Functional Assessments and Interventions for Academic Problems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 51
About This Presentation
Title:

Functional Assessments and Interventions for Academic Problems

Description:

Focus on behaviors that lead to success. 4. Do more, talk less. 5. Follow a ... antecedents lead to ... What consequences lead to sustained and increasing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:84
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 52
Provided by: george222
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Functional Assessments and Interventions for Academic Problems


1
Functional Assessments and Interventions for
Academic Problems
  • George H. Noell, Ph.D.
  • Louisiana State University

2
Fundamental Assumptions The Critical Nature of
Academic Assessment
  • Chronic failure and the negative feedback it
    engenders is an undesirable developmental
    condition for any child.
  • Chronic academic failure can set the occasion for
    problematic behaviors, negative affective states,
    and a negative self-perception.

3
Fundamentals 2
  • Chronic academic failure can exacerbate other
    developmental, emotional, and behavioral
    concerns.
  • Professionals working with children often assume
    that academic failure is the result of emotional
    or behavioral concerns.

4
Fundamentals 3
  • Learning and academic performance are central
    expectations of children in schools. Successful
    intervention should help children meet these
    expectations.
  • Herman
  • the common backwards perception

5
What is functional assessment of academic
concerns?
  • Conceptually systematic
  • Examines how change in teaching results in change
    in learning
  • (as described in this workshop only)

6
How is it different from traditional functional
assessment?
  • Focused on adaptive behavior from the outset,
    rather than problem behavior.
  • Is equally concerned with things that can improve
    current functioning as it is with things
    contributing to problems

7
How is it similar to traditional functional
assessment?
  • Assessment is ideographic.
  • Low level of inference
  • Focused on person environment interactions
  • Focused on treatment, intervention, or teaching
    over diagnosis

8
Core Principles
  • Be conservative
  • No unneeded conclusions
  • Insist on data / be serious
  • (NASA, FAA, IRS, nursing)
  • 2. Be about the individual, not groups
  •  

9
Core Principles 2
  • 3. Be focused on behavior
  • Avoid global summaries
  • Avoid dead persons behavior
  • Focus on behaviors that lead to success
  • 4. Do more, talk less
  •  
  • 5. Follow a consistent procedure

10
An Alternate Big 3 for Academic Assessment
  • Educational Context
  • Students skills
  • Response to intervention

11
I. Educational Context
  • What are the demands?
  • What are the expectations (standards)?
  • How is the student being taught (A-B-C)
  • What is the current functioning of peers

12
II. Students Skills
  • What is performance under typical conditions?
  • What is performance under optimal conditions?
  • What component skills does the student possess?

13
III. Students Response to Intervention
  • What antecedents lead to improved learning?
  • What consequences lead to improved learning?
  • What combination leads to improved learning?

14
(No Transcript)
15
Functional Academic AssessmentStage I Referral
  • 1. What demands that are problematic?
  • 2. What are the expectations?
  • 3. What does the student do?
  • 4. How does the student's performance compare to
    peers?
  • 5. How can we measure this concern?

16
Stage II Screening
  • How does the student perform when observed
    directly?
  • How do the students' peers perform when observed?
  • 3. How does the student perform under
    "optimized" conditions?

17
Stage III Identifying Instructional Targets
  • What component skills does the student lack?
  • 2. Can the student integrate his/her skills to
    complete the task?

18
Stage IV Instructional Analysis
  • How will learning be measured?
  • What antecedents lead to correct responding?
  • 3. What consequences lead to sustained and
    increasing learning?

19
(No Transcript)
20
Stage I Referral
  • What are the problematic demands?
  • Presented directions, time limits, etc.
  • Materials
  • What are the expectations?
  • Current Are they objective
  • What are meaningful expectations?
  • Peers, district/state standards, mastery,
    published standards

21
Stage I Referral
  • What does the student do?
  • Products (caution), interviews, keep it simple
  • How does he/she compare to peers?
  • Just impression at this stage
  • What is a meaningful and adequate way to measure
    concern?
  • CBM, curricular materials, etc.

22
Stage II Screening
  • Observe in the classroom.
  • See lesson delivery, work habits, ecology
  • Benchmark or baseline under know condition
  • Consider reactivity

23
Stage II Screening
  • How do peers perform.
  • Place referral in context general level of
    instruction and functioning
  • Student under optimized conditions
  • 1-on-1, quiet setting w/ strong incentives
  • Determine skill in the absence of interference

24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
32
Screening Outcomes
33
Screening Outcomes 2
34
Stage III Identifying Instructional Targets
  • What component skill does the student lack?
  • Break the skill down (task analysis)
  • Identify means of assessment
  • Identify standards
  • Conduct assessment
  • Evaluate data

35
Stage III Outcomes
  • Student lacks one or more component skills
    these will be our targets
  • Student possess all the skills focus will be on
    skill integration

36
(No Transcript)
37
Potential Task Analyses for Mathematics
  • Addition Facts
  • Read the problem
  • Identify the answer
  • Write the answer
  • Exercise
  • Word Problems
  • Read the problem
  • Identify the question
  • Identify the data
  • Write the necessary numerical statement
  • Solve for unknowns

38
Stage IV Instructional Analysis
  • How will learning be measured?
  • What antecedents will lead to correct responding?
  • Must lead to correct responding
  • Multiple effective means
  • Brainstorm and test

39
Stage IV IA 2
  • What consequences lead to sustained and
    increasing learning?
  • Instructional
  • Timing, error correct consequences
  • Shorten delay self-grading, tutoring, CAI
  • Motivational
  • Learning is work
  • people do things for reasons

40
(No Transcript)
41
(No Transcript)
42
(No Transcript)
43
(No Transcript)
44
Stage V Intervention Design
  • How is the student being taught?
  • Time
  • Active responding
  • Materials
  • Antecedents
  • Feedback/consequences

45
Stage V ID 2
  • Can current instruction be adapted to meet the
    students needs?
  • Will an additional or alternate from of teaching
    be needed?
  • Is a short term survival strategy needed?

46
(No Transcript)
47
(No Transcript)
48
Stage VI Intervention Implementation
  • What training materials are needed?
  • How will progress be monitored?
  • What data (permanent products)
  • Goals
  • Who evaluates and when

49
Design of Progress Montioring
50
Implementation 2
  • Document assure implementation
  • Statutory or discretionary
  • IDEA, 504, pre-referral
  • Document Implementation products?
  • Follow-up support implementation
  • Plan for it
  • Be data-based transparent
  • Incorporate a wider circle of accountability

51
Progress Monitoring
  • Measuring outcomes
  • Products
  • Observations (low practicality)
  • Self-montoring
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com