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SWPBS (aka EBS) 10 Year Perspective. George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS University of Oregon Center for Behavioral Education & Research University of Connecticut March 11, 2008 www.pbis.org www.cber.org George.sugai@uconn.edu.
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SWPBS (aka EBS)10 Year Perspective George Sugai OSEP Center on PBIS University of Oregon Center for Behavioral Education & Research University of Connecticut March 11, 2008 www.pbis.org www.cber.org George.sugai@uconn.edu
PURPOSE: Acknowledge what we have learned over last 10 years • Where did SWPBS come from? • Has triangle been useful? • What about academic achievement? • Is SWPBS program or system? • What about next 10 years?
World Events for 1997 • Deep Blue defeats Garry Kasparov in chess rematch • Hong Kong reverts to China after 156 years as British Colony • Space station 'Mir' experiences life threatening malfunctions & accidents • 1st Harry Potter book published • Clinton US president of US & Chretien Canadian prime minister • Seinfeld, Men in Black, Candle in the Wind (E. John) • Millions commemorate 20th anniversary of Elvis' death • Princess Diana killed in Paris car crash • 3 high school students killed in Paducah KY • Iowa woman gives birth to septuplets; all survive • Adult sheep named Dolly successfully cloned in Scotland • Center on PBIS awarded to university collaborative
Before1997 • No such thing as www • No such thing as PBIS Center • “Pre-PowerPoint”…transparencies • Concern about school climate & problem behavior • EBS “Effective Behavior Support”
Evolution School-wide Positive Behavior Support 2008 OR PBS & PBIS-III? 1986 Bohemia Elementary (1) 2007 USF Scaling Up Center 1988 Project PREPARE (4) 2003 OSEP TA PBIS-2 Center (~40/~6600) 1994 Effective Behavior Support Project (6) 2001 OR Behavior Research Center 1996 Fern Ridge Middle 1998 OSEP TA PBIS Center (~15/~1000)
Circa 1996 Fern Ridge Middle School Taylor-Greene et al., 1996
Pre Post
Behaviorism SWPBS Conceptual Foundations ABA EBS/PBS SWPBS
PBIS objective…. Redesign & support teaching & learning environments that are effective, efficient, relevant, & durable • Outcome-based • Data-guided decision making • Evidence-based practices • Systems support for accurate & sustained implementation
Tertiary (FEW) Reduce complications, intensity, severity of current cases Secondary (SOME) Reduce current cases of problem behavior Primary (ALL) Reduce new cases of problem behavior Original logic: public health & disease prevention (Larson, 1994)
Tertiary Prevention: Specialized Individualized Systems for Students with High-Risk Behavior CONTINUUM OF SCHOOL-WIDE INSTRUCTIONAL & POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT ~5% Secondary Prevention: Specialized Group Systems for Students with At-Risk Behavior ~15% Primary Prevention: School-/Classroom- Wide Systems for All Students, Staff, & Settings ~80% of Students
“Triangle” ?’s you should ask! • Where did it come from? • Why not a pyramid or octagon? • Why not 12 tiers? 2 tiers? • What’s it got to do w/ sped? • Where those % come from?
05% 20% 11% 22% 84% 58% SWPBS schools are more preventive
SWIS 06-07 (Majors Only)1974 schools; 1,025,422 students; 948,874 ODRs Rule violations happen
Mean Proportion of Students 3% 8% 89% 10% 16% 74% 11% 18% 71% ODR rates vary by level K=6 (N = 1010) 6-9 (N = 312) 9-12 (N = 104)
A few kids get many ODRs 32% 43% 25% 48% 37% 15% 45% 40% 15% K-6 (N = 1010) 6-9 (N = 312) 9-12 (N = 104)
It’s not just about behavior! STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT Good Teaching Behavior Management Increasing District & State Competency and Capacity Investing in Outcomes, Data, Practices, and Systems
Academic Systems Behavioral Systems • Intensive, Individual Interventions • Individual Students • Assessment-based • High Intensity • Intensive, Individual Interventions • Individual Students • Assessment-based • Intense, durable procedures • Targeted Group Interventions • Some students (at-risk) • High efficiency • Rapid response • Targeted Group Interventions • Some students (at-risk) • High efficiency • Rapid response • Universal Interventions • All students • Preventive, proactive • Universal Interventions • All settings, all students • Preventive, proactive Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success Circa 1996 1-5% 1-5% 5-10% 5-10% 80-90% 80-90%
RtI: Good “IDEiA” Policy Approach or framework for redesigning & establishing teaching & learning environments that are effective, efficient, relevant, & durable for all students, families & educators • NOT program, curriculum, strategy, intervention • NOT limited to special education • NOT new
Quotable Fixsen • “Policy is • Allocation of limited resources for unlimited needs” • Opportunity, not guarantee, for good action” • “Training does not predict action” • “Manualized treatments have created overly rigid & rapid applications”
RTI Continuum of Support for ALL Few Some All Dec 7, 2007
RCT etc.Algozzine et al., Horner et al., Leaf et al., • Improvements in school climate • Decreases in ODR • Improvements in perceived school safety • Improvements in achievement • Standardized achievement tests • High levels of implementation fidelity
Positive Behavior Support Supporting Decision Making Supporting Staff Behavior DATA SYSTEMS PRACTICES Circa 1996 Supporting Student Behavior
Basics: 4 PBS Elements Supporting Social Competence & Academic Achievement OUTCOMES Supporting Decision Making Supporting Staff Behavior DATA SYSTEMS PRACTICES Supporting Student Behavior
GENERAL IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS: “Getting Started” Team Agreements Data-based Action Plan Evaluation Implementation
Sample Implementation “Map” • 2+ years of school team training • Annual “booster” events • Coaching/facilitator support @ school & district levels • Regular self-assessment & evaluation data • On-going preparation of trainers • Development of local/district leadership teams • Establishment of state/regional leadership & policy team
Organization of behavioral subsystems Circa 1996
SWPBS Subsystems School-wide Classroom What does SWPBS look like? Family Non-classroom Student
School-wide 1. Common purpose & approach to discipline 2. Clear set of positive expectations & behaviors 3. Procedures for teaching expected behavior 4. Continuum of procedures for encouraging expected behavior 5. Continuum of procedures for discouraging inappropriate behavior 6. Procedures for on-going monitoring & evaluation
Reinforcement Wisdom! • “Knowing” or saying “know” does NOT mean “will do” • Students “do more” when “doing works”…appropriate & inappropriate! • Natural consequences are varied, unpredictable, undependable,…not always preventive
Non-classroom • Positive expectations & routines taught & encouraged • Active supervision by all staff • Scan, move, interact • Precorrections & reminders • Positive reinforcement
Classroom • Classroom-wide positive expectations taught & encouraged • Teaching classroom routines & cuestaught & encouraged • Ratio of 6-8 positive to 1 negative adult-student interaction • Active supervision • Redirections for minor, infrequent behavior errors • Frequent precorrections for chronic errors • Effective academic instruction & curriculum
Romanowich, Bourett, & Volmer, 2007
Individual Student • Behavioral competence at school & district levels • Function-based behavior support planning • Team- & data-based decision making • Comprehensive person-centered planning & wraparound processes • Targeted social skills & self-management instruction • Individualized instructional & curricular accommodations