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PBIS

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... office referrals, increase attendance, enhance academic engagement, improve grades ... Increase attendance. Attendance Committee. SIP/SID. Target Group ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PBIS


1
PBIS
  • Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports

2
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
3
ALL CHILDREN
4
Systems of Positive Behavior SupportBIG IDEAS
  • Collaboration - work as a team
  • Consensus - Agree and stick by agreements
  • Consistency - across time, adults, students
  • Logical and Realistic Solutions
  • Teach and Facilitate Success
  • Measure and Evaluate
  • Sustain with Data-Based Decision-Making

5
Discipline Works When .
  • Prevention creates more Positive than negative
    consequences

Punishment (Failure)
4 1
6
PBIS Big Ideas
  • PBIS is not a curriculum - it is a framework for
    systems to identify needs, develop strategies,
    and evaluate practice toward success
  • The goal of PBIS is to establish host
    environments that support adoption sustain use
    of evidence-based practices
  • (Zins Ponti, 1990)

7
Positive Approaches Keys
  • Prevention before reaction
  • Team and systems-based
  • Logical and realistic plans
  • Individualized
  • Consistency across time, adults, settings, and
    students
  • Founded on Teaching
  • Goal setting and monitoring

8
ALL STUDENTS
9
Administrator Discipline Time Cost/Benefit
AnalysisUrban Elementary, Baltimore, MD
10
Obtain 80 Staff Consensus
  • A YES vote means that I agree to
  • Provide input in determining what our schools
    problems are and what our goals should be
  • Make decisions about rules, expectations, and
    procedures in the commons areas of the school as
    a school community
  • Follow through with all school-wide decisions,
    regardless of my feelings for any particular
    decision
  • Commit to positive behavior support systems for a
    full year - allowing performance toward our goal
    to determine future plans

11
Predictable Problems Summary
12
Collaborative Solutions

13
Teaching
  • Create a discussion of each big idea - and the
    corresponding rule
  • Discuss their application in different areas of
    the school
  • Engage students in discussion and allow
    practice/demonstration time
  • Remind students (prompts, cues, pre-corrects)
  • Encourage and reinforce success
  • Discourage and provide correction/consequence for
    failure with rules
  • Provide re-teaching as indicated by failure
  • Remove prompts as indicated by success
  • Consider more direct teaching in complex areas
    (e.g., playground)

14
EXAMPLE Teachable Expectations
  • 1. Respect Yourself-in the classroom (do your
    best)-on the playground (follow safety rules)
  • 2. Respect Others-in the classroom (raise your
    hand to speak)-in the stairway (single file
    line)
  • 3. Respect Property-in the classroom (ask
    before borrowing)-in the lunchroom (pick up your
    mess)

15
Sample Teaming Matrix
16
Teaching Matrix Activity
 
 
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20
Consistent Consequences
  • Reinforcement
  • Continuum of reinforcers for different levels of
    success
  • Use the least amount necessary
  • Immediate and consistent to begin
  • Approximate and/or pair with natural reinforcers
  • Make part of routine and systems
  • Pre-plan and teach consequences
  • Fade
  • Move toward more natural reinforcers
  • Use more group contingencies
  • Increase ratios of behavior to reinforcement

21
Consistent Consequences
  • Responding to negative behavior
  • Immediate and consistent
  • Try to keep with natural consequences
  • Use the least amount necessary to get desired
    behavior Pre-plan and teach
  • Correction and re-teaching
  • Use only with reinforcement for replacement
    behavior
  • Should defeat function of problem behavior

22
Measure and Evaluate
  • Big Ideas
  • School determines what outcomes are important
  • School identifies the simplest way to get that
    information
  • School uses that information to evaluate their
    plans

23
Decision Flowchart
24
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25
Who?
26
When?
27
Where?
28
Cool Tool
29
Acknowledging SW Expectations Rationale
  • Humans require regular frequent feedback on
    their actions
  • Humans experience frequent feedback from others,
    self, environment
  • W/o formal feedback to encourage desired
    behavior, other forms of feedback shape undesired
    behaviors

30
Resources
  • www.pbis.org
  • www.coe.ufl.edu/faculty/scott/terrys/tscott.html
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