Title: Considerations for Individual Student Systems
1Considerations for Individual Student Systems
- Simple Solutions Wont Work for Complex Problems
- Sugai, Palmer, Hagan, 10/10/99
2Purpose
- To describe considerations procedures for
developing sustaining individual student systems
3Given
- Educating individual students with significant
problem behaviors requires highly individualized,
specialized, intensive behavioral supports.
4What challenges do educators experience in their
efforts to educate students with significant
problem behaviors?
5Factors Challenges to ISS
- Problem behaviors are high intensity /or
frequency. - Too many students display significant problem
behavior at any one time. - Problem behaviors are disrupting learning
teaching environments. - Problem behaviors are difficult to understand.
- Interventions are ineffective.
6- Insufficient number of minutes to collect
information, conduct meetings, implement
monitor plans. - Administrative leadership support is lacking,
unavailable, or underdeveloped. - Staff are unable or untrained to implement
interventions, lack opportunities for
continuous applied professional development. - Overemphasis on form, policy, or regulation
rather on process. - Lack of continuum of positive behavior support.
7Requirements for ISS
- Behavior must be considered within context in
which it is observed. - As intensity of problem behavior increases, so
must intensity complexity of functional
behavioral assessment behavior support
planning process.
8- Individuals who develop implement behavior
support plans must be behaviorally competent
able to - Conduct fluently functional assessment-based
behavior support planning. - Facilitate efficient development, implementation,
evaluation of behavior support plans. - Collect analyze student performance data.
- Develop academic social behavior support plans
that are based on research validated practices.
9- Decisions regarding effectiveness efficiency of
implementation of behavior support plan must be
based in data. - Efficiency effectiveness of implementation
system of individual student support are related
directly to effectiveness efficiency of
school-wide behavior support systems for all
students, staff, settings.
10- Longer problem behavior has been occurring, more
resistant it may be to intervention. - Staff need sustained effective support to
respond effectively efficiently to significant
problem behavior. - Efficient team-based approach process to
problem solving must be in place.
11Process for Establishing ISS
- Establish Behavior Support Team to guide/lead
process. - Secure establish behavioral competence within
school. - Develop three level system of school-wide
behavior support - Universal Interventions
- Targeted Group Interventions
- Targeted Individual Interventions
12(No Transcript)
13Universal Interventions
- School-wide discipline system for all students,
staff, settings that is effective for 80 of
students. - Common approach to discipline.
- Clearly positively stated expectations.
- Procedures for teaching expectations.
- Continuum of procedures for encouraging
expectations. - Continuum of procedures for discouraging rule
violations. - Procedures for monitoring modifying procedures.
14Targeted Group Interventions
- Specialized group administered system for
students who display high-risk problem behavior
are unresponsive to universal interventions. - Functional assessment based intervention
decisions. - Daily behavioral monitoring.
- Links to school-wide discipline system.
- Regular frequent opportunities for positive
reinforcement. - Home-school connection.
- Individualized academic accommodations for
academic success. - Planned social skills instruction.
- Behaviorally based interventions.
15Targeted Individual Interventions
- Specialized individually administered system for
students who display most challenging problem
behavior are unresponsive to targeted group
interventions. - Simple request for assistance.
- Immediate response (24-48 hours).
- Functional behavioral assessment-based behavior
support planning. - Team-based problem solving process.
- Data-based decision making.
- Comprehensive service delivery derived from a
wraparound process.
16- Establish data decision system for matching level
of intervention to student. - Simple direct request for assistance process
for staff. - Data decision rule for requesting assistance
based on number of major behavioral incidents.
17- Establish a continuous data-based system to
monitor, evaluate, improve effectiveness
efficiency. - Are students displaying improved behaviors?
- Are staff implementing procedures with high
fidelity? - What can be modified to improve outcomes?
- What can be eliminated to improve efficiency?
18What is FBA?
- Description of problem behavior(s)
- Testable hypothesis or summary statement
- Setting events, antecedents, behaviors,
consequences, functions - Evidence to support hypothesis
- Archival, interview, direct observation, checklist
19What is BIP?
- Instructional manipulations
- Antecedents, replacement behaviors, consequences,
setting events - Implementation plan
- Who does what, when, where, how.
- Measurement plan
20FBA Process
21Targeted-Group Interventions
- Develop specialized, group system for
addressing needs of students with at-risk or
significant problem behaviors
22Prerequisites
- Effective proactive SW system in place
- Team-based problem solving
- Local behavioral capacity
- Functional assessment-based behavior support
planning - Social skills programming
- Behavioral interventions
- Administrator participation
23Group-based Programming Requirements
- Targeted, individualized, small group
interventions - based on functional behavioral assessment
information - social skills instruction
- behavioral programming
- multiple opportunities for high rates of academic
success
24- Daily behavioral monitoring
- Self- and/or adult
- Regular, frequent opportunities for positive
reinforcement - tangible to social
- external to internal
- predictable to unpredictable
- frequent to infrequent
- Home-school connection
25Other Strategies
- behavioral contracts
- adult mentor/monitor
- targeted social skills instruction
- problem solving
- conflict management
- self-management programming
- academic restructuring
26Example Behavior Education Program (BEP) (March
Horner, 1998)
- Need
- 7 of students with chronic problem behavior
- Targeted, group based intervention needed
- Expected to work for most but not all students
- Interventions must be functional assessment based
- 24 students
27BEP Features
- Students identified with multiple office
referrals - Student-parent-school contract formed
- Connection to school-wide expectations
- Individualized, daily monitoring
28BEP Set-up
- Teach students, teachers, parents routines
- Establish school home reinforcers
- Establish data collection system
- Conduct abbreviated FBAs
29BEP Daily Cycle
- 1. Check in office at arrival to school
- reminder binder
- precorrections
- turn in previous days signed SM form
- pick-up new SM form
- review daily goals
30BEP Daily Cycle
- 2. At each class
- student completes SM card
- teacher checks initials
- 3. Check out at end of day
- review days points goals
- receive reinforcer if goal met
- take successful day card home
- precorrections
31BEP Daily Cycle
- 4. Give successful day card to parent(s)
- receive reinforcer from parent
- have parent sign card
- 5. Return signed card next day
32Effective Behavior Support
Supporting Decision Making
Supporting Staff Behavior
DATA
SYSTEMS
PRACTICES
Supporting Student Behavior
33General ISS Features
34Example DistrictIndividualized Interventions
- 11 schools (alternative school not participating
- About 5,300 students
- District-wide EBS project
- District-wide Reading project
35Role of EBSL Team
- Meets monthly
- Activities Include
- Identifying, organizing and coordinating district
EBS efforts - Provide appropriate EBS training to school teams
- BISSC (Bethel Individual Student Systems Cadre)
- Serve as liaison to district administration
36Provision and Coordination of District Support
- EBS Leadership Team
- Special Services Administrators
- Carl Cole and Ginger Kowalko
- EBS District Coordinator
- Celeste Dickey
- District Multicultural Coordinator
- Remie Calalang
- Curriculum Director
- District Behavior Specialist, Monica Bounds
- University of Oregon
- Teri Lewis-Palmer, George Sugai, Brigid Flannery
37BISSC
- Began in winter of 2002
- Meets twice a month
- Representatives from each school
- Counselors, Special education teachers, General
education teachers, Speech/Language Specialists - District-wide behavior specialist, EBS
coordinator, UO personnel
38Level 1Provision of Classroom Supports
39- Observable,
- measurable definition of
- the behavior(s) in context
- Self-Assessment of
- factors key to student
- success
- Preliminary FA (e.g. Guess
- Check by Whitney
- OKeefe)
40(No Transcript)
41Level 2Provision and Coordination of School
Supports
42- Are data of high quality?
- Is plan of high quality?
- Is implementation of high fidelity
- Are supports in place for sustained
implementation?
43Level 3Provision and Coordination of District
Support
44(No Transcript)
45- Structured activities to support schools in
assessing their individual student system - Teams can develop action plans for EBS teams