Title: Coaches have to help establish capacity for:
1Wraparound and Positive Behavior Supports A
Panel Discussion APBS Conference March 9,
2007 Boston
Lucille Eber, IL PBIS Network Kimberli Breen, IL
PBIS Network Martha Wally, Worcester, MA Public
Schools Michael Orth, Westchester County NY
2Designing School-Wide Systems for Student
SuccessA Response to Intervention Model
Academic Systems
Behavioral Systems
1-5
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5-10
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4IL 2003-04 data
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8School-wide Positive Behavior SupportsA Response
to Intervention Model
Universal School-Wide Assessment School-Wide
Prevention Systems
Group Interventions
AnalyzeStudent Data
Small group interventions Individualized
Interventions (simple) Complex individualized
interventions
Interviews, Questionnaires, etc.
Intervention
Assessment
Observations, FBA
Multiple settings
Multiple Perspectives
Team-Based Wraparound Interventions
Multi-Disciplinary Assessment Analysis
Adapted from T. Scott, 2004
9Continuum of Support for Secondary-Tertiary Level
Systems
- Group interventions (BEP, Check Connect, social
or academic skills groups, tutor/homework clubs,
etc) - Group Intervention with a unique feature for an
individual student - Individualized function based behavior support
plan for a student focused on one specific
behavior - Behavior Support Plan across settings (i.e. home
and school) - Wraparound More complex and comprehensive plan
that address multiple life domain issues across
home, school and community (i.e. basic needs, MH
treatment, as well as behavior/academic
interventions)
10Tertiary Level System Components
- Facilitate/guide an individualized team planning
process - Family/student/teacher ownership of plan
- Access full range of school and community support
services across life domains - Home, school, community settings
- Individualized academic and behavior
interventions are integrated into comprehensive
wraparound plans.
11Individualized Comprehensive Teams/Plans
- Who?
- Youth with multiple needs across home, school,
community - Youth with multiple life domain needs
- The adults in youths life are not effectively
- engaged in comprehensive planning
- (i.e. adults not getting along very well)
What? The development of a very unique,
individualized, strength-based team plan with
the youth and family that is designed to improve
quality of life as defined by the youth/family.
12Individualized, Comprehensive Teams/Plans
What Do Tertiary Plans include? Supports and
interventions across multiple life domains and
settings (i.e. behavior support plans, academic
interventions, basic living supports,
multi-agency strategies, family supports,
community supports, etc.)
Whats Different? Natural supports and unique
strengths are emphasized in team and plan
development. Youth/family access, voice,
ownership are critical features. Plans include
supports for adults/family, as well as youth.
13Tertiary Level System Components
- Facilitate/guide an individualized team planning
process - Family/student/teacher ownership of plan
- Access full range of school and community support
services across life domains - Home, school, community settings
- Individualized academic and behavior
interventions are integrated into comprehensive
wraparound plans.
14Wraparound A SOC Tool
- Emerged from practitioners struggling to
- implement SOC (grassroots)
- Keep/bring kids home
- Flexible, creative, non-categorical
- Natural support networks
- Community-based
- Do whatever it takes
- Let families guide service development
- Non-traditional supports and services
15Value Base
- Build on strengths to meet needs
- One family-one plan
- Increased parent choice
- Increased family independence
- Support for youth in context of families
- Support for families in context of community
- Unconditional If the plan doesnt work, change
the plan
P.Miles, 2004
16Similarities with Processes used in Special
Education
- Person-centered planning
- Positive behavior supports
- Mapping
- IFSP
- Voice and choice re quality of life
- Collaborative team process
- Supports adults who provide interventions for
child - Focus on natural supports settings
- Multiple life domains
The Art Science of Wraparound Eber, 2003
17Planning at the Tertiary Level
Individualized Planning
Supports Across Multiple Life Domains
The Art of Engagement Family Voice Blending
Perspectives
Science of Interventions Data-Based
Decision-making via gtFBA gtWraparound
(SIMEO)
Team-Building Home, School and Community
18Whats New in Wraparound?
- Skill set specificity
- Focus on intervention design/effectiveness
- Integration with school-wide PBS
- Phases to guide implementation/supervision
- Data-based decision-making
- Integrity/fidelity assessment
- Tools
- Home School Community
- Education Information Tool
- Wraparound Integrity Tool
19Lessons Learned
- An engaged team is worth investing time in
- Time investment is needed up front (pay now or
pay later) - Choice, voice, ownership increases strength of
interventions - School-wide system offers more options in natural
settings - Opportunities to intervene can be enhanced
increased - Not judging or blaming can transform relationships
20Coaches have to help establish capacity for
- Commitment of time
- Commitment to stay at table
- Willingness to regroup and be solution-focused
- No judging or blaming
- Time for listening to stories
- Time for venting, validating
- Establishing consensus
- Voice of student/family in prioritizing
- Establishing ownership
21Skill Sets
- Identifying big needs (quality of life
indicators) - Recognize voice/ownership stages
- Reframe blame
- Recognize setting event immobilization
- Getting to interventions that work
- Data-based decision-making
22Four Phases of Wraparound Implementation
- Team Preparation
- - Get people ready to be a team
- - Complete strengths/needs chats (baseline data)
- Initial Plan Development
- - Hold initial planning meetings (integrate data)
- - Develop a team culture (use data to establish
voice) - Plan Implementation Refinement
- - Hold team meetings to review plans (ongoing
data collection and use) - - Modify, adapt adjust team plan (based on
data) - Plan Completion Transition
- - Define good enough (Data-based decision-making)
- - Unwrap
-
23Examples of Needs Statements
- The student needs to feel adults and peers
respect him. - The student needs to feel happy about being at
school. - The parent needs to know her son is getting a
fair shake at school. - The student needs to be reassured that he can
complete the work.
24Needs Individualized Planning
- Focus on the why of a need not the how
- Needs to feel competent with academic tasks
rather than he needs to complete his assignments - Use descriptive terms
- To learn, To know, To experience, To feel, To
see, To have, To be - Deal with the big stuff
- Families/youth deserve to know their teams are
dealing with their larger challenges - More than one way to meet it
- Unlike a goal (John will come to school every
day) - Improves quality of life (as defined by family,
youth)
Adapted from P.Miles,2004
25Data-based Decision-making
- Can teams use data to prioritize needs, design
strategies, monitor progress of the
child/family team?
- more efficient teams, meetings, and plans?
- less reactive (emotion-based) actions?
- more strategic actions?
- more effective outcomes?
- longer-term commitment to maintain success?
26Using Data to Drive Decision Making at The Child
and Family Team
- Supports what we know to be true about a student
- Sometimes tells us what we did not know about a
student - Helps to support need for team involvement
- Helps to support need for family involvement
- Help to support need for resource allocation
- Helps us to our celebrate success
- Helps us to know when change is necessary and
imminent
27Mary Ellen
- 7th grade student
- Referred to the Student Assistant Team as a
potential WRAP because she had formed a strong
attachment to a teacher that interfered with her
ability to transition between classes. - The team determined that when Mary Ellen
transitioned between classes her anxiety
increased because she wanted attention from her
teacher. - Staff escorts were assigned to her between
classes as a safety precaution and to alleviate
anxiety of the student and teacher. A staff
member was also assigned outside the classroom
teachers room. The anxiety continued and the
wraparound process was initiated.
28Mary EllenHome, School, Community Tool
29Mary EllenHome, School, Community Tool
30Mary EllenWraparound Phase One
- The escort service was gradually faded and Mary
Ellens anxiety began to decrease. - Mary Ellen met with her counselor, D.D., to set
goals (Universal level intervention). Mary Ellen
set the goal to walk to class by herself. - The wrap team plans to meet to address social and
recreational needs identified by the family and
school via data and conversation. - The team has also started to plan ways that Mary
Ellen can interact with peers (Trivia game,
safety presentation). - The family is in the process of completing an
outside evaluation, which may lead Mary Ellen
being diagnosed with Aspergers Syndrome
Disorder.
31Wraparound Case Study Carlos cont.Classroom
Functioning From three points in time (11/03
06/04)
32Wraparound Case Study Carlos cont. Strength
Sustained at Six Months (11/03 06/04)
Works independently
33Wraparound Case Study Carlos cont. Need
Becomes Strength at Six Months (11/03 06/04)
Has enough to do (age-appropriate activities)
34Wraparound Case Study Carlos cont. Strengths
Sustained at Six Months (11/03 06/04)
35Wraparound Case Study Carlos cont. Ongoing
Needs/Six Months (11/03 06/04)
36Wraparound Case Study Ozzie cont.Getting to
Strengths and Needs at Baseline Using Data and
Voice Choice
37RomanUsing the Data to get to Strengths and
Needs
School
Home
38Why Build Interagency Networks?
- Better use of school/community based resources
- Increase community coordination collaboration
- Provide flexible, individualized approach to
helping students and their families - Contain costs and demonstrate cost effectiveness