370 likes | 493 Views
The Essential Feature of Individual Supports: Systems, Systems, Systems. Tim Lewis, Ph.D. University of Missouri Barbara Mitchell Columbia Public Schools. This morning…. Brief overview of key features of individual PBS assessment and plan development
E N D
The Essential Feature of Individual Supports: Systems, Systems, Systems Tim Lewis, Ph.D. University of Missouri Barbara Mitchell Columbia Public Schools
This morning… • Brief overview of key features of individual PBS assessment and plan development • Necessity of changing learning environments = need for system support • One middle school example
Big Ideas Understand interaction between behavior and the teaching environment Behavior is functionally related to the teaching environment Build Positive Behavior Support Plans that teach pro-social “replacement” behaviors Create environments to support the use of pro-social behaviors (practice, practice, practice) Around individual student need / self-management Classroom School-wide
Basic Steps in FBA-BIP Process Conduct functional behavioral assessment Create plan based on functional assessment outcome Develop infra-structure to support behavior change (system change)
Positive Behavior Support Plan • Teach replacement behavior(s) that result in same/similar outcome • Environment should not allow problem behavior to result in previous outcomes • Ideally replacement behavior should be more efficient than problem behavior
FBA – PBS Plan Process Success requires: • Individual(s) with expertise in FBA-PBS • Fluency with a clear process among all staff whereby roles are clearly defined • A basic understanding of Applied Behavior Analysis (Behavior is functionally related to the teaching environment) among all school staff
Essential Steps to Individual PBS Plans • Request for assistance • Operationally define problem/replacement behavior • Background/archival data/ data collection/Environmental Assessment • Functional Behavioral Assessment • Indirect measures • Direct observation • Develop hypothesis regarding function of problem behavior • Develop a PBS plan • Social skill instruction • Self management • Environmental modifications • Implement, Monitor and Evaluate progress
How do schools get there? Build parallel systemic processes • Provide school/district teams with a process to address the presenting challenge • Develop a parallel process for districts/states to support school implementation and continue to expand with integrity
Social Competence & Academic Achievement Positive Behavior Support OUTCOMES Supporting Decision Making Supporting Staff Behavior DATA SYSTEMS PRACTICES Supporting Student Behavior
Research Findings on “Scaling Up”(Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005, p. 70) • Best evidence documents what doesn’t work: • Information dissemination alone • Training by itself
Research Findings on “Scaling Up”(Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005, p. 70) • What works • Long term, multi-level approaches • Skills-based training • Practice-based coaching • Practioner performance-feedback • Program evaluation • Facilitative administrative practices • Methods for systems intervention
Applied Work in Progress Gentry Middle School
Background and Context • PBS in Columbia Public Schools • 18 elementary buildings • 3 middle schools • 3 junior highs • 3 high school programs • 17,000 students
Gentry Middle School • Three core teams per grade level • Five general education teachers • One special education /One paraprofessional • Elective team • Literacy support center • Self-contained/Special education • Administrative team
PBS at Gentry Year 1-2 • Universal Features • Administrative and faculty buy in • Building wide expectations (RRKS) • PBS team • Matrix
PBS at GentryYear 3-4 • Universal Features • Lesson plans • Redesign office referral • Track discipline data • System for acknowledging (RRKS Ribbon) • Team process revisited
PBS at GentryYear 5-6 • Universal Features • Revisit matrix • Lesson plans and teaching schedule • Behavioral expectations posted • RRKS Ribbon data collection • Assign sub-committee work
The Saga Begins • Student Assistance Team (SAT) • Administrator • School psychologist • Counselors • Team teacher • Behavior specialist • Goal = Individual supports
Painful Lessons… • Year 1: Floundering, Flailing and Failing • Inadequate universal supports • Targeted interventions not systematic or data-based • Individual plans overwhelming and ineffective
Initial Outcomes • Multiple changes in individual plans • Ineffective supports for teachers and students • Loss of time • Increased number of referrals • Diminished credibility
The Saga Continues • Year 2: Reinforcements Arrive • Outside expertise • Administrative supports • Money • Meetings • Melee
Building Systems • How to get there • Clarify process for accessing support • Reorganize process for disseminating effective practice • Provide training, tools and support
Process for Accessing Support AIS - SAT Flowchart
Process for Disseminating Practice SAT Process Teacher Training and Support Targeted Interventions Individual Student Plans SAT Team Administrator Counselor Behavior Specialist STAT Team Core Team/Classrooms Implement AIS Monitor Progress Refer to SAT Core Team Representative SAT Partner Core Team Teachers *Meets Weekly RRKS Team School-Wide Systems Matrix Lesson Plans School-Wide Data Acknowledgement Communication Core Team Representative District PBS Support Building Administrator and Counselors *Meets Monthly
Provide Skills-Based Training • Training Model • SAT members with behavior specialist • Behavior basics and management • SAT process • Function-linked strategies • SAT members with STAT team representative • SAT and STAT with core team teachers
Provide Tools • Tools for Teachers • SAT flowchart • Pyramid to Success • RRKS TOC • AIS guide (Alternative Intervention Strategies)
Pyramid to Success for All • Office Issues • Bus referrals, Truancy, Chronic offender, Threatening student or adult, Fighting, Refusal to go to or Disruptive in Buddy Room, Sexual harassment, Weapons, Drug/cigarettes/ tobacco/alcohol, Assault – physical or verbal • Teacher Method for handling student behaviors • Referral Form – send student to office with completed form • Process with student before re-entry • Office Method for handling student behaviors • Proactive: RRKS Review, Parent Contact • Corrective: Loss of Privilege, Saturday detention, Opportunity Center, Suspension, etc. Team Issues Repeated minor & major disruptions in multiple classrooms, Throwing things, Hallway/Lockers problems, Attendance, Repeated disrespect to peers or adults, Cheating, Inappropriate to substitute, Insubordination, Chronic Disruptions Method for handling student behaviors Proactive: Parent contact (mandatory), RRKS review, Team conference, Team conference with student, Team conference with Parents, Team conference with Administrator/Counselor, Triage in the AM with the student, Triage at lunch with the student, Team Focus, etc. Corrective:Removal of privilege on team, Recovery Study Hall, Buddy Room, etc. Classroom Teacher Issues Out of seat, Talking to classmates, Talking out, Off-task, Violation of class rules, Inappropriate language, Lack of materials, Gum, Disrespect, Cheating, Tardies, Minor destruction of property Method for handling student behaviors Proactive: Positive call to parents, Use praise, Use Rewards, Daily/Weekly Goal sheets, Proximity to instructor, Provide choices, One-to-One assistance, Pre-correct for transitions/trouble situations, Regular breaks for exercise, Give a job, RRKS Review, Reward lunch with teacher, etc. Corrective: One and only one REDIRECT, RRKS Review, Safe-seat, Buddy Room, Think Sheet, Parent Phone call, Lunch Detention, Recovery Study Hall, Removal of privilege in classroom, etc.
RRKS TOC (front side) RRKS – Time Out of ClassCode: _____ Student: _________________________ Date:______________________ Incident Time: ____________________# of min. out of rm.: __________ Teacher: _______________________Subject: ____________________ What did you do/not do that got you sent out of class? ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Circle the RRKS expectation that was not followed: Respect Responsible Kind Safe What will you do differently next time?______________________________________
RRKS TOC (back side) • Processing Checklist: • Processing data & time: • Review with the student reason he/she was sent out. • Teach & practice replacement behavior. • Provide positive reinforcement for replacement behavior. • Check the setting in which the behavior occurred. Minor List: Circle the appropriate code
Provide Ongoing Support • Weekly, skills-based, with feedback • Periodic, intensive, with follow-up • Example: 2007-08 Sessions • Classroom/team universals • AIS process • Follow-up AIS • Peer observations • Feedback and systems maintenance
A Happy Ending… • Outcomes to Date • Increased implementation of universals • Paradigm shift • Building infra-structure to sustain individual supports
How do schools get there? Build parallel systemic processes Provide school/district teams with a process to address the presenting challenge Develop a parallel process for districts/states to support school implementation and continue to expand with integrity
Pulling It All Together • Success in building sustained systems • Long-term, multi-level approach • Skills-based training • Practice-based coaching • Practitioner performance-feedback • Program evaluation • Facilitative administrative practices • Methods for systems intervention
Big Ideas • Understand interaction between behavior and the teaching environment Behavior is functionally related to the teaching environment • Build Positive Behavior Support Plans that teach pro-social “replacement” behaviors • Create environments to support the use of pro-social behaviors • Around individual student need / self-management • Classroom • School-wide