Title: Strengthening Positive Classroom Management in Elementary Schools
1Strengthening Positive Classroom Management in
Elementary Schools
- Judy Arthur, First Steps to Success Coordinator,
Tigard Tualatin School District - Sally Helton, EBIS Coordinator, Tigard Tualatin
School District
2Goals
- Examine methods for surveying teachers and
administrators to determine areas where
professional development is needed - Show how one district analyzed survey data
district-wide in order to focus on supporting
areas that were rated as most in need of support - Demonstrate a cost effective method for providing
professional development on classroom management
throughout a district
3TTSD Demographics
- 10 Elementary Schools, 3 Middle Schools, 2 High
Schools, 1 Alternative School (12,400 students) - Elementary student population ranges from 487 to
656 - 22 Hispanic (Ranges from 4 to 42)
- 35 Free and Reduced Lunch (Ranges from 11 to
61) - PBIS in place since 1996
- Counselor at each elementary school, no associate
principals - 2 district level behavior coaches.
4Annual PBIS Surveys completed in TTSD
- School-wide Evaluation Tool (SET)
- Outside evaluators interview students and staff
regarding PBIS systems and practices - Benchmarks of Quality
- PBIS Teams self-evaluate their own PBIS systems
and practices - Self-Assessment Survey
- On-line survey taken by all staff,
5PBS Self Assessment Survey
- Purpose of the Survey
- Completed on-line by entire staff in 20 to 30
minutes - Provides an annual assessment of effective
behavior support systems in the school. - Evaluates the status and need for improvement of
four behavior support systems - (a) school-wide discipline systems,
- (b) non-classroom management systems (e.g.,
cafeteria, hallway, playground), - (c) classroom management systems, and
- (d) systems for individual students engaging in
chronic problem behaviors.
6Self-Assessment Survey, Continued
- Survey results are summarized and used for a
variety of purposes including - annual action planning,
- internal decision making,
- assessment of change over time,
- awareness building of staff, and
- team validation.
- In TTSD, the survey summary is used to develop an
action plan for implementing and sustaining
effective behavioral support systems throughout
the school
7Classroom Systems Survey Questions
- Classroom settings are defined as instructional
settings in which teacher(s) supervise teach
groups of students. - 1. Expected student behavior routines in
classrooms are stated positively defined
clearly. - 2. Problem behaviors are defined clearly.
- 3. Expected student behavior routines in
classrooms are taught directly. - 4. Expected student behaviors are acknowledged
regularly (positively reinforced) (gt4 positives
to 1 negative). - 5. Problem behaviors receive consistent
consequences.
8Classroom Systems Survey Questions, Continued
- 6. Procedures for expected problem behaviors
are consistent with school-wide procedures. - 7. Classroom-based options exist to allow
classroom instruction to continue when problem
behavior occurs. - 8. Instruction curriculum materials are matched
to student ability (math, reading, language). - 9. Students experience high rates of academic
success (gt 75 correct). - 10.Teachers have regular opportunities for access
to assistance recommendations (observation,
instruction, coaching). - 11. Transitions between instructional
non-instructional activities are efficient
orderly.
9(No Transcript)
10Spring 2009 Self Assessment Survey
11Areas of Concern
- 5. Problem behaviors receive consistent
consequences. - 7. Classroom-based options exist to allow
classroom instruction to continue when problem
behavior occurs. - 9. Students experience high rates of academic
success (gt 75 correct). - 10.Teachers have regular opportunities for access
to assistance recommendations (observation,
instruction, coaching). - 11. Transitions between instructional
non-instructional activities are efficient
orderly.
12School PBIS Teams created actions to address
these areas
- 5. Problem behaviors receive consistent
consequences. - 7. Classroom-based options exist to allow
classroom instruction to continue when problem
behavior occurs. - 9. Students experience high rates of academic
success (gt 75 correct). - 11. Transitions between instructional
non-instructional activities are efficient
orderly.
13But, where are the resources for this?
- 10.Teachers have regular opportunities for access
to assistance recommendations (observation,
instruction, coaching). - And Why is classroom management important?
14Outcomes of Poor Classroom Management
- More disruption of learning
- More Office Discipline Referrals
- More time spent dealing with inappropriate
behavior - Lower test scores
- Less time for instruction
15Academic Learning Time? Typical School
How can Good Classroom Management help with
- 1170 Hours in a typical school year (6.5
hours x 180 days) - - 65 Absenteeism (1 day/month x 10 months)
- 1105 Attendance Time (Time in School)
- - 270 Non-instructional time (1.5 hrs./day
for recess, lunch, etc.) - 835 Allocated Time (Time scheduled for
teaching) - - 209 (25 of allocated time for
administration, transition, discipline-15
minutes/hour) - 626 Instructional time (time actually
teaching) - - 157 Time off task (Engaged 75 of time)
- 469 Engaged Time (On task)
- - 94 Unsuccessful Engaged Time (Success
Rate 80) - 375 Academic Learning Time
Efficiency Rating 32
Education Resources Inc., 2005
16Academic Learning Time Effective School
- 1170 School Year (6.5 hours x 180 days)
- - 65 Absenteeism (1 day/month x 10 months)
- 1105 Attendance Time (Time in School)
- - 270 Non-instructional time (1.5 hrs./day
for recess, lunch, etc) - 835 Allocated Time (Time scheduled for
teaching) - - 125 (15 of allocated time for
administration, transition, discipline-9
minutes/hour) - 710 Instructional time (actually hours
teaching 710 vs. 626) - - 71 Time off task (Engaged 90 of time)
- 639 Engaged Time (639 vs. 469 On task)
- - 64 Unsuccessful Engaged Time (Success
Rate 90) - 575 Academic Learning Time
Efficiency Rating 49
Education Resources Inc., 2005
17The Difference Typical vs. Effective Schools
- Unallocated Non-Instructional Time
- 75 vs. 85 84 more hours
- Difference in 15 minutes vs. 9 minutes/hour
- Employing PBS strategies in your school Teaching
expectations, teaching transitions and routines,
managing appropriate and inappropriate behavior
efficiently - Engagement Rate
- 75 vs. 90 86 more hours
- Management of groups, positive acknowledgement
systems, group contingencies - Success Rate (Rate and Level!)
- 80 vs. 90 30 more hours
- Appropriate placement, leveled instruction,
effective teaching - So what?
- 200 hours more academic learning time (575 vs.
375) - Equivalent of over 43 more days in school!!
Education Resources Inc., 2005
18Effective Behavior Management Practices
- Define and teach 3-5 behavioral expectations
(rules) - Establish Routines (Build a Predictable
Environment) - Engage in Active Supervision (Move, Scan,
Interact) - Design a Functional Physical Layout for the
Classroom - Maximize Academic Engaged Time
- Promote Academic Success by Matching Curriculum
to Student Skills - Establish an Effective Hierarchy of Consequences
for Problem Behavior - Vary Modes of Instruction
- Have a System for Teachers to Request Assistance
- Establish a positive environment (5 praises for
every correction) - from Sugai, Colvin, Horner Lewis-Palmer
19District Provided Support
- Annemeike Golly presented 2 hour training on
Classroom Management for all elementary teachers. - Three Half-day trainings provided for classified
and certified staff - Training provided for music, PE, and
library/media teachers
20But More Support is Needed!
21Achieving Training Outcomes Joyce Showers
(2002)
OUTCOMES OUTCOMES OUTCOMES
Knowledge (thorough) Skill Demonstration Use in the classroom/ school
Theory Discussion
Demonstration/ modeling
Practice Feedback in Training
Coaching (ongoing follow-up support)
0
0
5
95
21
22Coaching Defined
- Coaching is the active and iterative delivery of
-
- (a) prompts that increase successful behavior,
and -
- (b) corrections that decrease unsuccessful
behavior.
23Goals of Coaching
- Fluency with trained skills
- Adaptation of trained concepts/skills to local
contexts and challenges - And new challenges that arise
- Rapid redirection from miss-applications
- Increased fidelity of overall implementation
24The Plan Part 1
- Identify Master Teachers
- Principals/Counselor nomination
- Invitation to Master Teachers to participate
- Schedule the filming
- Film Master Teachers
- Create Video training DVDs
- Create Feedback tool
25You have been nominated by your administrator!
- Were looking for
- Strategies for continuing classroom instruction,
even when problem behavior occurs. - Positive environment is maintained (5 positive
comments to every correction, first comment
positive, etc.). - Classroom expectations and routines are taught
and re-taught. - Academic engagement is maximized (student have
opportunities to respond -0.5/min). - Self-management routines are established
(students know what to do when they enter in the
morning or what to do when they finish work). - Varied modes of instruction are used.
26The Plan Part 2
- Identify schools with the most need (pilot
schools) - Determine with principal best approach to
sharing training - Options total staff training, team level or
individual teacher - Targeted group Completes Pre-Assessment using
Horner et. al. Classroom Management Self
Assessment Tool
27Self-Assessment Tool
28The Plan Part 3
- Targeted group views the video and uses the
feedback tool to identify the classroom
management strategies they observed the Master
Teacher using. - Individual teachers target one area to focus on
in their classroom for the coming week. - We recommend that targeted teachers video
themselves and use the feedback tool to identify
their strengths and areas for development. Upon
request, a coach will review the teachers video
and feedback tool with the teacher and provide
additional support. - A month after viewing the initial training
video, targeted teachers will complete the post
assessment using the Horner Self-Assessment Tool.
29Feedback Tool
30Our Next Step
- Piloting of staff development using video
vingnettes of master teachers will begin in April
at Byrom Elementary - Chosen because self-assessment survey results
were low and principal was very supportive and
interested in offering this support to his staff. - Pilot Approach Chosen by Principal Offer
training to all staff, but personally ask the
most respected staff as well as teachers on
probation to participate
31Sample Training Video
32Questions?
- Contact us
- Judy Arthur jarthur_at_ttsd.k12.or.us
- Sally Helton shelton_at_ttsd.k12.or.us
-