Title: Outline
1Outline
- Introduction Chief Coleman
- National State Perspective MDE Dr. Ryan
- Current District Data Dr. Muyskens
- PBiS Rob Purple Ellen Nacik
- Work in progress PBiS in MPS David Branch
- District Parent Advisory Craig Nelson
2Office of Student Support, Family and Community
Engagement
- The mission of MPS is to ensure that all students
learn. We support their growth into
knowledgeable, skilled, and confident citizens
capable of succeeding in their work, personal and
family life.
3- In order to fulfill this mission, we must provide
students with the opportunity to develop - Academic skills
- Social-emotional skills
- Positive decision-making skills
4Our Goal is to
- Align district efforts and resources to support
classroom teachers and schools in the design and
implementation of effective climate, attendance,
and behavior strategies. - Target specific strategies to improving outcomes
for students of color.
5What is Discipline?
- The etymology of discipline
- From same Latin root as disciple (discipere)
To teach or comprehend
6The Roots of Zero Tolerance
- Based in 1980s Drug Programs
- Transitioned to schools in 1990
- 1994 Gun Free Schools Act Becomes Law
- Has led to significant increases in disciplinary
removal
7What are our challenges?
- Our current discipline system does not reduce
problem behavior. - Suspension rates are unacceptably high,
especially for African American, and American
Indian students, resulting in - Too many days of lost instruction
- A loss of connectedness between the child,
parent, and school
8Continued.
- Reports of school climate are uneven.
- Too often students, teachers and others report
that disruptive behavior is interfering with
learning in classrooms. - Implementation of evidence-based practice is
spotty. - Managing classroom behavior is the greatest
challenge identified by new teachers.
9Where do we go from here?
- Implement evidence-based programs to develop
student assets and social skills. - Enhance teacher quality and staff development
with emphasis on cultural competence. - Development and implementation of a continuum of
support to meet student needs. - Recognize parents as partners and bring them in
early and often.
10From theory to practice.
11Suspension Update January 2008
12- Suspension Data was largely unchanged when
comparing 2005/06 and 2006/07 school year data
13The following patterns remain clear
- Total suspensions remains high
- 06/07 17,041 suspensions (6,552 individual
students) - Instructional days was lost 32,571 student days
- 86 of those enrolled during the 06/07 school
year had 0 suspensions - African American and Native American students
were suspended at a higher rate.
1423 of African American students enrolled during
the 2006/07 school year were suspended
15Patterns, continued
- Male students suspended more than female students
(69 of suspensions were to male students). - Students receiving spec. ed. suspended more
(41 of suspensions) - Suspensions peak during middle school and early
high school (68 of suspensions occur in grades 6
through 10).
16Patterns, continued
- The most frequent reason for students being
suspended are - Disruptive/disorderly conduct/insubordination
(40) - Fighting (19)
- Assault (9)
- Other (9)
- Verbal Abuse (5)
17Reason for Suspension African American students
and Ethnicity not African Am.
18During the first quarter of 2007/08 there was a
drop of 12 in the number of students suspended
19The data appears to indicate that suspensions
are not an effective way to deal with behavior.
If they were they would lead to decreased
incidents of behavior difficulties, and thus to
reduced suspension rates, which is obviously not
the case. Research, and our own OCR voluntary
compliance agreement, tell us that the key to
changing this is not a reactionary approach, but
a preventative/early intervention approach
PBIS.
Paul Muyskens
20Background
- Safe Schools Healthy Students Grant
- Team Effort
- 5 years
- Promising results to date
- Momentum for system change
212 Worries Ineffective Responses to Problem
Behavior
- Get Tough (practices)
- Train--Hope (systems)
22An EDUCATIONAL approach
- If a student struggles with reading
- Teach reading
- If a student struggles with math
- Teach math
- If a student struggles with behavior
- Suspend
23Main Message
STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
Rigorous Academics
Behavior Systems
Increasing Staff Competency and Capacity
Increase Family and Community Involvement
District investment in outcomes, data, practices,
systems
24School-Wide Positive Behavior Support
- Focuses on establishing the broad continuum of
social, cultural, and individual behavior
supports needed to promote both academic success
and pro-social behavior - Start with school-wide emphasis
25School-Wide Positive Behavior Support invests in
- Prevention (more cost efficient and productive)
- Teach the expected skills (educational approach)
- Acknowledge and recognize when and students
adults are using the skills - Data based decision making
- Sustainable Systems (teams, policies, funding
admin. support, data structures)
26In schools where school-wide positive behavior
support is present, a visiting adult can
determine what the behavioral expectations are
within 5 minutes.
Rob Horner
27(No Transcript)
28Working Smarter not Harderwhere does PBiS fit?
- POL
- Early Childhood
- Community Involvement
- Equity teams and Courageous Conversations
- 2nd Step Social skills program
- Restorative Justice Measures
- Bully Prevention
- RTI
29District-wide Coordinated Services
30PRACTICAL district-wideElectronic Resources
- www.pbis.org
- sss.mpls.k12.mn.us/PBIS
- Positive SW Behavior Plan
- Positive School Climate Toolkit
- Links to research intervention ideas
31PBiS/MDE
Year 1 Schools
Year 2 Schools
- Not Shown
- PYC and
- Early
- Childhood
32Principles of Learning
CONTENT
Habits of Mind
33Not Just Academics
RIGOR
Practices
(what)
Systems (how)
34Social-Emotional/Behavioral Learning
Components
of a
RIGOR
Positive
SWBS
Habits of Leadership
35Mpls K-8 Building PBIS Triangle
Pre-PBiS
PBiS in place
36What about Disproportionality?1/14/08
37School-wide SystemsCreate a positive school
culture
- School environment is predictable
- common language
- common vision (understanding of expectations)
- common experience (everyone knows)
- School environment is positive
- regular recognition for positive behavior
- School environment is safe
- violent and disruptive behavior is not tolerated
- removing punishment, but not consequences
- School environment is consistent
- adults use similar expectations
- systematic approach
38Questions to Consider