Title: PBIS in Urban Settings
1PBIS in Urban Settings
- Presented by
- Christine McGrath, Ph.D., PBIS Trainer
- The May Institute
- Association for Positive Behavior Supports
- March 27, 2009
2Goals of Session
- Overview of Urban Systems
- PBIS in an urban school district in New England
- Meriden, CT
- Lessons learned
3Challenges Urban Systems
- Staff turnover
- More challenging behavior
- Lower SES level
- Increased diversity
- Academic deficits
- Competing Initiatives
4Survey of Barriers to Implementation and
Sustainability of SW-PBS in Urban Settings
- 10. Cultural difference between teacher-student
- 9. History of failed initiatives
- 8. Competing initiatives that drain resources
- 7. High proportion of inexperienced, short term
teachers - 6. Disconnect between school and district
administration - 5. Administrative turnover
- 4. Continuous change in district leadership and
priorities - 3. High bureaucratic complexity
- 2. Inadequate prepared teaching force
- 1. Teacher turnover
5Continuum of PBS in Schools
Tertiary Prevention Individualized Systems for
Students with High-Risk Behavior
1-5
6 referrals
10
2-5 referrals
10
Secondary Prevention Specialized Group Systems
for Students with At-Risk Behavior
Primary Prevention School-wide and
Classroom-wide Systems for All Students,
Staff Settings
80-85 of Students
0-1 referral
Crone Horner (2003)
6Continuum of PBIS in Urban Schools
Tertiary Prevention Individualized Systems for
Students with High-Risk Behavior
6 referrals
9
10
2-5 referrals
15
Secondary Prevention Specialized Group Systems
for Students with At-Risk Behavior
0-1 referral
76 of Students
Primary Prevention School-wide and
Classroom-wide Systems for All Students,
Staff Settings
Turnbull, et. al (2002)
7SW-PBIS Primary Outcomes
- Improves the school behavioral climate
- Decrease in
- office referrals
- suspensions detentions
- disruptive classroom behavior
- Increase in
- academic performance
- on-task behavior
- parent, student staff satisfaction
- staff retention
8Implementing School-wide Positive Behavioral
Interventions and Supports in an Urban School
District Meriden, CT
9District Characteristics
- Meriden Public Schools
- Approximately 8,864 pre KG-12th grade students.
- Comprised of 41 Hispanic,43 White,14 Black
- 29 students report a language other than English
spoken at home. - 58 qualify as low income.
- 9 English Language Learners.
10Development of District wide Leadership Team
- Representative District PBIS team formed in
Spring 2005 - Meets quarterly
- Compiled long-term action plan
- Planned for going to scale
- Provides support to PBS Coaches and PBS
Coordinator - Completes self-assessment quarterly
- Examines district-wide student discipline data
for overall trends, implications, and
intervention strategies - Outlined long-term funding for PBS initiative
11(No Transcript)
12Political Support
- Student social behavior identified as one of the
top 3 goals for the district. - Active participation and support of the
Superintendent Associate Superintendent
secured. - Associate Superintendent reports annually to the
Superintendent and Board of Education with PBIS
Trainer on activities and outcomes.
13Coordination
- District PBIS Coordinator identified (2005) to
oversee implementation - Principal, Benjamin Franklin Elementary School
- Coordinator receiving on-going training with May
Institute PBIS Trainer
14Visibility
- District team developed newsletter to share with
district administrators and board of education - Individual schools sharing information with
stakeholders about activities and outcomes - Monthly reports to staff
- Parent open houses and letters
- Postings on websites
15Coaching Capacity
- Leadership Team developed PBIS Coaching Network
to build sustain School-wide PBIS in the
district - 2 to 3 PBIS Coaches from each school implementing
SW-PBIS - Coordinator and/or Trainer meets monthly with all
PBIS Coaches for information sharing,
implementation strategies, fundraising, and
problem solving.
16Demonstrations
- Currently, 10 schools within district have
adopted SW-PBIS - 8 elementary schools
- 2 middle schools
- Exemplar schools within the district identified
that display - Fidelity of implementation of SW-PBIS
- Positive outcomes
- Decrease in office discipline referrals
- Increased staff satisfaction of SW Discipline
17SW-PBS Implementation Evaluation
- District-wide evaluation processes assess
- Fidelity of implementation of SW-PBIS
(School-wide Evaluation Tool (SET)) - Impact of SW-PBIS on student outcomes (ODRs and
suspensions) - Extent of implementation of the action plan
18Implementation and Outcomes Meriden Public
Schools
19PBS Implementation
- Organized into 4 Cohorts
- Cohort 1 Middle School 1
- (2004-2005)
- Cohort 2 Elementary Schools 1 2
- (2005-2006)
- Cohort 3 Elementary Schools 3, 4, 5 6, Middle
School 2 - (2006-2007)
- Cohort 4 Elementary Schools 7 8
- (2007-2008)
20PBS Implementation SET Scores
21Overall Impact of PBS on the Meriden Public
Schools
- Dramatic reduction in the number of referrals
that Administrators must deal with. - Providing more time for attention to our core
mission of teaching and learning. - Overall 38 reduction in ODRs at 7 implementing
schools - (Range 19 to 66 reduction)
- Improved over all school climate
- Improved relationships with parents, families,
and guardians
22Implementation and Outcomes Cohort 2 Elementary
School 2 Benjamin Franklin Elementary
23Benjamin Franklin Elementary School
- RESPECT SOS
- Respect for Self
- Respect for Others
- Respect for School
24Benjamin Franklin Elementary School
- Bulldog Bucks
- Token economy of Benjamin Franklin School
- Rewarded to students for demonstration of Respect
for Self, Others, and School
25Cohort 2 Data
26Cohort 2 Longitudinal Data
27SW-PBIS Behavioral Outcome Data Time Lost
28Impact of SW-PBIS on Benjamin Franklin Elementary
School Behavior and Academics Time Saved
- Dramatic reduction in the number of referrals
that Administrators must deal with. - Providing more time for attention to our core
mission of teaching and learning. - Overall 76.5 reduction in ODRs Improved overall
school climate - 149 hours saved in administrator time
- 298.5 hours saved in instructional time
29Impact of SW-PBIS on Benjamin Franklin Elementary
School Behavior and Academics Time Saved
- Improved relationships with parents, families,
and guardians - Dramatic improvement in overall school academic
achievement. - School In Need of Improvement designation
removed from school, Fall 2007.
30(No Transcript)
31Continuum of PBS in Schools
Tertiary Prevention Individualized Systems for
Students with High-Risk Behavior
1-5
6 referrals
10
2-5 referrals
10
Secondary Prevention Specialized Group Systems
for Students with At-Risk Behavior
Primary Prevention School-wide and
Classroom-wide Systems for All Students,
Staff Settings
80-85 of Students
0-1 referral
32Targeted Intervention
- H.U.G. Program Hello, Update, Good-bye
- Students from the targeted group
- Tier Two intervention for students at risk for
office discipline referrals (2-6) - Daily Record (point sheet)
- Check in/Check out
33HUG Students Enter in the Morning
34H.U.G. Behavioral Outcome Data
35H.U.G. Behavioral Outcome Data 4th Grade Cohort
36H.U.G. Academic Outcome Data 4th Grade Cohort
37H.U.G. Academic Outcome Data 4th Grade Cohort
38Impact of PBS on Benjamin Franklin Elementary
School
- Dramatic reduction in the number of referrals
that Administrators must deal with for at-risk
students. - 49 reduction in ODRs for 4th grade students in
H.U.G. intervention - 11.4 and 7.25 improvement in CMT Reading Scores
for 4th grade students in H.U.G. intervention
(larger increase than peers) - Improved relationships with parents, families,
and guardians
39Lessons Learned During Implementation
- Never underestimate the power of Data.
- Buy in of district and school-based
administration is crucial to a successful
implementation. - Trust your consultants.
40Lessons Learned During Implementation
- Build districts capacity must have trained
faculty and need to develop institutional
knowledge. - Take your time with planning and implementation.
- Watch out for over zealous teams that may not
have a complete understanding of the PBS process.
- The process is the most important aspect of
implementation. - Targeted and Intensive Team interventions are
difficult to develop but are essential. - Train, train and retrain. Constantly revisit the
training of faculty and students through out the
year a once and done training will not sustain
itself.
41Contact Information
- For more information contact
- Chrissy McGrath
- e-mail cmcgrath_at_mayinstitute.org