Title: Welcome GLPS Staff !! Professional Development Day Fall 2003
1Welcome GLPS Staff !!Professional Development
DayFall 2003
- Todays Topic
- POSTIVE
- BEHAVIORAL
- INTERVENTIONS
2How many of you have used one or more of the
following, when a students behavior disrupts
your instruction time??
- DETENTION
- SUSPENSION
- ISOLATION
- VERBAL WARNINGS
3THE STATISTICS
- In one state, expulsions increased from 426 to
2088 and suspensions went from 53,374 to 66,914
over a four year period. - A suburban high school with 1400 students
reported over 2000 office referrals from
September to February of one school year. - An urban middle school with 600 students reported
over 2000 discipline referrals to the office from
September to May. - Students reported, being suspended or expelled
from school is one of the top three school
related reasons for leaving school.
4You can see the challenges teachers face when
educating students with severe problem behavior
is increasing.
- These students represent 1-5 of the schools
population, however they can account for 50 of
the behavioral incidents handled by
administrators, etc.
5The ways that educators have been trying to solve
these problems in the past, have not been
working!!
- What we need to do is find out WHY the student
misbehaved in the first place. - So how can we teach students more acceptable ways
to behave????
6POSITIVE BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTION SUPPORT!
- Used to understand the individual who has the
challenging behavior - Used to find patterns that may be creating the
challenging behavior - Approach used when trying to understand the
physical and social context of behavior
7Traditional Behavioral Mgmt. vs. PBIS
- Traditional Behavior Mgmt.
- Negative consequences
- Attempts to fix the student
- Views the student as the problem
- Focuses on reducing or eliminating the behavior
- Positive Behavioral Intervention Support
- Positive approaches!
- Changes the systems, settings, etc.
- Looks closely at the system, setting, etc. as the
problem - Created by a collaborative team
8Why should we consider PBIS at Grand Ledge High
School??
- Problem behavior in our school is occurring more
often with even more intensity - Students misbehave to reach a desired outcome or
to satisfy a specific need - Being able to understand why the behavior is
occurring can provide us essential information to
create a plan that will help eliminate these
behavior problems - Over time we should see remarkable changes that
not only benefit staff and administrators, but
also improve the quality of life of our students. - It is a long term solution it changes the
system not just the one child
9HOW DO WE GET STARTED?
- FUNCTIONAL BEHAVIOR ASSESSMENT
- We will use techniques and strategies to help us
identity the reasons behind the certain problem
behaviors.
10WHO SHOULD BE INVOLVED??
- Teachers
- IEP team (other teachers of the student, school
psychologist, etc.) - Parents
- Administrators
11Step 1 Determine How Serious the Problem Is
- Find out if the behavior is coming from boredom,
fear of embarrassment, or too high of
expectations within the classroom - Is the students behavior is significantly
different from his/her classmates? - Have traditional behavior management strategies
been unsuccessful? - Is the students behavior a threat to the safety
of other students or take away important learning
opportunities from the other students in class?
12If you answered yes or if any of those apply to
your situation
- ..then we need to continue with a Functional
Behavior Assessment!! - On to Step 2..
13Step 2 Collecting Information
- Observe and record behavior of student in various
settings - Observe students taking part in various
activities within the classroom - Discuss students behavior with other school
teachers, administrators, and family members
14Recording the Data
- Scatterplots are a great way to record
- When the behavior is occurring
- Single events that are triggering behavior
- Who the student is with when behavior occurs
15What Did You Observe??
- Did the behavior only occur in a particular
location or setting? (classroom, playground,
small group work, in a large group) - How often does the behavior occur?
- Where there any events that took place
immediately before or after the behavior? - Was there anyone else present in the
room/environment during the incident?
(substitute, administrator, parent, peer)
16Step 3 Categorize the Behavior
- Now that we know when, where, and how often the
behavior occurs, lets focus on the primary
purposes - Escape
- Tangible
- Attention
- Sensory
17ESCAPE
- STUDENT ESCAPES FROM PERSON, TASK, ENVIRONMENT,
ETC. - Example Students behavior may occur when
teacher ask student to complete an assignment in
class.
18TANGIBLE
- STUDENT DESIRES A SPECIFIC ITEM OR ACTIVITY.
- Example Student may have had an item taken away
from him/her in the classroom, which leads to the
behavior.
19ATTENTION
- STUDENT WANTS THE POWER OR DESIRES ATTENTION
FROM OTHER STUDENTS OR ADULTS. - Example Students behavior may occur when a
substitute teacher or administrator is in the
classroom, and student wants the attention
focused on himself/herself.
20SENSORY
- STUDENTS BEHAVIOR FEELS GOOD OR MEETS A SENSORY
NEED. - Example Behavior usually occurs when the
student is feeling stressed. Extreme
frustration, hunger, fatigue can also bring on
the behavior.
21Step 4 Develop a Behavior Intervention Plan
- Should contain strategies to teach the student
replacement behaviors - Should include POSITIVE strategies
- Must be agreed upon by students, parents,
teachers, counselors, administrators, etc.
22What should the Functional Behavioral Assessment
Include?
- Clearly describes the challenging behaviors
- Identifies the events, times, and locations in
which the behavior does or does not occur - Contains the data that accurately supports the
summary statements - Includes a summary of what influences the
challenging behaviors
23How Will We Know If It Is Working??
- Information on the effectiveness of the Behavior
Intervention Plan will be collected regularly - Plan may have to be redesigned or implemented in
a few ways - Support from others is needed to make sure the
plan is working
24IS THERE EVIDENCE THAT PBIS WORKS??
- It takes time.we need to be patient!!
- Evidence supports that it takes 3-4 years to
implement, and studies show the results are
favorable - One middle school saw a 54 reduction of office
discipline referrals, and 300 fights per year
were reduced to a handfull
25WE NEED SCHOOL-WIDE SUPPORT
- LETS GET STARTED
- Form the behavior support team
- Secure administrator agreement, support, and
participation - Commitment from at least 80 of staff
26MORE INFORMATION?
- There are many useful websites and books where
you can find more information on Positive
Behavioral Interventions Support. - www.pbis.org
27THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME!!
- GOOD LUCK
- AND HAVE A
- WONDERFUL
- AFTERNOON!!