760 likes | 967 Views
PBIS Universal Systems, Practices, and Data-based decision making, Part 1. Approximate agenda for today. 8:30 Welcome, introductions, basics of PBIS, PBIS Team roles, etc. 10:00 Short break 10:08 Behavioral Expectations 11:30 Lunch 12:30 Teaching Behavioral Expectations
E N D
PBIS Universal Systems, Practices, and Data-based decision making, Part 1
Approximate agenda for today • 8:30 Welcome, introductions, basics of PBIS, PBIS Team roles, etc. • 10:00 Short break • 10:08 Behavioral Expectations • 11:30 Lunch • 12:30 Teaching Behavioral Expectations • 2:00 Break • 2:08 Acknowledgements and Celebrations • 3:15 Wrap-up, questions, and SURVEY!!
Pbis workshop expectations • Be a Team Player • Join in the discussion! We love to hear your thoughts and ideas! • When working in small groups, give and take input • Take information back to your school and share • Be Responsible • Be on time! • Sign in – morning and afternoon • Participate in activities • If you have questions, please ask! • Be Respectful • Be a good listener • Stay on task • Keep cell phones silent
How much do teachers/staff/administrators support implementing PBIS? • Who can you count on to help?
What about parents? • Do you have a strong parent group that will support you in your PBIS efforts?
Activity • What’s going on at your school? • Make a list of • Initiatives • Projects • Committees • Anything else?
Work smarter, not harder! • Working Smarter Matrix (on flash drive) Are Outcomes measurable?
Introduction to pbis What’s the big idea?
What is the big idea behind pbis? • Creating a • sustainablepositive • school climate
Benefits of Positive School Climate • Trust & Respect • Order & Discipline • Collaborative Decision Making • Student Interpersonal Relations • Student-Teacher Relations
Why is positive climate Important? • Increase students’ social and academic outcomes
Focus on prevention • PBIS takes a proactive approach • PBIS is for ALL students and ALL staff, in ALL areas of the school
What will it take? • Before student behavior changes, adult behavior has to change! • What is needed to get your school staff to buy into a positive approach to discipline, as opposed to a reactive/punitive approach?
Pbis organizes your environment • Elements of PBIS: • OUTCOMES: Academic Achievement & Social Competence • SYSTEMS: To support staff behavior • PRACTICES: To support student behavior • DATA: For all decision making
PBIS is a 3-Tiered model • UNIVERSAL TIER: Prevention: For ALL students, ALLstaff, in ALLsettings (100% of students) • SECONDARY TIER: For SOME students – small group interventions (5-15% of students) • TERTIARY TIER:For FEW students – individualized interventions (1-5% of students)
Why Have Universal supports? Maximizing Academic Achievement Improving Classroom and School Climate for ALL Decreasing Reactive Management Tier 1 Improving Support for Students with EBD Increasing Active Prevention
What about students who need more (support, resources, time, etc.)? • What have you experienced? • How was your class time impacted? • How much instructional time was lost?
overview what to expect in this 2-day training
Focus on universal tier • Establishing a Leadership Team (that’s you!) • Defining Expectations • Teaching Expectations • Reinforcing Expected Behaviors • Handling Problem Behaviors • Using data for decision-making and action planning
Lots of activities! • Planning • Creating • Practicing
Time for questions Like us on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/asucce Follow us on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/ASUCCE
The pbis team Roles and responsibilities
importance of team-driven • People come and go • long-term sustainability • Problem-solving process • need diverse expertise and input • Avoid 1 person effort
Your team represents your school PBIS Dream Team • Administrator • Representative group of teachers • Person with behavioral expertise • Support staff • Family member
Does your team represent your school? • Who is missing from your team? • Are there people outside the team that can help?
the PBIS Team leads the way • Defining school-wide expectations • Teaching expectations to students • Acknowledging students for appropriate behavior • Using consistent consequences • Using data to make decisions • Progress monitoring
Share the responsibilities! • Tips for avoiding burnout: • Divide the team into sub-groups or committees • Work in an area where you feel comfortable or have expertise • Rotate roles periodically
Example of sub-groups Teaching Making sure lesson plans are taught Acknowledgements Students and Adults Administrator + Coach Data Pull data, look at data, be able to talk about data Communication With other staff, community, and families
Roles at the team meeting • Facilitator (creates agenda, leads meeting) • Data Manager (brings data to team meetings) • Time-keeper (keeps team on task) • Recorder (takes and distributes minutes; archives material; updates profile) • Communicator (shares information with staff, families, and communities) • Switch it up!! Avoid burn-out • And have a back-up!
Some meeting tips • Create meeting norms (rules, expectations for meeting) • Record minutes electronically, and on overheard, if possible • Approve minutes and send out immediately after meeting • Have data report ready before meeting
activity • Think about your team and what roles each person will play • Assign meeting tasks • Decide on sub-groups or committees • What rules or expectations do you want for your meetings?
have a routine and • Example Agenda: • Attendance, roles for meeting, set next meeting date • Status of items from previous meeting • Look at data and problem solve • Precise problem statement (data manager) • Action plan • Assign tasks • Upcoming Events • Distribute minutes • Communicate news to school, district, families
Planning the year (we’ll come back to this) • Plan for upcoming events, such as • Fall kick-off • PBIS assessment tools • Implementation of reinforcement plan • Celebrations • Re-teaching/reinforcement boosters • Continuously update action plan
Activity • Begin planning your activities for next school year (we will revisit this later, too) • Introduce PBIS to staff and students • Communicate progress and activities to staff/parents, etc. • Evaluate your progress (when and how) • Celebrations
Time for questions! Like us on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/asucce Follow us on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/ASUCCE
Defining expectations What behavior do you want to see?
start with a vision • In a perfect world, what kind of school environment would you like to see? • What type of behavior would you like to see from your students? From staff? • What behaviors would you like never to see again?
Behavioral Expectations • Choose 3-5 broadly stated expectations • Use data to see what major challenges are and align expectations to those. • For example, if there are a lot of office referrals for harassment, Be Respectful may be a good choice.