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Systematic Screening Approaches for Students in Tier 2/3 Interventions

Systematic Screening Approaches for Students in Tier 2/3 Interventions. Lori Lynass, Ed.D., University of Washington Tricia Robles M. Ed. Highline School District, WA. Questions to Ponder. How do we determine what students need services at Tiers 2 & 3?

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Systematic Screening Approaches for Students in Tier 2/3 Interventions

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  1. Systematic Screening Approaches for Students in Tier 2/3 Interventions Lori Lynass, Ed.D., University of Washington Tricia Robles M. Ed. Highline School District, WA

  2. Questions to Ponder • How do we determine what students need services at Tiers 2 & 3? • How do we determine the “level of risk” in a school? • How might knowing these clearly changed the way we serve students? • By School and By District

  3. How most schools determine student need for services • Only 2% of schools screen all children for mental heath reasons (Romer & McIntosh, 2005) • Office discipline referrals & Teacher/Staff referrals are commonly used

  4. Screening for “At-risk” Students

  5. Office Discipline Referrals Implemented widely in SWPBS where 2-5 ODR is considered threshold for at-risk (Horner et al., 2005) Issues with Consistent Use of ODR May miss a number of students One study found that 35% of students who qualified as at risk on SSBD did not have multiple ODRs (Walker, Cheney, Stage, & Blum, 2005)

  6. Washington Schools: Study 1Walker, Cheney, Stage, & Blum (2005) 3 Elem. Schools, 80/80 SET, 1999-2003 124 students (70 Ext./54 Int.) Ext. > 1 s.d. on Social Skills and Prob Behs./ Not Int. Screening & ODR > ODR Screening+ODR increases # of at-risk students Screening and use of school supports maintains students at SST level (Gate 2 Tier 2), and fewer FBA/BSP or referred to Special Ed (Gate 3, Tier 3)

  7. Why Universal Screening benefits schools Establishes a schools risk level and allows for monitoring of responsiveness through shifts in this risk level (Lane, Kalberg, Bruhn, Mahoney & Driscoll, 2008) Informs the use of Tier 2 & 3 interventions - where to target limited funds Preventative supports reduce the need for more intensive supports later (Cheney & Stage, in press; Walker, Cheney, Stage, & Blum, 2005) Monitor overall effectiveness of the three-tiered model

  8. Why Universal Screening benefits students. • Promotes early intervention in place of “wait to fail” (Glover & Albers, 2007); • Of the 20% of school-aged children who experience mental health difficulties, only 30% receive services (US Public Health Service, 2000). • 65% of students identified for EBD are 12 years or older (US Dept of Ed, 2001) • A reduction in over-representation of children of color • African American students are twice as likely to be identified as EBD than White students (Alliance for Excellence Education, 2009) • Addresses the issue of under-identifying girls and students with internalizing issues (Hosp & Reschly, 2004)

  9. How Screening relates to Academics • Academic success inextricably linked to social/behavioral skills • Five predictor variables concerning student skills or behaviors related to success in school: • (a) prior achievement, • (b) interpersonal skills, • (c) study skills, • (d) motivation, and • (e) engagement (DiPerna and Elliott,1999, 2000)

  10. Choosing A Universal Screener • Choose a Screener that: • Is appropriate for its intended use and that is contextually and developmentally appropriate and sensitive to issue of diversity • Has Technical Adequacy • Useable - efficient, feasible, easy to manage - Calderella,Young, Richardson & Young, 2008

  11. Systematic Screening for Behavior Disorders (SSBD; Walker & Severson, 1992) • Originally normed K-6, recently normed for middle and Jr High (Calderella,Young, Richardson & Young, 2008) • Multiple gating procedures following mental health & PBS model • Externalizing and Internalizing dimensions • Evidence of efficiency, effectiveness, & cost benefits • Exemplary, evidence-based practice • US Office of Special Education, Council for Children with Behavior Disorders, National Diffusion Network

  12. Multiple Gating Procedure (Severson et al. 2007) Teachers Rank Order 3 Ext. & 3 Int. Students Gate 1 Pass Gate 1 Teachers Rate Top 3 Students on Critical Events, Adaptive & Maladaptive Scales Gate 2 Tier 2,3 Intervention Pass Gate 2 Gate 3 Classroom & Playground Observations Tier 3 Intervention or Special Ed. Referral

  13. SSBD Differentiates Grads , Non-grads, Comparisons

  14. Student Risk Screening Scale (Drummond, 1994) Originally normed at elementary level, recently normed at middle and high school (Lane, Kalberg, Parks, & Carter, 2008) Classroom teacher evaluates and assigns a frequency-based, Likert rating to each student in the class in relation to seven behavioral criteria (lies, cheats, sneaks, steals, behavior problems, peer rejections, low achievement, negative attitude, and aggressive behavior) Score indicates the level of risk (low, medium, high) Scores predict both negative academic and behavioral outcomes Effective, Efficient and Free

  15. BASC- Behavior and Emotional Screening Scale (BESS, Pearson Publications) Based on BASC by Reynolds & Kamphaus, 2002 Universal screener with norms for preschool & K-12, Includes teacher, parent, and self-rating forms grades 3-12. 3-5 minutes per form. Completed on all students in class Hand scored and scannable forms, ASSIST software available Provides comprehensive summary of student scores and teacher ratings across the school

  16. Brief Academic Competence Evaluation Scales System(BACESS; Elliott, Huai, Roach, 2007) Intended to be a universal screener (cover both academic and academic “enabling” behaviors) Phase 1: Criterion referenced Academic Screening used on ALL students Phase 2: 10 items five academic and five academic enabling behaviors rating of students who passed through phase 1 (from ACES) Phase 3: Teachers complete the entire ACES measure for students with specific cut score (less than 26) Academic Competency Evaluation Scale (ACES; DiPerna and Elliott,1999, 2000) is normed K-12, with teacher forms and student forms for grades 3-12. Bridget Walker, Ph.D.

  17. Integrating Screening into RTI/PBS Initiatives How is it done?

  18.  2009 Bridget Walker, Ph.D.

  19. Sample List of Students Identified Through Schoolwide Screening How could this information help you determine where your limited support resources should focus? Bridget Walker, Ph.D.

  20. Factors Related to Screening Effectiveness Teachers are reliable evaluators/judges of student academic & behavioral performance when given a clear, overt structure to facilitate the decision making (Elliott , Huai , Roach, 2007) Screening occurs across all students in the areas of health, academic, and social-emotional functioning. Schools need to be ready to move away from reactive systems of responding only to long standing need (Severson, Walker, Hope-Doolittle, Kratchowill & Gresham, 2007) Most effective when in the context of a comprehensive RTI/PBS initiative

  21. Issues with Implementation 1: Staff Training and Implementation For effective screening to occur leadership teams must consider: Procedural considerations in implementation of the process of screening (implemented consistently and with fidelity to the instructions and process) General training in behavioral and mental health issues that improves teachers’ understanding of the purpose and content of the screening process, provided prior to implementation (e.g. internalizing vs. externalizing behaviors) as well as potential concerns and misconceptions (Severson, Walker, Hope-Doolittle, Kratchowill & Gresham, 2007)

  22. Issues with Implementation 2: Informed Consent, Student Privacy Determine threshold for specific informed consent in your district/community Minimum includes; parents clearly informed as part of schoolwide academic/social screening, use of passive consent process for screening, outline confidentiality policy and follow up procedures for students who are identified as at-risk, no interventions at that level without informed parental consent Establish procedure to protect student privacy throughout the process Review confidentiality guidelines and follow up procedures with staff

  23. Review - This may be a good screener, but its not universal

  24. Universal Screening in Practice: Highline School District, Washington

  25. Highline School District Positive Behavior Intervention and Support

  26. Highline Public SchoolsWho & Where Are We? • Just South of Seattle in Washington State • 17,549 Students strong • 10,535 Students eligible for free & reduced-meals or 60.3% • 12.5% of Students qualify for special education services • 78 languages spoken • Students from 80 ethnic & racial backgrounds OSPI 2008-2009

  27. Highline is Beautifully Diverse • 1.9% American Indian/Alaskan Native • 21.5% Asian • 21.5% Asian/Pacific Islander • 14.8% Black • 28.3% Hispanic • 33.3% White October 2008

  28. Our Schools • 18 K-6 Elementary Schools • 4 Middle Schools Grades 7 & 8 • 10 High Schools • 1 Skills Center • 1 Early Childhood Center • 5 Other Instructional Sites

  29. Our PBS hiStory • 1997-1999 WA Task Force on Behavioral Disabilities • 1998 US Office of Special Education & OSPI Fund BEACONS Demonstration Project to reduce referrals to EBD via PBIS • 1998-2002 4 schools in 4 districts serve as demonstration sites in Seahurst Elementary was Highline’s 1st PBIS School • 2003-06 OSPI, OSEP, & WEA Outreach Project • Six districts, 28 schools join network • Five Highline Elementary Schools • 2004-05 WA State CIP/SIG Project w/ 15 Schools in 6 districts • 2004-08 – OSEP funded CC&E Project 3 Districts 18 Schools Check, Connect, and Expect - 6 Highline Schools • 2008-2009 1.0 FTE District PBIS Coordinator, district team, sustain PBS in six schools, District implementation adding 9 schools

  30. Why has screening been such an important part of PBIS in Highline?

  31. We know we have students exhibiting problem behavior? • 486 incidents of violence/gang/weapons in 4 middle school • 13 elementarys processed 6284Major Office Discipline Referrals = 1,571 hours or 262 days of instructional time lost - fighting, aggression, bullying, non-compliance, etc • 1713Major incidents of defiance/disobediance/disruptive conduct were reported in 4 middle schools • 4 middle schools processed 3827Major ODRs = 957 hours or 159 days of instructional and leadership time lost Elementary and Middle School ODR data in O7-08 School Year

  32. Prevention Logic for All(Walker et al., 1996) Decrease development of new problem behaviors Prevent worsening of existing problem behaviors Redesign learning/teaching environments to eliminate triggers & maintainers of problem behaviors Teach, monitor, & acknowledge prosocial behavior

  33. RtI Application Examples

  34.  2009 Bridget Walker, Ph.D.

  35. How Did We Screen? • Conduct SSBD Screening each October at staff mtg. • Counselors & psychologists help define externalizers & internalizers & lead process • Teachers identify & rank students in order of concern • Teachers complete the screening protocol on top 3 internalizers & 3 externalizers • Bldg. PBS Team scores screening, compares screening to previous years ODRs & identifies targeted group and individuals for intensive supports

  36. What tools did we use? • SWIS ODRs - Office Discipline Referrals • SSBD - Systematic Screening for Behavior Disorders • 08-09 compared the SRSS -Student Risk Screening Scale & SSBD in 4 HSD schools

  37. Who was identified for Targeted Group Intervention? • 488 students in 4 years were identified & given permission for CC&E (Check, Connect, & Expect) • Ten schools continue screening and targeted group interventions

  38. # of Highline Schools Implementing PBIS & Screening • 2005-2007 3 Elementary Schools • 2007-2008 6 Elementary Schools • 2008-2009 10 Elementary Schools • 2009-2010 16 Elementary Schools

  39. Student Meets CC&E Criteria Via SSBD Screening, ODRs,Teacher Nomination Program Phases Daily Program Routine Basic Program Morning Check-in Basic Plus Program (as needed) Parent Feedback Teacher Feedback Afternoon Check-out Self-Monitoring Graduation

  40. What was the impact? • Show reduction of ODRs • Reduction of ODRs in sped slide • Total number of students in Highline in CC&E

  41. How has screening changed the way we do business in Highline? • Helps us match students to building supports • Provided teams with common language • Strengthened behavioral expertise for all staff • Students are identified earlier & more efficiently without having to “qualify”Oct.vs Apr • Helped make the shift in thinking about addressing behavioral concerns the same way we address academic concerns - • Teach! Re-teach! Model! Practice & Motivate!

  42. Impact of PBIS in one year 2008-2009 • 10 elementary schools implemented SWPBS & screened for CC&E Targeted Group Intervention • Reduction in office referrals from 6,284 to 3,703 is 42% reduction or 2,581 fewer referrals • Administrative, instructional, and academic engaged time recaptured = 645 hours or 108 days

  43. System wide reductions in suspensions for special education students(from 07-08 to 08-09 School Years) • Out-of-school suspensions <= 10 days reduced by 31.72% • Out-of-school suspensions > 10 days reduced by 47.05% • Total out of school suspension reduced by 35.14%

  44. System wide reductions in suspensions for special education students(from 07-08 to 08-09 School Years) • Out-of-school suspensions <= 10 days reduced by 31.72% • Out-of-school suspensions > 10 days reduced by 47.05% • Total out of school suspension reduced by 35.14%

  45. How might screening work in your school? What questions do you have for us?

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