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Function Based Supports and Functional Behavioral Assessment

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Maureen Tracey, Alliance for Community Supports ... Frequently gets kicked out of class for yelling and cursing at teacher. 41. Interventions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Function Based Supports and Functional Behavioral Assessment


1
Function Based Supports and Functional Behavioral
Assessment
  • 3rd Annual APEX II LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE
  • August 20th, 2008
  • Maria Agorastou
  • Institute on Disability/ UCED
  • University of New Hampshire
  • Maureen Tracey, Alliance for Community Supports
  • (Many thanks to Dr. Hank Bohanon for sharing many
    of his slides with us!)

2
Goals of Todays Presentation
  • Increase understanding of Why behaviors occur
    (function)
  • Be able to Predict with high accuracy when
    behaviors will occur
  • Learn techniques to assist in extinguishing
    negative behaviors
  • Teach, Model, Reinforce behaviors we want to see
  • Replace negative with appropriate behaviors

3
Questions
  • Have you ever had a flat on your car, then yelled
    at the dog when you got home?
  • Have you ever felt uncomfortable because you did
    not know what the group around you was talking
    about so you escaped to the bathroom?

4
All Behavior Has a Purpose
5
Function-Based Behavior Support
  • A different approach to addressing support for
    children with problem behaviors.
  • Medical/Clinical Model
  • Diagnosis --gt Intervention
  • Old Behavior Management Model
  • Type of Problem Behavior --gt Intervention
  • Positive Behavior Support
  • Behavioral functions Larger support goals --gt
    Understand Not why does he do it? but why does
    he keeps doing it?

6
Behavior continued
  • FBA is concerned with why behaviors occur

?
?
?
7
The ABCs of Behavior
  • Antecedents what happens right before a
    behavior occurs
  • Behavior what does the behavior look like
  • Consequences what happens right after a
    behavior occurs
  • Reinforcers consequences which increase a
    specific behavior
  • Setting events-bigger picture (missed medication,
    missed meals, academic failure, peer conflict).

8
Common Problem Behaviors
  • Verbal Conflict
  • Skipping
  • Tardy
  • Lack of Organization
  • Fighting
  • Electronics
  • Cheating
  • Incomplete assignments

9
Behavior Communication
  • As soon as most of us are born we begin to
    realize that our behaviors communicate our needs
  • All behaviors serve a purpose
  • Conscious or Unconscious

10
Positive Behavior Intervention Supports
  • Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports
    (PBIS)
  • Systems approach using data
  • Preventing, Responding to discipline problems
  • School-wide systems that support staff
  • Teach promote positive behaviors in ALL
    students
  • Reduce behavior problems
  • Maintain a safe learning environment
  • Where teachers can teach and
  • students can learn

11
APEX PBIS MODEL
Tertiary Prevention RENEW Intervention
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
12
PBIS-NH Big Idea
  • Changing student behavior often involves changing
    adult behavior
  • Thinking strategically about how to increase the
    likelihood that more socially acceptable behavior
    will occur
  • Muscott Mann

13
PBIS FBA IDEA 2004Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act
  • If the child's behavior impedes his learning or
    the learning of others
  • The IEP team must include strategies, including
    positive behavioral interventions, supports, and
    other strategies to address that behavior.
  • Team must review and revise IEP to put in place a
    positive behavioral intervention

14
Functional Behavior Assessment Operational
Definition
  • Process that determines Why a student engages in
    a behavior
  • If the behavior interferes with the students
    learning or the learning of others
  • How the student relates to his/her environment
  • Includes but it not limited to
  • Identification of the problem (Target Behavior)
  • Definition of the behavior in concrete terms
  • Identification of the contextual factors that
    contribute to the behavior
  • The formulation of a hypothesis about when and
    why the behavior occurs
  • The consequences that it maintains

15
Keep it Simple
  • If it works - Keep doing it
  • If it doesnt work Change it

16
Become a detective!
  • Who?
  • What?
  • Where?
  • When?
  • How?
  • Why do they keep doing it?

17
Possible Functions of Behavior
  • Positive
  • Social attention (get)
  • Access to materials (get)
  • Sensory Stimulation
  • Control?
  • Negative
  • Escape from activities or people (avoid)
  • Sensory
  • Pain

18
Typical Consequences
  • Reprimand
  • Put in time out
  • Sent to the office
  • Receive poor grades
  • Ignore
  • Call parents
  • Loss of privileges
  • Suspension
  • Detention

19
What we know about Typical Consequences
  • They may stop a behavior temporarily
  • They do not provide opportunity for a new
    behavior to occur

20
What can go wrong?
  • Wants to escape task sent to office
  • Wants adult attention gets yelled by staff
  • Wants peer attention makes class laugh
  • Often the consequence can increase the behavior!

21
The consequences of a behavior affect future
behavior
  • Sometimes, people learn that problem behavior can
    be more efficient than appropriate behavior.

22
PBIS Model
  • Prevent
  • Teach
  • Model
  • Practice
  • Reinforce
  • Collect Data!

23
Whatll I Do First?
  • No behavioral intervention plan or strategy can
    be effective or functional without systematic
    evaluation
  • THAT MEANS YOU HAVE TO TAKE DATA!

24
Why?
  • Forces us to define target behaviors more
    precisely
  • Lets us know if the interventions are working
  • Ensures consistency of planned intervention
    techniques
  • Progress becomes visual

25
Assumption or Fact
26
How to Take Data
  • Keep it simple
  • Use different days
  • Use different times during the day
  • Use data to set evaluation criteria
  • Use data to report progress every six-eight weeks

27
Gathering Information a.k.a DATA
  • Parents
  • Teachers
  • Therapists
  • Office referrals
  • Reinforcers tried
  • Negative
  • consequences tried

28
Rule of thumb!!
  • Written
  • Visual
  • Verbal

29
We have the data. Now what?
  • Think ABC and
  • Start with a simple Behavior Pathway!

30
Simple Behavior Pathway
  • Setting Events
  • Immediate Antecedent Occurs
  • Antecedent Triggers Student Behavior
  • Student Behavior Produces Consequences
  • Over time, through reinforcement and punishment
    these become maintaining consequences or the
    function of behavior

31
Competing Behavior Pathway
Desired Behavior
Typical Consequences
Problem Behavior
Setting Events
Triggering Antecedents
Consequences
Replacement Behavior
Maintaining Consequences
32
What can be done?
  • Prevent Pre-teach, modify environment
  • Teach At a time when the student is able, calm
    and rested.
  • Practice Practice makes perfect.
  • Reinforce (positively)
  • Give child a repertoire of appropriate behaviors

33
Setting Events
  • Environmental prior relationship, changes in
    routine,
  • Learning Style degree of skill in activity/task,
    learning challenges, prior
  • Personal Factors sleep nutrition, anxiety, fear
    of frustration/embarrassment anger

34
A B Cs3 Term Contingency(Benjamin, 2004)
  • Antecedent What happens in the environment prior
    to behavior
  • Behavior What the person does
  • Consequence Change in the environment shortly
    after the behavior occurs

35
Antecedent Events
  • What happens before a behavior is exhibited?
  • (trigger)

36
Behavior
  • State the behavior in observable measurable
    terms
  • Non example He was fresh, she was aggressive
  • Example He told me to shut up, she pushed the
    staff away from her

37
Consequence
  • Often we look at consequences as being negative
  • However, can have a negative or positive result
    depending on their function
  • We can learn that a negative consequence can get
    us what we need

38
Baseline
  • The number of incidents before an intervention
  • This will determine if your intervention is
    working

39
Background
  • 7th Grade Boy
  • Transition Difficulties
  • Anxiety
  • Non Verbal Learning Disability
  • History of Academic Failure
  • Reads on 2nd grade Level
  • Has very few friends
  • Setting Events Recess, Language Arts room

40
Situation What is going on?
  • Student has difficulty with kids at recess.
  • Duty teachers claim he is a bully on the
    playground.
  • Frequently gets sent to the office or put against
    the wall at recess
  • Is failing Language arts
  • Misplaces Language arts homework
  • Frequently gets kicked out of class for yelling
    and cursing at teacher

41
Interventions
  • Paired up with buddy to work in school store
    during recess
  • Earned points during the day for computer time at
    the end of the day for appropriate behavior
  • Worked with one on one tutor on reading
  • Pre-Taught Language Arts Lesson with para-educator

42
Target Behavior
43
Target Behavior
44
Data
  • What is the target behavior (pushing, hitting,
    yelling at the teacher)
  • Where (at recess, language arts)
  • When (during basketball, when called on to read
    or clarify instruction)
  • With who (peers, teacher/para)
  • Why (hypothesis, why does he keep doing it)

45
Simple ABC Chart
46
What is the Maintaining Consequence?
  • Why does Corey keep yelling and being Aggressive?
  • Why doesnt Corey do this in Math?
  • Is it with a particular student at recess?
  • Is it when he wins or looses a game?

47

48
Goal
  • The goal is to extinguish or replace the problem
    behavior so that it is not effective
  • To replace the negative behavior with a positive
    behavior that serves the same purpose

49
Misbehavior Learning Error
  • Students learn appropriate behavior in the same
    way
  • they learn to readthrough
  • instruction,
  • practice,
  • feedback,
  • and encouragement

50
FBAsFunctional Behavior Assessment
  • Request a functional behavior assessment if
    things are going wrong
  • Develops a Behavior Intervention Plan
  • Includes not only professionals but parent and
    the student if appropriate

51
Change
  • Change is hard
  • People tend to go back to their previous
    behaviors
  • School personnel, students, staff, people in
    general will have difficulty with change

52
Catch Them!
  • Remember to Catch students when they are
    displaying appropriate, positive behaviors!
  • Everyone likes to be acknowledged for doing a
    good job!

53
PBIS Philosophy
  • The Power of Teaching
  • If a child doesnt know how to swim, we teach.
  • If a child doesnt know how to read, we teach.
  • If a child doesnt know how to multiply, we
    teach.
  • If a child doesnt know how to drive, we teach.
  • If a child doesnt know how to behave we . . . .
    . . teach?. . . . remove?. . . .punish?
  • Why cant we finish the last sentence as
    automatically as we do the others?

54
Remember
  • 4 positives to 1 negative as a rule
  • Teach, Model, Practice, Reinforce
  • If you can predict you can prevent!

55
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56
The Final Word
  • It is not fair to expect anyone to exhibit a
    behavior which has never been taught.
  • The key to changing inappropriate behaviors is
    replacing them with appropriate behaviors that
    serve the same function.

57
FBA Resources
  • Detailed bibliography can be found in your
    packet. We recommend to start with
  • http//www.behaviordoctor.org/
  • http//www.pbis.org/main.htm
  • Crone, D., Horner, R (2003) Building Positive
    Behavior Support Systems in Schools Functional
    Behavior Analysis (Paperback) Guilford, Press

58

Thank you!
Contact Info maureentracey3_at_hotmail.com 603-628-7
681 Office Maria.agorastou_at_unh.edu 603-862-0318
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