Title: SWPBS Fidelity
1SWPBSFidelity Sustainability
- George Sugai
- OSEP Center on PBIS
- University of Oregon
- Center for Behavioral Education Research
- University of Connecticut
- August 5, 2008
- www.cber.org www.pbis.org
- George.sugai_at_uconn.edu
2www.pbis.org
3Problem Statement
- We give schools strategies systems for
developing positive, effective, achieving,
caring school classroom environments, but
implementation is not accurate, consistent, or
durable. Schools need more than training.
4Pre
Post
5Sustaining Scaling Change
- Know your basics
- Adopt adapt evidence-based practices
- Monitor implementation fidelity
- Give priority to what matters
- Keep data regular, easy, relevant
- Know your outcomes
- Integrate for efficiency
- Build durable capacity
- Celebrate successes improvement
6Basics SWPBS/PBIS
7Supporting Social Competence Academic
Achievement
Achieving Supporting Sustainability
OUTCOMES
Supporting Decision Making
DATA
Supporting Staff Behavior
SYSTEMS
PRACTICES
Supporting Student Behavior
8Tertiary 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
9GENERAL IMPLEMENTATION PROCESS
Team
Agreements
Data-based Action Plan
Implementation
Evaluation
10WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT SAFE EFFECTIVE SCHOOLS?
- Surgeon Generals Report on Youth Violence (2001)
- Coordinated Social Emotional Learning
(Greenberg et al., 2003) - Center for Study Prevention of Violence (2006)
- White House Conference on School Violence (2006)
- Positive, predictable school-wide climate
- High rates of academic social success
- Formal social skills instruction
- Positive active supervision reinforcement
- Positive adult role models
- Multi-component, multi-year school-family-communit
y effort
11SWPBS Subsystems
School-wide
Classroom
Family
Non-classroom
Student
12School-wide
- 1. 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
13Non-classroom
- Positive expectations routines taught
encouraged - Active supervision by all staff
- Scan, move, interact
- Precorrections reminders
- Positive reinforcement
14Classroom
- 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
15Individual Student
- 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
16Family
- Continuum of positive behavior support for all
families - Frequent, regular positive contacts,
communications, acknowledgements - Formal active participation involvement as
equal partner - Access to system of integrated school community
resources
17Some Sustainability Basics
18Local Demonstration w/ Fidelity
Need, Agreements, Adoption, Outcomes
1.
IMPLEMENTATION PHASES
2.
Sustained Capacity, Elaboration, Replication
4. Systems Adoption, Scaling,
Continuous Regeneration
3.
19Implementation Stageswww.scalingup.org
- Exploration
- Installation
- Initial Implementation
- Full Implementation
- Innovation
- Sustainability
Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, Wallace, 2005
20Sustainability Elements
Organizational Capacity Documentation of.
Accurate Implementation
Evidence-Based Practice
Consideration for Context Culture
Over Time
Local Resources Utilization
Continuous Regeneration
21SUSTAINABLE IMPLEMENTATION DURABLE RESULTS
THROUGH CONTINUOUS REGENERATION
Continuous Self-Assessment
Relevance Priority Efficacy Fidelity
Valued Outcomes
Effective Practices
Practice Implementation
Local Implementation Capacity
22Detrich, Keyworth, States (2007). J.
Evid.-based Prac. in Sch.
23Implementation Levels
State
District
School
Classroom
Student
24PBS Systems Implementation Logic
Visibility
Funding
Political Support
PBS Implementation Blueprint www.pbis.org
Leadership Team Active Integrated Coordination
Training
Evaluation
Coaching
Local School Teams/Demonstrations
25Integration 1 2 Rule
26Working Smarter
Initiative, Project, Committee Purpose Outcome Target Group Staff Involved SIP/SID/etc
Attendance Committee
Character Education
Safety Committee
School Spirit Committee
Discipline Committee
DARE Committee
EBS Work Group
27ESTABLISHING A CONTINUUM of SWPBS
- TERTIARY PREVENTION
- Function-based support
- Wraparound/PCP
- Special Education
-
-
- Audit
- Identify existing practices by tier
- Specify outcome for each effort
- Evaluate implementation accuracy outcome
effectiveness - Eliminate/integrate based on outcomes
- Establish decision rules (RtI)
5
15
- SECONDARY PREVENTION
- Check in/out
- Targeted social skills instruction
- Peer-based supports
- Social skills club
-
- PRIMARY PREVENTION
- Teach encourage positive SW expectations
- Proactive SW discipline
- Effective instruction
- Parent engagement
-
80 of Students
28Evaluation Criteria
29Its not just about behavior!
STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
Good Teaching
Behavior Management
Increasing District State Competency and
Capacity
Investing in Outcomes, Data, Practices, and
Systems
30Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success
Academic Systems
Behavioral Systems
1-5
1-5
5-10
5-10
80-90
80-90
31Responsiveness to InterventionAcademic
Social Behavior
32RtI
33RtI Good IDEiA Policy
- Approach or framework for redesigning
establishing teaching learning environments
that are effective, efficient, relevant,
durable for all students, families educators - NOT program, curriculum, strategy, intervention
- NOT limited to special education
- NOT new
34Quotable Fixsen
- Policy is
- Allocation of limited resources for unlimited
needs - Opportunity, not guarantee, for good action
- Training does not predict action
- Manualized treatments have created overly rigid
rapid applications
35RTI Continuum of Support for ALL
Few
Some
All
Dec 7, 2007