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Best Practice in Positive Behavior Supports

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Evolution of ABA & 'Positive Behavior Supports' ... In 2001 fewer than 20 Universities with programs in ABA ... Strategies based on the principles of ABA. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Best Practice in Positive Behavior Supports


1
Best Practice in Positive Behavior Supports
  • Robert W. Ricketts, M.S., BCBA
  • Southwest Center for Applied Behavior Analysis
  • Consultant Betty Hardwick Center

2
Introduction
  • Evolution of ABA Positive Behavior Supports

3
Introduction
  • Evolution of ABA Positive Behavior Supports
  • Behavior Modification of the 1950s into the
    80s.

4
Introduction
  • Evolution of ABA Positive Behavior Supports
  • Behavior Modification of the 1950s into the
    80s.
  • In 1982, Behavior Analysis begins with
    publication of Toward a Functional Analysis of
    Self-Injurious Behavior (Iwata, et. al.).

5
Introduction
  • Evolution of ABA Positive Behavior Supports
  • Behavior Modification of the 1950s into the
    80s.
  • In 1982, Behavior Analysis begins with
    publication of Toward a Functional Analysis of
    Self-Injurious Behavior (Iwata, et. al.).
  • Aversive vs. Positive debate of the 1980s/1990s.

6
Introduction
  • Evolution of ABA Positive Behavior Supports
  • Behavior Modification of the 1950s into the
    80s.
  • In 1982, Behavior Analysis begins with
    publication of Toward a Functional Analysis of
    Self-Injurious Behavior (Iwata, et. al.).
  • Aversive vs. Positive debate of the
    1980s/1990s.
  • In 1999, Behavior Analysts are Certified by the
    Behavior Analyst Certification Board (BCBA).
  • BCBA becomes the accepted credential for minimal
    standards of competency.

7
Maturation of ABABehavior Analyst Certification
as a Standard of Practice
  • Behavior Analyst Certification Board established
    in1999

8
Maturation of ABABehavior Analyst Certification
as a Standard of Practice
  • Behavior Analyst Certification Board established
    in1999
  • Presently approximately 6,000 Certificants

9
Maturation of ABABehavior Analyst Certification
as a Standard of Practice
  • Behavior Analyst Certification Board established
    in1999
  • Presently approximately 6,000 Certificants
  • In 2001 fewer than 20 Universities with programs
    in ABA
  • Today, there are more than 120 Universities with
    programs in ABA.

10
Maturation of ABABehavior Analyst Certification
as a Standard of Practice
  • Behavior Analyst Certification Board established
    in1999
  • Presently approximately 6,000 Certificants
  • In 2001 fewer than 20 Universities with programs
    in ABA
  • Today, there are more than 120 Universities with
    programs in ABA.
  • On May 5th, 2009, Oklahoma becomes first state to
    License Behavior Analysts.

11
An Important Best Practice Standard
  • If a professional represents themselves as having
    expertise or a specialty in any given area, they
    are expected to have the recognized professional
    credentials for that area.

12
An Important Best Practice Standard
  • If a professional represents themselves as having
    expertise or a specialty in any given area, they
    are expected to have the recognized professional
    credentials for that area.
  • A professional who presents themselves as having
    expertise in Applied Behavior Analysis, should
    have their certification as a BCBA.

13
Some Critical Issues in the Effective Practice of
ABA
  • Direct, Frequent, On-Going Involvement of a BCBA
  • Time Intensive

14
Some Critical Issues in the Effective Practice of
ABA
  • Direct, Frequent, On-Going Involvement of a BCBA
  • Time Intensive
  • Treatment must be responsive to rapidly changing
    conditions

15
Some Critical Issues in the Effective Practice of
ABA
  • Direct, Frequent, On-Going Involvement of a BCBA
  • Time Intensive
  • Treatment must be responsive to rapidly changing
    conditions
  • Effective Staff Training
  • Is not classroom based
  • The BCBA needs to work on the floor.

16
Some Critical Issues in the Effective Practice of
ABA
  • Direct, Frequent, On-Going Involvement of a BCBA
  • Time Intensive
  • Treatment must be responsive to rapidly changing
    conditions
  • Effective Staff Training
  • Is not classroom based
  • The BCBA needs to work on the floor.
  • BCBAs should be involved in teaching.
  • Home Living Skills
  • Vocational Skills
  • Leisure Skills

17
Some Critical Issues in the Effective Practice of
ABA
  • Direct, Frequent, On-Going Involvement of a BCBA
  • Time Intensive
  • Treatment must be responsive to rapidly changing
    conditions
  • Effective Staff Training
  • Is not classroom based
  • The BCBA needs to work on the floor.
  • BCBAs should be involved in teaching.
  • Home Living Skills
  • Vocational Skills
  • Leisure Skills
  • Positive Behavioral Supports
  • Environments which support Quality of Life

18
Written Behavior Programs Barriers to Effective
Treatment?
19
Written Behavior Programs Barriers to Effective
Treatment?
  • Written BTPs often function as barriers to
    effective intervention.
  • Are static and unresponsive.

20
Written Behavior Programs Barriers to Effective
Treatment?
  • Written BTPs often function as barriers to
    effective intervention.
  • Are static and unresponsive.
  • Focus on reducing problem behavior, which is
    often not the problem.

21
Written Behavior Programs Barriers to Effective
Treatment?
  • Written BTPs often function as barriers to
    effective intervention.
  • Are static and unresponsive.
  • Focus on reducing problem behavior, which is
    often not the problem.
  • Rarely address replacement behaviors in any
    meaningful way.

22
Written Behavior Programs Barriers to Effective
Treatment?
  • Written BTPs often function as barriers to
    effective intervention.
  • Are static and unresponsive.
  • Focus on reducing problem behavior, which is
    often not the problem.
  • Rarely address replacement behaviors in any
    meaningful way.
  • BTPs focus on the person, not the environment.

23
Written Behavior Programs Barriers to Effective
Treatment?
  • Written BTPs often function as barriers to
    effective intervention.
  • Are static and unresponsive.
  • Focus on reducing problem behavior, which is
    often not the problem.
  • Rarely address replacement behaviors in any
    meaningful way.
  • BTPs focus on the person, not the environment.
  • BTPs may include emergency restrictive
    procedures which are inappropriately placed in a
    training objective.

24
Written Behavior Programs Barriers to Effective
Treatment?
  • Written BTPs often function as barriers to
    effective intervention.
  • Are static and unresponsive.
  • Focus on reducing problem behavior, which is
    often not the problem.
  • Rarely address replacement behaviors in any
    meaningful way.
  • BTPs focus on the person, not the environment.
  • BTPs may include emergency restrictive
    procedures which are inappropriately placed in a
    training objective.
  • BTPs are a relic of the era of Behavior
    Modification, and often hinder/discourage
    effective use of present-day Behavior Analytic
    methodologies.

25
Positive Behavior Supports are not an Add-On
Service.
  • Behavior Supports consist of everything that
    gives an individual Quality of Life.

26
Positive Behavior Supports are not an Add-On
Service.
  • Behavior Supports consist of everything that
    gives an individual Quality of Life.
  • Behavior Intervention Strategies should be the
    persons regular activities/objectives.

27
Positive Behavior Supports are not an Add-On
Service.
  • Behavior Supports consist of everything that
    gives an individual Quality of Life.
  • Behavior Intervention Strategies should be the
    persons regular activities/objectives.
  • The BCBA must partner with all other persons
    responsible for the provision of services.
  • Program Staff
  • Support Staff

28
What are Positive Behavior Supports?
  • Positive Behavior Supports
  • Formal Assessment/Intervention Strategies based
    on the principles of ABA.
  • Those strategies which require a BCBA.

29
What are Positive Behavior Supports?
  • Positive Behavior Supports
  • Formal Assessment/Intervention Strategies based
    on the principles of ABA.
  • Those strategies which require a BCBA.
  • Quality of Life Environments
  • Physical (home and work environments)
  • Social
  • Work
  • Leisure
  • Quality of Social Interactions

30
Importance of Quality of Life in Positive
Behavior Support
  • Effective behavioral strategies must teach new
    behavior.

31
Importance of Quality of Life in Positive
Behavior Support
  • Effective behavioral strategies must teach new
    behavior.
  • Options for new/alternate/desired behavior is
    directly related to the Quality of the
    Environment.

32
SIB, HIT, SIT, or Urinate. Those are the
choices. What should we teach?
33
Importance of Quality of Life in Positive
Behavior Support
  • Without a Quality Environment, or Positive
    Behavior Supports, the probability of effective
    intervention (behavioral or otherwise) is greatly
    reduced.

34
Positive Supports Living Environments (Singh,
1997)
  • An Engaging Environment
  • Teaching and Maintaining Functional Skills
  • Reducing or Preempting the Occurrence of Behavior
    Problems
  • Least Restrictive Living Environment
  • Stable Environment
  • Safe Environment
  • Choice of Residential Placement

35
An Engaging Environment
  • For example, some individuals do not find
    anything in the environment that is reinforcing
    enough to attract their attention. (Singh, 1997,
    p.10)

36
An Engaging Environment
  • For example, some individuals do not find
    anything in the environment that is reinforcing
    enough to attract their attention. (Singh, 1997,
    p.10)
  • Given that there is a negative correlation
    between engagement and problem behavior, some of
    the problem behaviors exhibited by these
    individuals may be related to the fact that the
    environment is not responsive to their needs.
    (Singh, 1997, p.11)

37
Teaching and Maintaining Functional Skills
  • In acceptable treatment environments, training
    is conducted not in discrete, artificial training
    sessions, but in settings, times, and activities
    that are functional for the individual. (Singh,
    1997, p.11)

38
Least Restrictive Living Environment
  • The basic question is How normalized is the
    living environment?
  • Lack of privacy.sharing bedrooms.
  • Personal belongings on walls, in rooms.
  • Do not have a homelike environment.
  • Spontaneous activities.
  • Restriction of civil liberties in lieu of
    effective behavioral and/or psychopharmalogical
    management.

39
Reducing or Preempting the Occurrence of Behavior
Problems
  • The longer a problem behavior remains in an
    individuals repetoire, the less acceptable is
    the treatment environment. (Singh, 1997, p.11)

40
Safe Environment
  • Incidence of Self-Injury/Aggression
  • Incidence of Abuse/Neglect
  • Lack of acceptance and insensitivity by members
    of the community.

41
Stable Environment
  • Is there predictability and continuity in terms
    of services and personnel?
  • Unstable environments
  • Unfamiliar Staff
  • Changes in how programs are implemented
  • Changes in expectations/rules

42
Choice of Residential Placement
  • Do people choose to live in their current
    environments?

43
Do people choose their own roommates?
44
Choice of Residential Placement
  • Do people choose to live in their current
    environments?
  • Do people choose their own roommates.
  • We must never forget that living in the
    community is not inherently better (than living
    in an institution) if the services we provide to
    individuals in the community are not of the same
    quality as those we provide to ourselves.
    (Singh, 1997, p.14)

45
BACB Guidelines for Responsible Conduct
46
BACB Guidelines for Responsible Conduct
  • 2.09 Treatment Efficacy.
  • (a) The behavior analyst always has the
    responsibility to recommend scientifically
    supported most effective treatment procedures.
    Effective treatment procedures have been
    validated as having both long-term and short-term
    benefits to clients and society.
  • (b) Clients have a right to effective treatment
    (i.e., based on the research literature and
    adapted to the individual client).

47
BACB Guidelines for Responsible Conduct
  • 3.02 Environmental Conditions that Hamper
    Implementation.
  • If environmental conditions hamper implementation
    of the behavior analytic program, the behavior
    analyst seeks to eliminate the environmental
    constraints, or identifies in writing the
    obstacles to doing so.

48
BACB Guidelines for Responsible Conduct
  • 6.06 Conflicts with Organizations.
  • If the demands of an organization with which
    behavior analysts are affiliated conflict with
    these Guidelines, behavior analysts clarify the
    nature of the conflict, make known their
    commitment to these Guidelines, and to the extent
    feasible, seek to resolve the conflict in a way
    that permits the fullest adherence to these
    Guidelines.

49
Summary
  • Best Practice consists of
  • Professionals with appropriate credentials
  • Quality environments
  • A structure such that Formal Behavior
    Strategies are part of the persons daily
    routines and programs.
  • A view that the person is not the problem.

50
Im Finished!
  • Questions?
  • Comments?
  • Discussion?
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