Title: How did you act in school?
1How did you act in school?
Margaret Gessler Werts, Ph.D. Appalachian State
University Boone, NC National Resource Center
for Paraeducators Salt Lake City, Utah April
28, 2005
2Why do we care about management of behaviors?
- Purpose
- Maintain pleasant environment
- Reduce stress
- Be conducive to learning
3Terms
- Behavior is what you do-
- Good or bad
- Right or wrong
- Helpful or useless
- Purposeful or useless
- Misbehavior is a behavior that is considered
inappropriate.
4 Prevention
- Getting attention from the class
- Dont talk over them
- Give a signal
- Establish a signal for the classroom o
- Use an established signal
- Announce your readiness to start and wait
- Wait is 3 to 5 seconds (not minutes)
- Waiting can involve a signal
- Have your materials ready so students are NOT
waiting for you
5Reductive techniques for inappropriate behaviors
- Request vs. reprimand
- Only use a question when you will accept No as
a response! - Get up close
6Reductive techniques for inappropriate behaviors
- Use a quiet voice
- Look em in the eyes
- Give them time
7Reductive techniques for inappropriate behaviors
- Ask only twice
- Give one request at a time
- Describe the request
8Reductive techniques for inappropriate behaviors
- Be non-emotional
- Make more Start requests than Stop requests
- Verbally reinforce compliance
9- Have extra materials for student use
- (Contrary to popular opinion, this is not
heresy.) - Have materials for students who may need them
- Pencils break
- Paper becomes used in another class
- People forget
10Floor space
- Spaces to sit that provide enough personal space
- Space to fit instructional style
- Whole group instruction (consider the size of
whole group) - Small group instruction
- Individual instruction
- Independent work
11- Reduce distance and barriers between you and the
students - Furniture arrangement should allow motion around
the room - Seat students so they can see you and you can see
all of them. - Proximity controlstudy shows the proximity of
adult in classroom resulted in increased time on
task with academic behaviors
12Needs
- Privacy of instruction vs. need for observational
learning - Talking among class members vs. cooperative
learning - Acoustic properties of room (noise considerations)
13Learning centers
- Are students able to benefit for independent work
time? - Adequate space for working
- Space to access materials
- Space to spread out
14Methods for maintaining attention
- Pace of the instruction
- To increase academic learning time,
- Begin class on time
- Minimize housekeeping tasks
- Minimize transition times
- Have follow up assignments ready
- Have re-teaching plans ready
15Motivation
- Assign some part of the sessions as a
reviewbuilding in praise opportunities - Direct instruction when needed
- Give directions on steps to be taken
- Model but do not complete work for a student
16Reinforcement
- Golden Rule for Reinforcements
- Any selected reinforcers should
- Not cost a lot
- Not take a lot of time
- Should be a natural consequence
- A reinforcer must be important to the student.
- An artificial reinforcer must be faded
17IFEED-AV
- I Immediately
- F Frequently
- E Enthusiasm
- E Eye contact
- D Describe the behavior
- A Anticipation
- V Variety
18Behavior Modification Primer
- Behavior is controlled by consequences.
- Antecedent events foretell consequences.
- Reinforcement increases the likelihood of the
behavior. - Immediacy of application of the reinforcer is
important. - Extinction takes time.
19- Intermittent reinforcement strengthens the
possibility of having the behavior reoccur. - Cessation of reinforcement leads to extinction.
- Immediately following cessation of a reinforcer,
the behavior escalates.
20- Behaviors can act as their own reinforcers or
there can be unknown reinforcers acting in
concert with the assigned and given reinforcer. - Punishment of behavior will weaken the schedule
of occurrence. - Punishment is the removal of positive stimuli or
the application of aversive stimuli.
21- A conditioned reinforcer is one that becomes
associated with a previously established
reinforcer. - An aversive stimulus decreases the probability of
a behaviors recurrence. - Negative reinforcement is relief from aversive
stimuli. - Response cost is procedure for the reduction of
inappropriate behavior through the withdrawal of
reinforcers contingent on the behaviors
occurrence (a fine or penalty).
22- A contingency is the relationship between a
behavior and its consequences. - Differential reinforcement of other behavior is a
procedure in which reinforcement is delivered
when a target behavior is not emitted for a
specified period of time. - Overcorrection or exaggeration of experience of
appropriate behavior can result in decrease of
inappropriate behavior
23- A reinforcer can satiate.
- A reinforcer must be reinforcing.