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Introduction to Schoolwide Positive Behavior Support

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Alternative programming. Anti-bullying initiatives. Increased number of harassment policies. ... Ekstrom, Goertz, Pollack, & Rock, 1986. Wehlage & Rutter, 1986 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Schoolwide Positive Behavior Support


1
Introduction to School-wide Positive Behavior
Support
  • Major portions of the following material were
    developed by George Sugai and Rob Horner
  • OSEP Funded Technical Assistance Center
  • www.pbis.org
  • In conjunction with
  • The Iowa Behavioral Alliance (An Initiative of
    the Iowa Dept. of Education)
  • www.rc4alliance.org

2
Organization
  • Problem behavior challenge for schools
  • Traditional efforts
  • to get tough or train and hope
  • ineffective.
  • School-wide PBS
  • three-tiered prevention model
  • efficient and effective

3
Main Logic for School-wide PBS
  • Schools face a difficult challenge
  • Academic, social, safety
  • Children more different from each other than ever
    before
  • Do more with less

4
Main Logic for School-wide PBS
  • Individual behavior support
  • Functional assessment
  • Commitment to all students
  • Wraparound

5
Main Logic for School-wide PBS
  • School-wide behavior support.
  • Behavior support in schools begins by investing
    in building a positive social culture
  • School-wide intervention

6
Main Logic
  • Prevention
  • Teaching
  • Effective practices need nurturing systems

7
Message!
?
  • Successful Individual student behavior support
    is linked to host environments or schools that
    are effective, efficient, relevant, durable
  • (Safran Howard, 2003 Zins Ponti, 1990)

8
Problem Behaviors
  • Exist in every school
  • Vary in intensity
  • Are associated w/ variety of contributing
    variables
  • Are concern in every community

9
Kappan/Gallup Poll
  • In 2000, general public rated fighting/violence/g
    angs, lack of discipline, lack of funding,
    and overcrowded schools as top 4 biggest problems
    facing local schools.

10
The Challenge
  • Teachers report that uncivil behavior is
    increasing and is a threat to effective learning
  • Skiba and Peterson, (2000)
  • There is a link between general level of
    disruptive behavior and more extreme acts of
    violence
  • Skiba and Peterson, (2000)

11
When behavior doesnt improve, we Get Tougher!
  • Zero tolerance policies
  • Increased surveillance
  • Increased suspension expulsion
  • In-service training by expert
  • Alternative programming
  • Anti-bullying initiatives
  • Increased number of harassment policies
  • ..Predictable systems response!

12
Immediate seductive solution Get Tough!
  • Clamp down increase monitoring
  • Re-re-re-review rules
  • Extend continuum consistency of consequences
  • Establish bottom line
  • Exclude student not ready to learn
  • ...Predictable individual response

13
The Challenge
  • Exclusion and punishment are the most common
    responses to conduct disorders in schools.
  • Lane Murakami, (1987)
  • Rose, (1988)
  • Nieto, (1999)
  • Sprick, Borgmeier, Nolet, (2002)

14
The Challenge
  • Exclusion and punishment are ineffective at
    producing long-term reduction in problem behavior
  • Costenbader Markson (1998)

15
The Challenge
  • Exposure to exclusionary discipline has been
    shown, not to improve school outcomes, but in
    fact to be associated with higher rates of school
    dropout.
  • Skiba, Peterson and Williams, 1997
  • Ekstrom, Goertz, Pollack, Rock, 1986
  • Wehlage Rutter, 1986
  • Sprick, Borgmeier, Nolet, (2002)

16
The Challenge
  • We have the knowledge and the skill to make our
    schools effective instructional environments with
    a minimal use of suspension and expulsion.
  • Russ Skiba, Testimony before U.S. House of
    Representatives, May 2002

17
The Challenge
  • We have no evidence that suspension and
    expulsion make a positive contribution to school
    safety or improved student behavior they may in
    fact have significant unintended negative
    consequences for students and school climate.
  • Russ Skiba, Testimony before U.S. House of
    Representatives, May, 2002

18
Research Findings
  • Reviews of over 600 studies on how to reduce
    school discipline problems indicate that the
    least effective response to school violence are
  • Counseling (talking therapies)
  • Psychotherapy
  • Punishment
  • Gottfredson, 1997
  • Lipsey, 1991 1992
  • Tolan Guerra, 1994
  • Elliott, Hamburg, Williams, 1998

19
Research Findings
  • The same research reviews indicate that the most
    effective responses to school violence are
  • Social Skills Training
  • Academic Restructuring
  • Behavioral Interventions
  • Gottfredson, 1997
  • Elliot, Hamburg, Williams, 1998
  • Tolan Guerra, 1994
  • Lipsey, 1991 1992

20
Activity Think About This.
  • Discuss what youve heard
  • Does it ring true?
  • What questions do you have?
  • So what?

21
Need for systemic change
  • We know a great deal about what can be done,
    but we have not yet translated our knowledge into
    widespread changes in the incidence of antisocial
    behavior or the proportion of children who engage
    in antisocial behaviors
  • Biglan, 1995, p. 480

22
School-wide Positive Behavior Support
  • School-wide positive behavior support is set of
    systemic and individualized strategies for
    achieving social and learning outcomes while
    preventing problem behavior.

23
School-wide Positive Behavior Support
  • Four core elements are emphasized.
  • Clearly defined outcomes
  • Research-validated practices
  • Supportive administrative systems
  • Use of information for problem solving

24
SW-Positive Behavior Support
Social Competence, Academic Achievement, and
Safety
OUTCOMES
Supporting Decision Making
Information
Supporting Staff Behavior
SYSTEMS
PRACTICES
Supporting Student Behavior
25
Current Implementation
  • School-wide Positive Behavior Support
  • 2,800 schools in 32 states

26
Iowa PBS Schools
  • 8 teams
  • completed 3
  • 7 teams
  • starting 3rd year
  • 27 teams
  • starting 2nd year
  • 25 teams
  • starting 1st year 1 of training
  • TOTAL 67 Teams

27
Six Major Ideas
  • 1. Build Multiple Systems of Behavior Support
  • 2. Invest in Prevention
  • 3. Start with Administrative Commitment

28
Six Major Ideas
  • 4. Use Team-based Implementation
  • 5. Adapt procedures to fit the context
  • 6. Collect and use information for
    decision-making

29
Tertiary Prevention Individualized Systems for
Students with High-Risk Behavior
CONTINUUM OF SCHOOL-WIDE POSITIVE
BEHAVIOR SUPPORT
5
Secondary Prevention Targeted Systems for
Students with At-Risk Behavior
15
Primary Prevention School-wide/Classroom/ Non-cla
ssroom Systems for All Students, Staff, Settings
80 of Students
30
Invest in PreventionBuild a Culture of
Competence
  • Define behavioral expectations
  • Teach behavioral expectations
  • Monitor and reward appropriate behavior
  • Provide corrective consequences for behavioral
    errors.
  • Information-based problem solving

31
Building Culture
  • Do not expect school-wide efforts to affect
    students with chronic problem behavior.

32
Practices for School-wide Behavior Support
  • Practices
  • Define expectations
  • Teach expectations
  • Monitor expected behavior
  • Acknowledge expected behavior
  • Correct behavioral errors (continuum of
    consequences)
  • Use information for decision-making

33
Systems for School-wide Behavior Support
  • Systems
  • Admin Leadership
  • Team-based implementation
  • Defined commitment
  • Allocation of FTE
  • Budgeted support
  • Development of decision-driven information system
  • Formal policies

34
Define School-wide Expectationsfor Social
Behavior
  • Identify 3-5 Expectations
  • Short statements
  • Positive Statements (what to do, not what to
    avoid doing)
  • Memorable

35
Some Examples
  • Be responsible, be respectful, be safe
  • Respect self, others, property

36
Activity Define Expectations
  • Team Action Time 20

37
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These banners are hanging in the commons area and
in our gymnasium.
40
Orange County, CA
41
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43
Teach Behavioral Expectations
  • Transform into specific, observable behaviors.
  • Teach in the actual settings
  • Teach
  • (a) the words, and
  • (b) the actions.
  • Build a social culture that is predictable, and
    focused

44
Expectations by Settings
45
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46
Activity Expectations by Settings Matrix
  • Take 20 minutes to start the filling out the
    form. You will want to keep working on this
    during your monthly meetings and report on your
    progress at the next training.

47
Teaching Behavioral Expectations
  • Define the expectation
  • Provide a rationale
  • Teach the critical discrimination
  • Demonstrate appropriate behavior
  • Demonstrate unacceptable behavior
  • Practice telling the difference with multiple
    examples

48
Teaching Plan
  • Presentation Ways to demonstrate and have fun!
  • Practice At least twice
  • Reinforcement How will you positively reinforce
    or celebrate their success
  • Follow-up Plan ensure a 5-1 ratio of positive

49
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50
Activity Teaching Expectations in a Specific
Setting
  • 20 Minutes for Team Time to start the process of
    developing these forms.

51
On-going Recognition of Appropriate Behavior
  • Every faculty and staff member acknowledges
    appropriate behavior.
  • 5 to 1 ratio of positive to negative contacts
  • System that makes acknowledgement easy and simple
    for students and staff.

52
On-going Recognition of Appropriate Behavior
  • Different strategies for acknowledging
    appropriate behavior (small frequent rewards more
    effective)
  • Celebration of success (annually, quarterly, etc)
  • Beginning of class recognition
  • Raffles
  • Open gym
  • Social acknowledgement

53
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54
Are Incentives/Rewards Dangerous?
  • our research team has conducted a series of
    reviews and analysis of (the reward) literature
    our conclusion is that there is no inherent
    negative property of reward. Our analyses
    indicate that the argument against the use of
    rewards is an overgeneralization based on a
    narrow set of circumstances.
  • Judy Cameron, 2002
  • Cameron Pierce, 1994, 2002
  • Cameron, Banko Pierce, 2001

55
Recognition of Success
  • For other ideas on techniques for recognition
    used in Iowa
  • http//www.educ.drake.edu/rc/elemrewards.html
  • http//www.educ.drake.edu/rc/middlehighrewards.htm
    l

56
Discourage and Interrupt Problem Behaviors
  • Do not ignore problem behavior
  • Provide clear guidelines for what is handled in
    class versus sent to the office
  • Remember the PURPOSES of neg. consequences

57
Discourage and Interrupt Problem Behaviors
  • Do not expect negative consequences to change
    behavior patterns. Negative consequences are a
    way to keep the lid on. Teaching changes
    behavior.

58
Activity Celebration of Success
  • 15 minutes Team Time to start identifying how you
    will celebrate student success or give
    recognition/acknowledgement

59
Determining if a Culture of Competence Exists
  • You can identify the behavioral expectations
    within 5 min of entering the school.
  • Students state the behavioral expectations
  • Students are recognized for appropriate behavior

60
Determining if a Culture of Competence Exists
  • Faculty, staff and families know behavioral
    expectations
  • Student to Student interactions reflect
    expectations
  • Physical environment is cared for
  • Students approach adults

61
Team-based Adapted to Fit Local School
  • Team established
  • Investment in team development
  • Active administrative support and involvement
  • Self-assessment to fit procedures to school
  • Never give up something that already works
  • Different paths to the same outcomes.

62
Process of Implementation
  • School-teams
  • Establish Commitment
  • Self-Assessment and Action Planning
  • School-wide systems (primary prevention)
  • Targeted and Intensive (secondary and tertiary
    prevention)
  • On-going use of information for evaluation

63
School-Wide Systems Fern Ridge Middle School
1994-95
  • Total Enrollment 530 (grades 6, 7 and 8)
  • Total Office Discipline Referrals 2628
  • 4.95 office referrals per student.
  • 304 students (57) with 1 or more referrals
  • 34 students (6) with 20 or more referrals
  • Students with 20 referrals accounted for 52 of
    all referrals.

64
Main Messages
  • Invest in prevention
  • Create an effective environment
  • Use different systems for different problems
  • Build a culture of competence
  • Build sustainable systems
  • Invest in gathering and using information for
    decision making/problem solving.
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