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Chapter%206%20Emotional%20and%20Behavioral%20Disorders

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Title: Chapter%206%20Emotional%20and%20Behavioral%20Disorders


1
Chapter 6Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
2
IDEA-Definition of Serious Emotional Disturbance
(SED)
  • One or more of the following characteristics over
    a long period of time and to a marked degree that
    adversely affects educational performance
  • Inability to learn not related to other factors
  • Inability to build or maintain satisfactory peer
    or teacher relationships
  • Inappropriate feelings or behavior under normal
    conditions
  • Frequently unhappy or depressed
  • Often fearful
  • Definition does not apply to children who are
    socially maladjusted

3
Problems with IDEA Definition
  • Definition is vague and subjective
  • What are satisfactory peer and teacher
    relationships?
  • What does inappropriate behavior look like?
  • The definition, as written, excludes children on
    the basis for which they are included
  • How does one differentiate between socially
    maladjusted and true emotional disturbance?
  • Individual teacher expectations and tolerances
    make identification a difficult and subjective
    process

4
CCBD Definition of Emotional or Behavioral
Disorders
  • Behavioral or emotional responses so different
    from appropriate age, cultural, or ethnic norms
    that they adversely affect educational
    performance
  • More than temporary, expected responses to stress
  • Consistently exhibited in two different settings,
    at least one of which is school related
  • Unresponsive to direct intervention in the
    general education setting

5
Common Characteristics of Children with EBD
  • Two primary behavioral excesses
  • Externalizing behaviors (most common behavior
    pattern)
  • Noncompliance
  • Temper tantrums
  • Property destruction
  • Threats of violence or violence toward peers
    and/or teachers
  • Internalizing behaviors
  • Overly shy or immature
  • Withdrawn
  • Hypochondria
  • Easily upset and difficult to calm

6
Common Characteristics (cont.)
  • Behavioral deficits
  • Academic achievement
  • Low GPA
  • High absenteeism
  • At risk for school failure and early drop out
  • Social skills
  • Less participation in extracurricular activities
  • Lower quality peer relationships
  • Juvenile delinquency

7
Prevalence
  • Prevalence
  • Estimates vary, but about 3 to 5 of school-age
    population
  • Given prevalence data, many students not
    receiving specialized services
  • Gender
  • The vast majority are boys

8
Causes
  • Biological factors
  • Brain injury or dysgenesis
  • Genetics (e.g., schizophrenia)
  • Temperament
  • Environmental factors
  • Home - Inconsistent parenting practices
  • Community - Low SES, gangs, high crime rate
  • School ineffective instruction, coercive pain
    control
  • The primary medical classification system used
    for individuals with EBD is based on the
    DSM-IV-TR. It includes 16 major categories,
    including mood, and anxiety disorders, and
    schizophrenia

9
Identification and Assessment
  • Whether behavior is different enough to require
    services
  • Screening tests
  • Used to determine if intervention is warranted
  • Behavior rating scales or checklists
  • E.g., Child Behavior Checklist (Affective
    Problems Anxiety Problems Somatic Problems
    Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Problems
    Oppositional Defiant Problems and Conduct
    Problems)
  • Projective tests
  • Ambiguous stimuli
  • Limited usefulness for education planning
  • Direct observation and measurement
  • Directly focuses on the childs problems
  • Useful for educational planning

10
Functional Behavioral Assessment
  • Systematic, data-driven process
  • Informal assessment
  • School records, parent interviews, teacher
    checklists
  • Direct observation and measurement
  • In-class observation when behavior is likely to
    occur
  • Hypothesis development
  • All informal and observational data used to
    develop intervention based on probable cause of
    the behavior
  • Intervention
  • Teaching functional replacement behaviors
  • Evaluation and modification
  • Data are collected to determine success of the
    intervention

11
Functional Behavioral Assessment
  • Federal law (IDEA, 1997) mandates the use of
    functional behavioral assessments (FBAs) and
    positive behavioral supports to address
    challenging behaviors demonstrated by students in
    school settings
  • Functional assessment has a scientifically based
    history with more than 30 years of research
    rooted in applied behavior analysis

12
Curriculum Goals
  • Learn to control their antisocial behavior
  • Social skills
  • Cooperation skills
  • Appropriate ways to express feelings
  • Responding to failure
  • Academic skills
  • Direct, explicit instruction
  • High rates of teacher praise

13
Curriculum Goals (cont.)
  • Behavior management
  • Clear school-wide expectations (PBS)
  • Positive proactive classroom management
    strategies
  • Self-management
  • Self-monitoring
  • Self-evaluation
  • Peer mediation and support
  • Peer tutoring
  • Positive peer reporting

14
Self-Management Card
15
Fostering Strong Teacher-Student Relationships
  • Differential acceptance
  • Witness or be the victim of acts of anger without
    responding similarly
  • Focus on alterable variables
  • Teachers should focus effort on only those
    variables that make a difference in student
    learning and can be affected by sound teaching
    practice

16
Educational Placement Alternatives
  • More than 50 of students with EBD receive their
    education in
  • Separate classrooms
  • Special schools
  • Residential facilities
  • Most students receiving special education because
    of emotional or behavioral disorders have serious
    problems that require intensive intervention

17
Current Issues and Future Trends
  • Revising the federal definition to meet the needs
    of students
  • Prevention efforts in the community
  • Clarify regulations for disciplining students
  • Improving services for youth in correctional
    facilities
  • Developing wraparound services for families
  • Putting into practice research validated teaching
    methods
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