230 likes | 445 Views
Behavior Modification/Parent Communication…. How to make it work for your class By: Angela Poovey. Parent Communication- A Few Reminders. Remember positive statements about students. Ratio 5:1 or even 7:1 Positive notes, phone calls, comments in meetings
E N D
Behavior Modification/Parent Communication…. How to make it work for your class By: Angela Poovey
Parent Communication- A Few Reminders • Remember positive statements about students. Ratio 5:1 or even 7:1 • Positive notes, phone calls, comments in meetings • Consult with colleagues/team if a conflict arises • Don’t rely solely on email or notes, use the telephone! • Hard to interpret • Difficult to include all details, answer all questions, can be time consuming • Ex. Factual, specific emails are fine (field trip money, clothes needed, etc.) • Always “reply with history” for documentation
Communication Cont….. • Remember to utilize our Spanish language resources when sending home notes, writing things on your website, and in newsletter • Involve parents in behavior modification strategies, especially contracts • Use your planner to document, if it works with your organizational style
"Feelings are real and legitimate; children behave and misbehave for a reason, even if adults cannot figure it out." -Unknown
Behavior contracts (1st- 5th) Self-monitoring/Self-management Token Systems (Example: Ms. Gambin) Cost Response Systems (Example: Ms. Canaday) Shaping Cuing Behavioral Momentum Positive Reinforcement (Ms. Glass, Ms. Heberer, K teachers) How Can You Use Behavior Modification?
Why is it important to use behavior modification strategies? • Concrete data: Helpful if problems continue or worsen. This data can be used in the Functional Behavior Assessment and in the creation of a Behavior Intervention Plan, if necessary. Ex. Future SST referral, IEP, Bridges referral • Set plan for you to follow each day. Expectations for yourself, parent, and student are created • Keeps the parent involved with concerns as they are incorporated into behavior modification
Behavior Contracts- The Essentials Behavior: • MUST be specific, observable behaviors. BAD examples: “Johnny needs to be good today” “Suzie needs to be a good friend” “Matthew needs to improve his behavior”
What does that mean? NOTHING if we don’t know what specific behaviors will show that the student is being “good”!
Specific Behaviors • Good learner = staying in your seat, eyes on your teacher, completing work assignment during the required time, mouth closed • Good friend = hands to yourself, sharing materials, talking in a quiet, calm voice
What Behaviors Do We Target? • Baseline Data: • Observation forms • Parent feedback • Gradebook • Attendance • Teacher/Parent interviews
Look at the Setting Event and the ABCs • Setting Event- Where is the student when the problem behavior occurs? • A- Antecedents (Physiology, Physical, Environmental/Cultural) • B- Behaviors (frequency, duration, intensity) • C- Consequences (events that maintain, increase, decrease behavior)
Reinforcement • Positive reinforcement- increases or maintains behaviors. Ex. Praising a student for listening to directions • Negative reinforcement- increases or maintains behaviors. Ex. A student who is acting out gets the attention of his/her classmates • Punishment- Extinguishes behaviors. Ex. Suspension
Behavior Contracts- The Essentials • Explain specific, observable, and positive behaviors to student. Include performance criterion if appropriate. (time/percentage of target behavior) • Start SMALL- you want the student to accomplish his/her goal so that motivation will increase. • If/Then statements: “If you accomplish ______ (target behavior), you will get….” • Clearly stated reward that the child has chosen- try to rely on a easy, natural reward. • Starting and ending date for the contract with student and teacher signatures. • Cover to ensure student’s privacy (Ex. Ms. Fitzgerald)
Contract Essentials Cont…. • Revisit your contract on a weekly or bi-weekly basis. (Is it still working?, is the reward still effective?) • As consistency is reached- change the performance required to receive the reward • Terminating the contract- spread out rewards, substitute material things for verbal encouragers, notes home, or immaterial rewards • If you are using a contract with velcro stars, make sure you document how the student does each week so you can track progress and report long-term effects of the contract • Make sure you list the weekly goal in specific numbers on any contract you use
Reward Ideas • Special Class Job • Prize Box • Extra time on the computer • Extra recess • Choices – for centers, lunch table, partners for groups • Home reward
Self-monitoring/Self-management • Works better with older students because it takes more self-discipline • Self-recording: Students are working on specific, observable, positive behaviors – keep track of how they are doing throughout the day • Visual reminders or cues. Ex. A picture on a student’s desk reminding them of how they should sit in class and listen • Self-reinforcement or self-punishment: Reward/punish as you reach goals
Can be done on an individual or class basis Students receive or lose tokens based on predetermined behaviors- good if they are based on class rules At the end of a certain time period (1/2 day, a whole day, a week) students can exchange their tokens for rewards Reward menu can include many different choices that students have created More tokens = better rewards Token system can be used the entire year or faded like an individual behavior contract Token Point System
Remember: If you choose a behavior modification system….. Consistency is KEY!
General Classroom Management • Use directives, not questions (Ex. Hallway) • Circulate the room • Call on students who aren’t paying attention/talking • Quick redirection and then move on • Light touches that refocus students • Identify modelers and model yourself • Hold eye contact • Verbal encouragers • Non-exclusionary time outs • Classroom environment • Daily schedule
Handouts and Practice • Gary- 1st grade Behaviors: • Comes to school and sleeps until 10am • Calls out during math class instead of raising his hand • Doesn’t turn in any homework What could some antecedents be for each behavior? What tools could we use to modify his behavior?