Title: Behavior Management in APE
1Behavior Management in APE
Chapter 6
2- Many of the concepts you learned in PE 299 still
apply. However, there are some differences that
underlie to focus of this lecture.
3TRAITS OF AN EFFECTIVE TEACHER-GENERAL
- Plan with effective behavior management in mind
(groupings, transitions, engagement, etc) - 80 of problems relate to the teacher!
- Make the learning fun
- Using behavioral, humanistic, or biophysical
strategies - Developing a clear system of rules, routines,
rewards, and consequences - Affirm positive behavior
4CRITICAL MISTAKES
- Ignoring misbehaviors, especially little ones,
with the hope they will go away - Not wanting to be mean/have students like you
- Being inconsistent in expectations, demeanor, and
behavior (not being fair) - Create a system and stick with it unless its not
working
5Critical Mistakes - APE
- Allowing a students disability to become an
excuse - for their behavior
- May need to modify behavioral expectations but do
not let the situation become extreme. - Its hard to distinguish between learned
misbehavior and the impaired behavior DUE TO the
disability but you must try and will improve
6BM Techniques - Proactive
- Reinforcement
- Use reinforcers appropriate to the student
- Supervised free play
- Leader of the warm-up exercises
- Assist the teacher
- A poster of a sports star
- Distribute or collect equipment
- Premack Principle for one student was being able
to stare at the scoreboard for a period of time - May use a puppet to demonstrate
- proper behavior with more severely
- disabled students
7BM Techniques - Proactive
- Unified PE - Use same age peers or older students
to - Enhance the learning of the student with
disabilities - Increase the self esteem and understanding of the
peer tutor - Aka win win
- New Britain uses students who have failed PE
previously. They take regularly scheduled PE and
also assist special needs students. Often, such
students shine in this environment. - Recruit peer tutors from students who have free
periods. - Recruit community volunteers (retired
individuals, parents)
8BM Techniques - Proactive
- Bepositive teaching enthusiastically
- Reinforce legitimate effort frequently
- Great try!
- Youre getting so close!
- Catching the students being good and
acknowledging that behavior
9BM Techniques - Reactive
- Physical contact is more accepted than with
students without disabilities - Gently turn a student in the desired direction
- Give them hugs and high fives
- Kinesthetically guide them through a motion
- Planned ignoring
- Non-invasive techniques proximity, eye contact,
vocal variety, name in sentence - Time-out, daily report, contracts
10BM Techniques - Reactive
- When inappropriate behavior occurs
- Special needs students may exhibit unexpected
behavior such as you would never suspect - Examples (stories from you)
- What about a student who gets in your personal
space and says he or she likes you?
11BM Techniques - Reactive
- When misbehavior occurs, BE REFLECTIVE and ask
yourself some questions - Does the student understand the task?
- Was the demonstration sufficient?
- Does the student need more help?
- Does the student have the lead up skills?
- Is the student trying to obtain something, avoid
something, become stimulated, or communicate
something?
Look for patterns!
12Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
- Various terms used
- Oppositional defiant disorder (ODD)
- Conduct disordered (more extreme)
- Behaviorally defiant
- May or may not be in combination with other
disabilities. Must be diagnosed by a mental
health professional. Medications are available - Increasing percentage of school population
13Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
- Possible characteristics
- often loses his or her temper (aggression)
- frequently argues with adults
- often disregards adults' requests or rules
- deliberately tries to provoke others
- frequently blames others for mistakes or
misbehavior - is often easily irritated by others
- is often angry, resentful, and/or spiteful
14Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
- Strategies
- Focus on
- 1) Skill building (regulate anger, actions,
verbal output) - 2) Raising their conscience and
- 3)Improving their relationship skills.
15Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
- Various terms used
- Oppositional defiant disorder (ODD)
- Conduct disordered
- Behaviorally defiant
- May or may not be in combination with other
disabilities
16Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
- Resources
- Understanding ODD (Suffolk SD)
- http//www.spsk12.net/departments/specialed/odd.ht
m - Association for Childrens Mental Health
- http//www.esu1.org/dept/sped/psych/PDFFiles/ODD.p
df - Exceptional Teachers Factsheet
- http//www.brandonu.ca/academic/education/exceptio
nal/Oppositional20Defiant20Disorder.pdf
17Long-term or Reoccurring Problems
- If problems continue or become more difficult,
other interventions may be necessary. For
example - Complete a functional behavior assessment and a
behavior intervention program - Adding a related service, such as counseling or
an instructional assistant - Page 17 of the CT IEP manual lists behavior
intervention and support modalities - Changing the child's special education placement
to a different, possibly more restrictive
setting, such as a self-contained classroom,
special school, alternative school or residential
program.
18Functional Behavior Assessment
- If a special needs student is suspended, a
functional behavioral assessment plan must be
developed for that student and carried out in a
school or alternative setting - FBAs
- Examine the antecedents that occur before a child
misbehaves to determine what triggers the
misbehavior. - Change the consequences that come after a
behavior occurs so that the consequences are more
likely to reinforce a child for performing
appropriate behavior. - Most importantly, teach the child a replacement
behavior. A replacement behavior is an
appropriate behavior that the child can perform
that accomplishes the same goal as the
inappropriate behavior. Without teaching a child
a replacement behavior, meaningful, positive
changes in behavior will be difficult, if not
impossible, to obtain. - Example 1-directions
- Example 2-directions
- Example 3-form
19Behavior Intervention Plan
20Physical Interventions
- Physical interventions may only be used if it is
included on a students behavior management plan
or a child is a danger to him/herself, another
student, or you. - Know your district
- http//www.atl.org.uk/atl_en/help/FAQs/restraining
_a_pupil.asp - http//www.angmeringschool.co.uk/policies_controlR
estrain.php
21Disciplining a Student
- Students with disabilities may be suspended.
- Shorter than 10 days, not be part of a pattern of
suspensions - Often complete a functional behavior assessment
and rework IEP - A school district cannot suspend a student with a
disability for misconduct that is a manifestation
of the student's disability. The IEP team will
conduct a manifest determination. When a
district decides to suspend a student with a
disability for more that ten days, it must hold
an IEP meeting. - As part of IDEA, parents may request a stay put
and the student will remain in his/her current
placement until a hearing before the due process
officer - Special needs students can be placed in interim
alternative educational settings for up to 45
days. At the conclusion, they must be returned
to their school unless the school requests a
hearing for extreme behavior (violence, guns,
etc)
22- http//www.makeadifferencemovie.com/
- An important message in the video is to not give
up on students - Teachers never know what difference they may make