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PBIS Universal Training Day 4

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PBIS Universal Training Day 4 Tom Ellison Sullivan County BOCES tellison_at_scboces.org – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PBIS Universal Training Day 4


1
PBISUniversal Training Day 4
  • Tom Ellison
  • Sullivan County BOCES
  • tellison_at_scboces.org

2
  • VISION COUNTS BUT
  • IMPLEMENTATION IS PRICELESS

3
EVALUATION RESULTS
  • YIKES!!!!!!
  • Loved it or hated it-no middle ground
  • Redundant!
  • Teams asked for more time
  • to work and more time to share

4
Universal Training- Day 4
  • Welcome/Overview of day
  • Evaluation Results
  • Team sharing and problem solving
  • Negative Consequences
  • Data Does Not Have To Be a Four letter Word
  • Discussion
  • Implementation Process Focus on Fidelity
  • Networking
  • Action Planning
  • Discussion of Identified Topics
  • Next Steps/Moving Forward Preview of Secondary
    Interventions

5
OBJECTIVES
  • Quickly cover remaining concept/component areas
  • Discuss, examine, and develop consequence systems
  • Provide concrete tools for consequence system
  • Develop/refine data system
  • Action plan
  • Provide multiple opportunities to share, discuss,
    and complete work as a team,

6
Training Behavioral Expectations
EXPECTATION TRAINING SITE
BE RESPONSIBLE Make yourself comfortable take care of your needs Address question/activity in group time before discussing other topics Return from Breaks and lunch on time
BE RESPECTFUL Turn cell phones, beepers, and pagers off or to vibrate make/take calls away from room Keep sharing time brief/concise so all may share Pass notes
BE PREPARED Plan, Plan, Plan for next steps Follow directions stay on task during group/peer time Follow up on tasks
7
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT PBIS
  • BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK

8
There is a proverb which says, If youve told a
child 100 times to do something and they dont do
itit isnt the child that is a slow learner.
9
Reviewing Components of School Wide Discipline
Plan
  • Encouraging Appropriate Behaviors
  • Discouraging Inappropriate Behavior

10
I DONT GIVE THEM A CHANCE TO MISBEHAVE.
11
Negative consequences
  • are delivered to
  • Provide immediate feedback that behavior is
    unacceptable
  • Increase likelihood behavior will NOT BE
    repeated, i.e. punished.

12
I HAVE A PLAN. THEYLL ABIDE BY ITOR ELSE!
13
Key to Using Negative Consequences
  • No Silver bullet!
  • Rather
  • MILD CONSEQUENCES
  • CONSISTENTLY delivered

14
Systems capacity for use of negative consequences
  • Have a clear line between what problem behavior
    is handled by staff/faculty vs. administration
    what consequences may be used in what situations
  • Ensure familiarity for delivering consequences
    and referrals to office
  • Have a continuum of consequences for the
    classroom other settings, and for
    administration
  • Clarify consequences for actions up front with
    students and families

15
General guidelines for negative consequences
  • Mild consequences consistently delivered
  • Deliver consequences as soon after the infraction
    as possible
  • Maintain students respect and dignity when
    administering a consequence
  • Try to keep it relevant to the infraction
  • Ratio of positive to negative consequences should
    be at least 41

16
Examples of negative consequences
  • Loss of teacher attention and approval
  • Loss of privilege
  • Time out or removal from activity
  • Re-teaching after school (detention with skill
    acquisition)
  • Restitution or make-up service help
  • Parent contact and conference
  • Change in seating

17
Procedures for Using Negative Consequences
  • Deliver negative consequences following
    occurrence of problem behavior
  • Consequences should be mild
  • More serious consequences usually delivered by
    administration
  • Follow negative consequences with positive
    consequences at earliest appropriate opportunity
    (fair pair)

18
Procedures for discouraging inappropriate
behaviors (System)
  • Office vs. Classroom managed
  • Are distinctions clear?
  • Do administration and staff need to create a
    list? If list already exists, does staff agree?
  • Are appropriate administrators dealing with
    office managed discipline? (Not Counselors, SWs
    or Psychologists)
  • Does staff feel supported?
  • Is there a clear flow chart to follow for
    misbehavior?

19
Procedures for discouraging inappropriate
behaviors Cont
  • Review behavioral consequences
  • Should be continuum of responses
  • The smallest effort to achieve the greatest
    effect
  • Are we inadvertently reinforcing the
    inappropriate behaviors for students and staff?
  • Track who is using consequences/options
  • Are consequences having no effect?
  • Repeat offenders
  • Do you need to address behaviors with targeted
    interventions or wraparound services? (intensive)

20
PROGRESSIVE NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES
  • Dr. Randy Sprick lists two criteria for
    evaluating progressive negative consequence
    sytems
  • Does it treat the child with dignity and respect?
  • Does it work?

21
Be Consistent
Or what I learned from speeding
22
What Causes Speeding Tickets?
  • SPEEDING?
  • GETTING CAUGHT?
  • GETTING WRITTEN UP!

23
  • What we can learn
  • Ignoring the expectations or rules leads to
    confusion
  • The wrong behavior becomes the norm
  • If youre not consistent, kids will think you are
    out to get them (Take personally)
  • You must correct kids every time
  • It is crucial to recognize the behavior we do want

24
Guiding Principles
  • Natural consequences are varied, unpredictable,
    undependable,not preventive
  • Knowing or saying know does NOT mean will
    do
  • Students do more when doing worksappropriate
    inappropriate

25
Concerns with using big hammer consequences
  • There is no Silver Bullet, no one consequence
    will work for all kids
  • Only using big hammer consequences shows no
    degrees of violation
  • They can set the stage for escalation
  • Staff can be reluctant to use them
  • Do not take away an earned reinforcement
  • Remember that punishment, like beauty, is in the
    eye of the beholder

26
Student Behavior Management Process Observe
problem behavior ? Problem solve with student ?
Is behavior office managed?
Write office referral
Management Process
NO YES
Continue problem-solving techniques with
student. Record in student note section of
School Tools

Classroom Managed Language Lateness Preparedness Calling Out Put Downs Refusing to work Minor dishonesty Touching Tone/ attitude Inappropriate comments Electronic devices Food or drink Dress code Minor disruption Academic Misconduct Office Managed Weapons Fighting Aggressive physical contact Threats Harassment Truancy/ late to class (3) Cutting Vandalism Alcohol Drugs Gambling Directed Profanity Major disruption (prevents instruction from continuing)
Write an Office Referral. Submit
Use classroom consequences
Administrator determines consequences
Document incident in student note section of
School Tools
Administrator provides teacher with feedback.
Does the student have 3-5 incidents in the same
quarter?
  • POSSIBLE CLASSROOM MANAGED INTERVENTIONS
  • Change / re-assign seat
  • Conference with student outside of room
  • Pre-correct student before entering room
  • Contact with parent
  • Contract with student
  • Detain student after school
  • Conference with other staff members to find out
    what works
  • Use available classroom management resources


27
Team Time - Consequences
  • Examine your current continuum of consequences
  • Use data to determine what consequences are
    working and are not working
  • Review what behavior is classroom (and setting)
    managed vs. office managed
  • What consequences are the staff empowered to use?

28
Correct Behavioral Errors
  • Are you using reteaching, reminding
    (precorrecting) and other prompts to clarify and
    refresh on expectations not met?
  • Have you established a continuum of consequences
    and feature ones that are mild and can be
    consistently delivered?
  • Are you using your data to gauge effectiveness of
    corrective measures?

29
Time to get going again.
Evaluate your current system for negative
consequences?
30
Networking
  • Be prepared to share.

31
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32
What are the roadblocks?
33
Group Feedback Discussion
  • Whats on your mind??

34
DATA DOES NOT HAVE TO BE A FOUR LETTER WORD
35
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36
Steps of Data Collection, Analysis, and Use
Data
  • Identify sources of information and data
  • Office discipline referrals
  • Attendance, tardies
  • Detentions, in-school-suspensions, out-of-school
    suspensions, expulsions
  • Academic performance (class work, homework,
    grades, classroom tests, state test results)
  • EBS/PBIS survey
  • Reinforcers issued

37
Data Collection, Analysis, and Use(SYSTEM)
  • Summarize/Organize Data
  • Number of Office Discipline Referrals By
  • The Big 5 Graphs
  • Number per day per month per 100 students
  • Time of day
  • Type of Behavior
  • Location
  • Student
  • Additional Graphs
  • Day of week
  • Type of Consequence
  • Number of Reinforcers
  • Teacher

38
Reviewing your ODR Form
  • Necessary
  • Student name, grade
  • Referring staff
  • Date, time, location
  • Problem behavior operational definitions for
    problem behaviors
  • Others involved
  • Administrative decision
  • Your Choice
  • Possible motivation
  • Comments
  • Follow up comments
  • Primary teacher
  • Parent signature/date

39
Why Use Data?
  • Communications
  • Effectiveness, efficiency, relevance of
    decision making
  • Professional accountability
  • Prevention
  • ..Use minutes efficiently

40
Identify Data Info Sources
  • School-based data sources
  • EBD/PBIS survey
  • Team Implementation Checklist (TIC), Parts A B
  • Systems-wide Evaluation Tool (SET)
  • Phases of Implementation Tool
  • Teacher Retention
  • School performance
  • State Testing
  • CSE 504 Statistics

41
Identify Data Info Sources
  • Student-based data sources
  • Office discipline referrals
  • Attendance, tardies
  • Detentions, in-school-suspensions, out-of-school
    suspensions, expulsions
  • Academic performance (class work, homework,
    grades, classroom tests, SAT)
  • School nurse visits
  • EBS/PBIS survey
  • Recognition/feedback rate

42
Identify Data Info SourcesContinued
  • Family-based Data Sources
  • Family Involvement Survey Behavioral Assessment
    (FISBA)
  • Family surveys questionnaires
  • Team Implementation Checklist (TIC), part C
  • Referrals to community agencies
  • Family attendance rates
  • Socioeconomic/census data

43
Summarize/Organize Data
  • Examine behavior patterns
  • Office Discipline Referrals
  • The Big 5 Graphs

44
3 Elements of Data-based Decision Making using
ODR data
  1. High quality data from clear definitions,
    processes, implementation (e.g., sw behavior
    support)
  2. Efficient data storage manipulation system
    (e.g., Excel or SWIS)
  3. Process for data-based decision making action
    planning process (e.g., team)

45
Who? Referrals by Student
46
What?
47
Where?
48
When?
49
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50
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51
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52
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53
Incident Referrals by Grade Level(Does not
include bus)
54
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55
Elementary Out of School Suspension
56
Your School Data
  • What data do you currently collect?
  • How/when do you review or analyze this data? (Who
    analyzes, who sees it?)
  • What questions are answered by this data?
  • What decisions are made based on this data?

57
Enhancing your Data System
  • What other questions would you like to have
    answered?
  • What other types of data would you like to
    collect?
  • Who would benefit from reviewing the data?

58
Paint a Full Picture of the Problem
59
Data-based Action Planning Process
  • Use Team
  • Ask Questions
  • Examine Assumptions
  • Form Hypotheses
  • Identify data sources
  • Collect data
  • Organize and summarize data
  • Analyze data
  • Build implement action plan based on data

60
Data for Decision-making Guiding Questions
  • Do you have an ODR data collection system?
  • If not use excel!
  • Do you have easy access to the data?
  • Are you collecting survey data?
  • Are you looking at grades, attendance, tardies?
  • Are you presenting the data to staff?
  • Are you using data to make decisions?
  • Who has data here today??

61
Analyze Data Build Action Plan
  • Continual Data AnalysisIdentify areas of
    strength and progress
  • Identify areas for problem-solving and planning
  • Build action plan based on data trends
  • Teaching issue? (boosters needed, re-teaching)
  • Recognition/feedback schedule? (frequency,
    intensity)
  • Type of recognition/feedback (tangible, verbal)
  • Real root/function of the problem identified?

62
DATA AND PROBLEM SOLVING
  • A look at your current issues
  • What does the data tell us?
  • What improvements do we want to focus on?
  • Where do we go from here?

63
What to do when?
Data Rules
64
1. Focus on School-wide system when
  • gt40 of students received 1 or more ODR
  • gt2.5 ODRs per student
  • Action to Take
  • Modify universal/school-wide interventions to
    improve effectiveness of the overall system.
  • Effective teaching of expectations
  • Increased use if pre-correction
  • Enhanced consistency with reinforcing expected
    behavior

65
2. Focus on Classroom system when
  • gt60 of referrals come from classroom
  • gt50 of ODRs come from lt10 of classrooms
  • Action to Take
  • Enhance universal and/or targeted classroom
    management systems and practices.
  • Examine academic engagement success
  • Teach, pre-correct for, positively recognize
    expected classroom behavior routines
  • Consider mentor teachers, administrative support,
    family volunteers, classroom management training

66
3. Focus on Non-classroom systems when
  • gt35 of ODRs come from non-classroom settings
  • gt15 of all students referred are from
    non-classroom settings
  • Action to Take
  • Enhance universal behavior management practices
    in specific non-classroom settings.
  • teach, pre-correct for, positively reinforce
    expected behavior routines
  • increase active supervision (move, scan,
    interact)

67
4. Targeted group interventions if
  • gt10-15 students receive gt5 ODR
  • Action to Take
  • Provide functional assessment-based, but
    group-based targeted interventions
  • Standardize increase daily monitoring,
    opportunities frequency of positive
    reinforcement

68
5. Individualized action team if...
  • lt10 students with gt10 ODR
  • lt10 students continue rate of referrals after
    receiving targeted group support
  • Action to Take
  • Provide highly individualized functional-assessmen
    t-based behavior support planning

69
Establishing an Action/Evaluation Plan
  • Develop evaluation/action questions
  • What do you want to know?
  • Why are there so many injuries on the playground?
  • Will a bus PBIS plan change bus referrals?
  • Identify indicators for answering each question
  • What information can be collected?
  • Nurse visits, accident reports, ODRs
  • Bus referrals, bus driver observation

70
Start with Questions Outcomes!
  • Use data to verify/justify/prioritize
  • Describe in measurable terms
  • Specify realistic achievable criterion for
    success
  • Develop methods schedules for collecting
    analyzing indicators
  • How when should this information be gathered?
  • Make decisions from analysis information
  • What is the answer for the question?

71
7 Basic Evaluation Questions
  1. What does it look like now?
  2. Are we satisfied with how it looks?
  3. What would we like it to look like?
  4. What would we need to do to make it look like
    that?
  5. How would we know if weve been successful with
    it?
  6. What can we do to keep it like that?
  7. What can we do to make it more efficient
    durable?

72
Guidelines To greatest extent possible.
  • Use available data
  • Make data collection easy (lt1 of staff time)
  • Develop relevant questions
  • Display data in efficient ways
  • Develop regular frequent schedule/routine for
    data review decision making
  • Utilize multiple data types sources
  • Establish clarity about office v. staff managed
    behavior
  • Invest in local expertise

73
Needs Assessment
  • Personal Observations
  • Hypothesis
  • Assumptions
  • Questions
  • Data Sources

74
Excel Office Referral Data System
  • Free.
  • Can help track student referral data
  • Excel is a spreadsheet not database
  • Codes must be strictly adhered to or you will
    loose data. Blanks or typos can loose data as
    well. You must perform checks to keep data
    clean.

75
School Report Cards
  • http//www.emsc.nysed.gov/irts/reportcard/
  • Choose a School Year
  • Scroll down to Finding a School Report Card
  • Choose one of the following and find your school
  • NY State County Map
  • NY State County List (in Alphabetical Order)
  • NY State School List (in Alphabetical Order)

76
Conclusion
  • Data are goodbut only as good as systems in
    place for
  • PBIS
  • Collecting Summarizing
  • Analyzing
  • Decision making, action planning, sustained
    implementation

77
Questions?
78
SharingWhere is your team with
  • Data Collection
  • Data Analysis
  • Using Data For Decision Making
  • 10 minutes

79
Team Time - Data
  • Office Discipline Referral Form does it contain
    all needed information? What is missing? What
    needs to be changed?
  • What is our current data collection system? Does
    it have the capacity to provide graphs and charts
    for the Big 5 plus other areas we need?
  • Do we have a clear definition of infractions? Is
    there a clear definition of what behaviors are
    classroom managed vs. office managed?
  • Are we using the EBS survey? Discuss plans for
    involving staff in survey.

80
Time to get going again.
Whats our data system and how will we use it?
81
Group Feedback Discussion
  • Whats on your mind??

82
GENERAL IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS
Team
Agreements
Data-based Action Plan
Implementation
Evaluation
83
Data Sources
  • Student-oriented
  • Office Discipline Referrals (ODR)
  • Violent Incidents (VADIR)
  • Nurse Visits, accident reports
  • Attendance, tardies
  • Detentions, In-School Suspensions (ISS),
    Out-of-School Suspensions (OSS), Expulsions
  • Academic performance (class work, homework,
    grades, classroom tests, etc.)

84
Data Sources
  • School-oriented
  • EBS/PBIS Survey
  • Team Implementation Checklist (TIC), Part
    A B
  • Systems-wide Evaluation Tool (SET)

85
Data Sources
  • Family and Community-oriented
  • Family Involvement Strength-Based Assessment
    (FISBA)
  • Family Survey
  • Team Implementation Checklist (TIC)-Part C
  • Volunteer Skill and Interest Survey
  • Family and Community attendance at school
    activities
  • Volunteer ratios

86
SharingWhere is your team with
  1. Surveying (EBS)
  2. Using Data

87
Team Implementation Checklist
  • Part A Start Up Activities
  • Part B Ongoing Activities
  • Part C Family Involvement Support

88
New York State Positive Behavioral Interventions
Supports Initiative Team Implementation
Checklist (TIC)    School_________________________
__________________ Region ________________ Distri
ct_________________________ County________________
____ Cohort _______   INSTRUCTIONS PBIS team
will complete parts A B of the checklist to
monitor guide activities for implementation of
PBIS in the school community. Please mail or fax
(____________________________)your completed TIC
by the 15th of each designated month to your
Regional Positive Behavioral Interventions and
Supports Specialist.
89
Time to get going again.
TIC Team Completion
90
P.U.B.S
91
Team Time
  • Team Implementation Checklist
  • Action Planning

92
Action Planning
  • Your steps
  • REVIEW you Teams TIC
  • What is partially or not in place?
  • Who will work towards completing it?
  • When do you hope to have it done?
  • Do you have 80 staff buy in for the process?
  • Why not?
  • How can you get it?
  • Staff presentation / surveys / videos / admin
    help
  • Present your action plan to staff
  • Is your team well represented?
  • Who is missing?
  • How are families involved?
  • What are the steps to getting these groups
    involved?

93
Action Planning
  • Your steps Cont
  • Is your team effective?
  • Do you meet regularly?
  • Are there assigned roles?
  • Are you looking at any data?
  • What type of Data do you have?
  • Surveys? Discipline data? FISBA?
  • Who collects and presents data?
  • Are you using it to make decisions?

94
Guide to Implementation
  • Team Do you have what who you need?
  • Consolidate/Integrate Who else is doing the same
    thing?
  • TIC Action Plan What are your priorities? What
    else is going on at your school? How will you
    know when you get there?
  • Evaluate What systems are still not in place?
    Data, violations systems,

95
Action Planning Guidelines
  • Agree upon decision making procedures
  • Align with school/district goals.
  • Focus on measurable outcomes.
  • Base adjust decisions on data local contexts.
  • Give priority to evidence-based programs.
  • Invest in building sustainable implementation
    supports (gt80)
  • Consider effectiveness, efficiency, relevance,
    in decision making (1, 3, 5 rule)

96
Team Time
  • Action Planning

97
Time to get going again.
Action Planning
98
Team Time
  • Use this time to address your teams needs
  • Assess your priorities
  • Action Plan

Web Exploration-If time allows
99
LASTTHOUGHTS
100
1. Give priority to prevention
  • Decrease development of new problem behaviors
  • Prevent worsening of existing problem behaviors
  • Eliminate triggers maintainers of problem
    behaviors
  • Teach, monitor, acknowledge prosocial behavior

101
2. Focus on whole school
  • All students, families, staff, settings
  • Continuum of behavior support
  • Collaborative, integrated initiatives

102
3. Give priority to evidence-based practices
  • Outcome-based
  • Monitoring of effectiveness, efficiency,
    relevance, durability
  • Function-based approach

103
4. Lead with team
  • Invested representative stakeholders
  • Active administrative involvement
  • Shared vision voice
  • Data-based action planning
  • Capacity building

104
5. Emphasize data-based evaluation
  • Self-assessment action planning
  • Continuous self-improvement
  • Strengths needs
  • Strategic dissemination

105
6. Invest in capacity building
  • Implementation priorities accuracy, durability,
    expansion
  • Institutionalize efforts
  • Vision, language, experience
  • Continuous evaluation improvement

106
Things You Should Know
107
BIG IDEA
PBIS isnot a program or curriculum, it is
System Culture Change!
108
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
109
Targeted Preview
  • Learn functioning of the Targeted Team
  • Develop and implement both group and individual
    targeted level interventions
  • Begin the use of data with small groups and
    individual students
  • Gain an fuller understanding of behavior and the
    function of behavior

110
Targeted Level
  • For students at-risk for chronic and intensive
    behavior problems
  • Interventions for groups of students experiencing
    difficulty and are not being managed by Universal
    Level

111
Targeted Preview
  • This team
  • Is similar in membership to Child Study Team or
    Child Assistance Team
  • Sees the whole child
  • Has representation including administrator,
    general education teacher, special education
    teacher, pupil personnel services (social worker,
    school psychologist, school counselor), and
    family representation.
  • One of the team members should have some
    behavioral expertise and one should be the PBIS
    Coach (this may be the same person).

112
Online Resources
  • www.pbis.org
  • www.partnershipschools.org
  • www.ebdnetwork-il.org
  • www.swis.org
  • www.pbsiep.com
  • www.ed.gov/offices/OSERS/OSEP

113
WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS
Duck tape. It fixes everything.
114
Thank you for all you doand for your support!!!!!
Tom Ellison tellison_at_scboces.org
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