Title: SchoolWide Positive Behavior Support: Getting Started
1School-Wide Positive Behavior Support Getting
Started
- George Sugai
- OSEP Center on PBIS
- University of Connecticut
- April 6, 2006
- www.pbis.org
- www.swis.org
- George.sugai_at_uconn.edu
2PURPOSE Provide overview of rationale, features,
outcomes of school-wide approach to positive
behavior supports
3OUTCOME OBJECTIVES
- Rationale for adopting proactive systems approach
to improving school climate - Features of School-wide Positive Behavior Support
- Examples of SWPBS implementation
- Understanding of prerequisites for participation
in training support activities
4SW-PBS Logic!
- Successful individual student behavior support
is linked to host environments or school
climates that are effective, efficient, relevant,
durable - (Zins Ponti, 1990)
5Context Matters Examples
- Individual Student
- vs.
- School-wide
6Messages Repeated!
- Successful Individual student behavior support is
linked to host environments or schools that are
effective, efficient, relevant, durable - Learning teaching environments must be
redesigned to increase the likelihood of
behavioral academic success
72001 Surgeon Generals Report on Youth Violence
Recommendations
- Establish intolerant attitude toward deviance
- Break up antisocial networkschange social
context - Improve parent effectiveness
- Increase commitment to school
- Increase academic success
- Create positive school climates
- Teach encourage individual skills competence
8Supporting Social Competence Academic
Achievement
4 PBS Elements
OUTCOMES
Supporting Decision Making
DATA
Supporting Staff Behavior
SYSTEMS
PRACTICES
Supporting Student Behavior
9Tertiary Prevention Specialized
Individualized Systems for Students with
High-Risk Behavior
CONTINUUM OF SCHOOL-WIDE INSTRUCTIONAL
POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT
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
10Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success
1-5
1-5
5-10
5-10
80-90
80-90
11Organizational Features
Common Vision
ORGANIZATION MEMBERS
Common Language
Common Experience
12GENERAL IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS Getting Started
Team
Agreements
Data-based Action Plan
Implementation
Evaluation
13Team-led Process
Non-Teaching
Family
Behavioral Capacity
Priority Status
Representation
Specialized Support
Administrator
Team
Community
Data-based Decision Making
Administrator
Student
Communications
Teaching
Start with Team that Works.
14Working Smarter
15Sample Teaming Matrix
163-4 Year Commitment
Top 3 School- Wide Initiatives
3-Tiered Prevention Logic
Agreements Supports
Coaching Facilitation
Administrative Participation
Dedicated Resources Time
17Self-Assessment
Efficient Systems of Data Management
Existing Discipline Data
Data-based Action Plan
Team-based Decision Making
Multiple Systems
Evidence- Based Practices
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20Referrals by Problem Behavior
21Referrals per Location
22Referrals per Student
23Referrals by Time of Day
24School-wide Positive Behavior Support Systems
Classroom Setting Systems
Nonclassroom Setting Systems
Individual Student Systems
School-wide Systems
25SW PBS Practices
- SCHOOLWIDE
- Common purpose approach to discipline
- 2. Clear set of positive expectations behaviors
- 3. Procedures for teaching expected behavior
- 4. Continuum of procedures for encouraging
expected behavior - 5. Continuum of procedures for discouraging
inappropriate behavior - 6. Procedures for on-going monitoring
evaluation
- CLASSROOM-WIDE
- Classroom-wide positive expectations taught
encouraged - Teaching classroom routines cues taught
encouraged - Ratio of 6-8 positive to 1 negative adult-student
interaction - Active supervision
- Redirections for minor, infrequent behavior
errors - Frequent precorrections for chronic errors
- Effective academic instruction curriculum
- SECONDARY/TERTIARY INDIVIDUAL
- Behavioral competence at school district levels
- Function-based behavior support planning
- Team- data-based decision making
- Comprehensive person-centered planning
wraparound processes - Targeted social skills self-management
instruction - Individualized instructional curricular
accommodations
- NONCLASSROOM SETTINGS
- Positive expectations routines taught
encouraged - Active supervision by all staff
- Scan, move, interact
- Precorrections reminders
- Positive reinforcement
26Team Managed
Staff Acknowledgements
Effective Practices
Implementation
Continuous Monitoring
Administrator Participation
Staff Training Support
27Relevant Measurable Indicators
Efficient Input, Storage, Retrieval
Team-based Decision Making Planning
Evaluation
Continuous Monitoring
Effective Visual Displays
Regular Review
28Sample websites (www.)
- pbis.org
- swis.org
- pbismaryland.org
- bethel.k12.or.us
- cde.state.co.us/pbs
- flpbs.fmhi.usf.edu
- ebdnetwork-il.org
29To Conclude
- Create systems-based preventive continuum of
behavior support - Focus on adult behavior
- Establish behavioral competence
- Utilize data based decisions
- Give priority to academic success
- Invest in evidence-based practices
- Teach acknowledge behavioral expectations
- Work from a person-centered, function-based
approach - Arrange to work smarter