Title: Overview of Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA)
1Overview of Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA)
- Project ACCEPT
- Lecture Presentation
2What is Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA)?
- A process for determining why a student engages
in a problem behavior (the function of the
behavior) - Process for identifying a relationship between
conditions (what is happening in the classroom)
and the students problem behavior - Process for identifying classroom conditions that
could be changed to prevent problem behavior and
to - promote positive behavior
3Regular Educators FBA
- Regular educators may be in the best position to
observe and assess the behavior of a student with
a disability in an inclusive classroom. - FBA may be useful when a students problem
behavior does not improve under the classroom
management system or discipline plan. - FBA is typically implemented by a team that
includes the regular educator when - a student with a disability is included
- in the regular classroom.
4Conducting a Functional Behavior Assessment (FBA)
- Direct observation and recording of student
behavior in the classroom - Observations usually conducted by school
psychologist, special educator, and regular
educator - Indirect methods such as interviews and
questionnaires are often used to supplement
direct observation
5Functions of Problem Behavior
- Behavioral theory suggests that problem behavior
is maintained by - Positive reinforcement in which the behavior
results in or produces a new condition or event - Negative reinforcement in which the behavior
results in avoidance or termination of a
condition or event - Sensory regulation/modulation in which the
behavior results in a change (increase or
decrease) in the students level of sensory
stimulation
6Types of Positive Reinforcement that Maintain
Problem Behavior
- Social attention
- Reaction from peers or teacher, acceptance or
affiliation with peer group - Preferred staff
- Behavior may result in access to a different
staff person, such as a classroom assistant - Preferred activity or object
- Teacher may provide access to a preferred
activity or object if doing so results in student
ceasing problem behavior
7Examples of Positive Reinforcement in the
Classroom
- Billys peers all laugh when Billy makes barnyard
noises during math class. Billy continues to make
noises each day. - When Latrice is disruptive in class, the
assistant moves next to her for the rest of the
class period. Latrice is disruptive earlier in
the class period the next day.
8Types of Negative Reinforcement that Maintain
Problem Behavior
- Countercontrol
- Behavior allows student to gain control by not
following staff directive, rule, or contingency - Avoid or terminate a social condition
- Behavior results in student avoiding or escaping
interaction with a peer or staff - Avoid or terminate an activity or task
- Student avoids or escapes completion of an
assigned activity or task by engaging in - the behavior
9Examples of Negative Reinforcement in the
Classroom
- Students in Mr. Smiths class successfully delay
a quiz by asking numerous questions and
discussing unrelated topics. They repeat this
behavior before the next quiz. - William says he is sick and wants to visit the
nurse when he is assigned to a group experiment
with a bully in his class. He skips class the
next time a group activity is scheduled. - Clarence does not want to do his math. He
complains that it is too hard, and his teacher
sits by him and helps him with each problem. He
then complains - immediately each time he is assigned math.
10Types of Sensory Regulation that Maintains
Problem Behavior
- Increase in sensory stimulation
- Squirming, talking, doodling, leaving seat,
listen to music - Decrease or modulate sensory stimulation
- Rocking, leave noisy area, pick skin or nails
- Combination of increase and decrease in sensory
stimulation - Some behaviors (e.g., rocking) can be used to
both increase or decrease sensory regulation
11Direct Observation in FBA
- Observing to determine relationships between
classroom conditions and student behavior -
- Observations involve recording setting events,
antecedents, and consequences each time a problem
behavior occurs. - The function of a problem behavior is evidenced
from patterns in observational data.
12Setting Events
- Setting events can occur or begin outside of the
classroom but affect the probability of problem
behavior in the classroom. - Examples medication effects, physical injury or
discomfort, sleep deprivation, conflict or
stress, anxiety, allergies.
13Antecedents (Predictors)
- Antecedents or predictors occur just before or as
problem behavior occurs. - Social antecedents presence or absence of
attention from a peer or teacher, teasing,
teacher proximity - Activity or event antecedents teacher presenting
instruction, difficulty of task, correction, no
materials or demands, group activity, choice
14Consequences
- Social consequences
- Praise, correction, laughter, change in proximity
- Tangible consequences
- Stickers, points
- Activity reinforcers
- Free-time, preferred activities, reduced homework
- Change in sensory stimulation
- Increase or decrease in level of stimulation
15Basic FBA Recording Form
Setting Event (if known) Antecedent Problem Behavior Consequence Perceived function
16Assessment-Based Interventions
- Setting event strategies
- Remove or prevent setting event
- Minimize effects of setting event
-
- Examples
- Prevent conflict on bus ride to school
- Allow student with severe allergies or fatigue
issues to take breaks during - the day
17Assessment-Based Interventions
- Antecedent-based strategies
- Remove or alter antecedent (predictor) for
problem behavior - Increase antecedent (predictor) for prosocial
behavior - Examples
- Change students seat away from bothersome peer.
- Reduce difficulty of math assignment by
preteaching the strategy needed to - solve problems.
18Assessment-Based Strategies
- Teaching strategies
- Teach student a functionally-equivalent behavior
to replace the problem behavior. - Examples
- Teach student to raise hand to get help with
difficult work. - Teach student to recruit teacher attention in
appropriate ways. - Teach student social skills for interacting with
difficult peers.
19Assessment-Based Strategies
- Consequence-based strategies
- Increase the benefit (reinforcement) for the
replacement behavior - Withdraw or prevent benefit (reinforcement) for
the problem behavior - Example
- Withdraw attention (planned ignoring) for
disruptive comments and praise topic-related
comments consistently.
20Conclusion
- The purpose of this brief overview was to
familiarize you with the basic principles and
procedures for functional behavior assessment
(FBA). Inexperienced practitioners are encouraged
to read additional sources and work with other
team members when implementing FBA with their
students. Several different FBA recording forms
are available in sources cited on the next slide.
21Sources
- Chandler, L.K., Dahlquist, C.M. (2002).
Functional assessment Strategies to prevent and
remediate challenging behaviors in school
settings. Upper Saddle River, NJ Merrill
Prentice Hall. - Friend, M. Bursuck, W.D. (2006). Including
students with special needs A practical guide
for classroom teachers (4th ed.). Boston Allyn
Bacon. (Pages 442-461 address FBA). - ONeill, R.E., Horner, R.H., Albin, R.W.,
Sprague, J.R., Storey, K., - Newton, J.S. (1997). Functional assessment and
program - development for problem behavior A practical
handbook. Pacific Grove, CA Brooks/Cole.