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SchoolWide Positive Behavior Support:

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Title: SchoolWide Positive Behavior Support:


1
School-Wide Positive Behavior Support
  • Getting Started!!!!!!!!!!

2
PURPOSE Enhance capacity of school teams to
provide the best behavioral supports for all
students...
3
MAIN TRAINING OBJECTIVES
  • Establish leadership team
  • Establish staff agreements
  • Build working knowledge of SW-PBS practices
    systems
  • Develop individualized action plan for SW-PBS
  • Office Discipline Data
  • EBS Self-Assessment Survey
  • Team Implementation Checklist

4
Map
  • 2 years of team training
  • Annual booster events
  • Coaching/facilitator support _at_ school district
    levels
  • Regular self-assessment evaluation data
  • State/district coordination TA

5
Challenge 1
6
Challenge 2
7
Competing, Inter-related National Goals
  • Improve literacy, math, geography, science, etc.
  • Make schools safe, caring, focused on teaching
    learning
  • Improve student character citizenship
  • Eliminate bullying
  • Prevent drug use
  • Prepare for postsecondary education
  • Provide a free appropriate education for all
  • Prepare viable workforce
  • Affect rates of high risk, antisocial behavior
  • Leave no child behind
  • Etc.

8
Challenge 3
9
SW-PBS Logic!
  • Successful individual student behavior support
    is linked to host environments or school
    climates that are effective, efficient, relevant,
    durable
  • (Zins Ponti, 1990)

10
School-wide Systems
  • 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

11
Classroom Setting Systems
  • Classroom-wide positive expectations taught
    encouraged
  • Teaching classroom routines cues taught
    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

12
Nonclassroom Setting Systems
  • Positive expectations routines taught
    encouraged
  • Active supervision by all staff
  • Scan, move, interact
  • Precorrections reminders
  • Positive reinforcement

13
Individual Student Systems
  • 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

14
Identifying School-wide Expectations
Attention Please
1 Minute New Spokesperson
  • 11 minutes
  • Select different spokesperson
  • Review/develop positively stated school-wide
    expectations (1 p. 6-7)
  • 3-5 positively stated
  • Mutually exclusive
  • Comprehensive
  • Contextually appropriate
  • Present 2-3 big ideas from your team (1 min.
    reports)

15
Expectations behavioral skills are taught
recognized in natural context
16
TEACHING MATRIX
Expectations

17
RAH at Adams City High School(Respect
Achievement Honor)
18
RAH Athletics
19
Kuleana Be Responsible
Plan ahead Walk directly to destination
Hoihi Be Respectful Walk quietly when
classes are in session Laulima Be
Cooperative Keep movement flowing Share equipment
and play space Malama Be Safe Walk at all times
Walkways
King Kaumualii on Kauai
20
Kuleana Be Responsible Have lunch card ready
Be orderly in all lines Hoihi Be Respectful
Use proper table manners Eat your own
food Laulima Be Cooperative Wait patiently/
quietly Malama Be Safe Walk at all times Wash
hands Chew food well dont rush
Cafeteria
King Kaumualii on Kauai
21
Playground / Recess / P.E.
Kuleana Be Responsible Take care of
equipment/facilities Plan appropriate times for
drinks/restroom visits Hoihi Be Respectful
Be a good sport Laulima Be Cooperative Follow
rules/ procedures Malama Be Safe Avoid rough,
dangerous play Use equipment properly

King Kaumualii on Kauai
22
Field Trips
Kuleana Be Responsible Turn in
paperwork/ on time Wear appropriate
footwear/clothing Bring home lunch
Hoihi Be Respectful
Care for the field trip site Listen to
speakers Laulima Be Cooperative Stay with your
chaperone/group Malama Be Safe Use the buddy
system Follow school/bus rules
King Kaumualii on Kauai
23
Cool Tool
24
Teaching Academics Behaviors
25
Acknowledging SW Expectations Rationale
  • To learn, humans require regular frequent
    feedback on their actions
  • Humans experience frequent feedback from others,
    self, environment
  • Planned/unplanned
  • Desirable/undesirable
  • W/o formal feedback to encourage desired
    behavior, other forms of feedback shape undesired
    behaviors

26
Cougar Traits in the Community
Student Name __________________________________
Displayed the Cougar Trait of
Respect Responsibility Caring Citizenship (
Circle the trait you observed)Signature
_____________________________________________If
you would like to write on the back the details
of what you observed feel free! Thank you for
supporting our youth.
27
Are Rewards Dangerous?
  • our research team has conducted a series of
    reviews and analysis of (the reward) literature
    our conclusion is that there is no inherent
    negative property of reward. Our analyses
    indicate that the argument against the use of
    rewards is an overgeneralization based on a
    narrow set of circumstances.
  • Cameron, 2002
  • Cameron Pierce, 1994, 2002
  • Cameron, Banko Pierce, 2001

28
Bus Bucks
  • Improving bus behaviors
  • Procedures
  • Review bus citations
  • On-going driver meetings
  • Teaching expectations
  • Link bus bucks w/ schools
  • Acknowledging bus drivers

29
Positive Office Referral
  • Balancing positive/negative adult/student
    contacts
  • Procedures
  • Develop equivalent positive referral
  • Process like negative referral

30
Acknowledgements
  • 12 minutes
  • Review/develop what your school does to formally
    acknowledge positive student social behavior (1
    p. 11-13)
  • Report 2-3 big ideas from your table discussion
    (1 min. reports)

Attention Please
1 Minute New Spokesperson
31
Team Managed
Staff Acknowledgements
Effective Practices
Implementation
Continuous Monitoring
Administrator Participation
Staff Training Support
32
GENERAL IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS
Team
Agreements
Data-based Action Plan
Implementation
Evaluation
33
Avoiding Train-n-Hope
Attention Please
1 Minute (Spokesperson)
  • Work for 5 min.
  • Describe 2-3 strategies for embedding staff
    development into daily, weekly, monthly, etc.
    routines of school
  • Pick spokesperson to give 1 min. report of 1
    strategy

34
Golden Plunger
  • Involve custodian
  • Procedure
  • Custodian selects one classroom/ hallway each
    week that is clean orderly
  • Sticks gold-painted plunger with banner on wall

35
G.O.O.S.E.
  • Get Out Of School Early
  • Or arrive late
  • Procedures
  • Kids/staff nominate
  • Kids/staff reward, then pick

36
Staff Acknowledgements
  • 11 minutes
  • Review/develop procedures for acknowledging/encour
    aging staff contributions accomplishments
  • Report 2-3 big ideas from your team discussion
    (1 min. reports)

Attention Please
1 Minute New Spokesperson
37
GENERAL IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS
Team
Agreements
Data-based Action Plan
Implementation
Evaluation
38
Relevant Measurable Indicators
Efficient Input, Storage, Retrieval
Team-based Decision Making Planning
Evaluation
Continuous Monitoring
Effective Visual Displays
Regular Review
39
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
40
Example
41
1 Free Period
  • Contributing to a safe, caring, effective school
    environment
  • Procedures
  • Given by Principal
  • Principal takes over class for one hour
  • Used at any time

42
80 Rule
  • Apply triangle to adult behavior!
  • Regularly acknowledge staff behavior
  • Individualized intervention for nonresponders

43
Acknowledgements
  • 12 minutes
  • Review/develop what your school does to formally
    acknowledge positive student social behavior (1
    p. 11-13)
  • Report 2-3 big ideas from your table discussion
    (1 min. reports)

44
Super Sub Slips
  • Empowering substitute teachers
  • Procedures
  • Give 5 per sub in subfolder
  • Give 2 out immediately

45
Good morning, class!
  • Teachers report that when students are greeted
    by an adult in morning, it takes less time to
    complete morning routines get first lesson
    started.

46
10 positive 1 correction
47
Traveling Passports
  • Precorrecting new kids
  • Procedures
  • Meet with key adults
  • Review expectations
  • Go to class

48
Teaching Expectations
  • Meet as team for 11 minutes
  • Review/develop procedures for teaching
    school-wide expectations (1 p. 8-10) (5)
  • Present 2-3 big ideas from your team (1 min.
    reports)

Attention Please
1 Minute
49
Organizational Features
Common Vision
ORGANIZATION MEMBERS
Common Language
Common Experience
50
GENERAL IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS Getting Started
Team
Agreements
Data-based Action Plan
Implementation
Evaluation
51
Team-led Process
Non-Teaching
Family
Behavioral Capacity
Priority Status
Representation
Specialized Support
Administrator
Team
Community
Data-based Decision Making
Administrator
Student
Communications
Teaching
Start with Team that Works.
52
Example
53
Working Smarter
54
Sample Teaming Matrix
55
Fortunately, we have a science that guides us to
  • Assess these situations
  • Develop behavior intervention plans based on our
    assessment
  • Monitor student progress make enhancements
  • All in ways that can be culturally
    contextually appropriate
  • Crone Horner, 2003

56
  • 5,100 referrals
  • 76,500 min _at_15 min
  • 1,275 hrs
  • 159 days _at_ 8 hrs

57
Messages Repeated!
  • Successful Individual student behavior support is
    linked to host environments or schools that are
    effective, efficient, relevant, durable
  • Learning teaching environments must be
    redesigned to increase the likelihood of
    behavioral academic success

58
Example
59
141 Days!
  • Intermediate/senior high school with 880
    students reported over 5,100 office discipline
    referrals in one academic year. Nearly 2/3 of
    students have received at least one office
    discipline referral.

Reiko is in this school!
60
2 Worries Ineffective Responses to Problem
Behavior
  • Get Tough (practices)
  • Train--Hope (systems)

61
Worry 1Teaching by Getting Tough
  • Runyon I hate this f____ing school, youre a
    dumbf_____.
  • Teacher That is disrespectful language. Im
    sending you to the office so youll learn never
    to say those words again.starting now!

62
Immediate seductive solution.Get Tough!
  • Clamp down increase monitoring
  • Re-re-re-review rules
  • Extend continuum consistency of consequences
  • Establish bottom line
  • ...Predictable individual response

63
Reactive responses are predictable.
  • When we experience aversive situation, we select
    interventions that produce immediate relief
  • Remove student
  • Remove ourselves
  • Modify physical environment
  • Assign responsibility for change to student /or
    others

64
When behavior doesnt improve, we Get Tougher!
  • Zero tolerance policies
  • Increased surveillance
  • Increased suspension expulsion
  • In-service training by expert
  • Alternative programming
  • ..Predictable systems response!

65
Erroneous assumption that student
  • Is inherently bad
  • Will learn more appropriate behavior through
    increased use of aversives
  • Will be better tomorrow.

66
But.false sense of safety/security!
  • Fosters environments of control
  • Triggers reinforces antisocial behavior
  • Shifts accountability away from school
  • Devalues child-adult relationship
  • Weakens relationship between academic social
    behavior programming

67
Science of behavior has taught us that students.
  • Are NOT born with bad behaviors
  • Do NOT learn when presented contingent aversive
    consequences
  • ..Do learn better ways of behaving by being
    taught directly receiving positive
    feedback.consider function

68
2001 Surgeon Generals Report on Youth Violence
Recommendations
  • Establish intolerant attitude toward deviance
  • Break up antisocial networkschange social
    context
  • Improve parent effectiveness
  • Increase commitment to school
  • Increase academic success
  • Create positive school climates
  • Teach encourage individual skills competence

69
Worry 2Train Hope
70
Enhanced PBS Implementation Logic
71
Supporting Social Competence Academic
Achievement
4 PBS Elements
OUTCOMES
Supporting Decision Making
DATA
Supporting Staff Behavior
SYSTEMS
PRACTICES
Supporting Student Behavior
72
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73
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74
Referrals by Problem Behavior
75
Referrals per Location
76
Referrals per Student
77
Referrals by Time of Day
78
Do we need to tweak our action plan?
If many students are making same mistake,
consider changing system.not students Start
by teaching, monitoring rewardingbefore
increasing punishment
  • How often?
  • Who?
  • What?
  • Where?
  • When?
  • How much?
  • If problem,
  • Which students/staff?
  • What system?
  • What intervention?
  • What outcome?

79
Discipline Data Review
  • 10 minutes
  • Complete Discipline Referral Data
    Self-Assessment Checklist (9)
  • Report 2-3 big ideas from your team discussion
    (1 min. reports)

Attention Please
1 Minute
80
What does SWPBS look like?
  • 80 of students can tell you what is expected of
    them give behavioral example because they have
    been taught, actively supervised, practiced,
    acknowledged.
  • Positive adult-to-student interactions exceed
    negative
  • Function based behavior support is foundation for
    addressing problem behavior.
  • Data- team-based action planning
    implementation are operating.
  • Administrators are active participants.
  • Full continuum of behavior support is available
    to all students

81
Example
82
Action Planning (12) (245)
  • Review big ideas
  • Content from two days
  • Review/modify action plan (what, when, how, who)
  • Getting Started (1)
  • SW PBS (B)
  • School data
  • Logistics
  • Complete return TIC (2) TODAY
  • Develop report to staff
  • Build data-management (C/9) capacity
  • Schedule next team meeting date
  • Report 2-3 planned activities from your team
    action planning (1 min.)

Attention Please
1 Minute New Spokesperson
83
To Conclude
  • Create systems-based preventive continuum of
    behavior support
  • Focus on adult behavior
  • Establish behavioral competence
  • Utilize data based decisions
  • Give priority to academic success
  • Invest in evidence-based practices
  • Teach acknowledge behavioral expectations
  • Work from a person-centered, function-based
    approach
  • Arrange to work smarter

84
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