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Classroom Applications of PBIS

Classroom Applications of PBIS. Major portions of the following material were developed by: George Sugai and Rob Horner OSEP Funded Technical Assistance Center www.pbis.org In conjunction with The Iowa Behavioral Alliance (An Initiative of the Iowa Dept. of Education) www.rc4alliance.org.

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Classroom Applications of PBIS

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  1. Classroom Applications of PBIS Major portions of the following material were developed by: George Sugai and Rob Horner OSEP Funded Technical Assistance Center www.pbis.org In conjunction with The Iowa Behavioral Alliance (An Initiative of the Iowa Dept. of Education) www.rc4alliance.org

  2. School-Wide Systems Non Classroom Setting Systems Classroom Systems Individual Student Support Systems

  3. Why formalize classroom management? Arrange environment to maximize opportunities for • Academic achievement • Social success • Effective & efficient teaching

  4. Classroom Setting Systems • Classroom-wide positive expectations taught & encouraged • Classroom routines & cues taught & encouraged • Ratio of 5 positive to 1 negative adult-student interaction • Active supervision • Redirections for minor, infrequent behavior errors • Frequent precorrections for chronic errors • Effective academic instruction & curriculum

  5. How is My Classroom Management? Brandi Simonsen, Sarah Fairbanks, Amy Briesch, & George Sugai University of Connecticut Center on Behavioral Education and Research 7r Number a piece of paper from 1 to 10.

  6. 1. I have arranged my classroom to minimize crowding and distraction. • Room arrangement consistent with instructional goals • High traffic areas free of congestion • All students are easily seen by teacher • Frequently used supplies available • All students can see instruction • Staff & student areas are designated

  7. Design physical space • Classroom Functions: • Independent Work • Group work • Choice activities • Time out or penalty • Storage materials & supplies

  8. Seating Arrangements • Ensure all students can see whole group instruction • Minimize distractions • Use cluster groups for instruction • Change seating charts on a periodic basis • Vary the seating arrangement on a periodic basis (rows, semicircular, clusters) • Three common classroom arrangements: • Whole group • Small group activities • Small group instruction combined with independent work

  9. Zelda Zany Effective Classroom Arrangement Activity Select three of the arrangements in your handout packet and respond to the questions below the diagram. http://www.aft.org/tools4teachers/index.htm Physical Space

  10. 1. I have arranged my classroom to minimize crowding and distraction. Number 1, YES or NO?

  11. 2. I have maximized structure and predictability in my classroom. • Teacher routines: volunteers, communications, movement, planning, grading, etc. • Student routines: personal needs, transitions, working in groups, independent work, instruction, getting, materials, homework, etc.

  12. 2. I have maximized structure and predictability in my classroom (e.g., explicit classroom routines, specific directions, etc.). Number 2, YES or NO?

  13. 3. I have posted, taught, reviewed, and reinforced 3-5 positively stated expectations. • Establish behavioral expectations/rules. • Teach rules in context of routines. • Prompt or remind students of rule prior to entering natural context. • Monitor students behavior in natural context & provide specific feedback. • Evaluate effect of instruction - review data, make decisions, & follow up.

  14. Rules within Routines Matrix

  15. Sample Classroom Expectations

  16. Teach Rules in the Context of Routines • Teach expectations directly. • Define rule in operational terms—tell students what the rule looks like within routine. • Provide students with examples and non-examples of rule-following within routine. • Actively involve students in lesson—game, role-play, etc. to check for their understanding. • Provide opportunities to practice rule following behavior in the natural setting.

  17. Teach Expectations Teach social skills as you would academic skills: • Describe • Model • Practice/role play • Give feedback • Transfer/generalize

  18. Maintenance Plan Goal:Students perform the skill without having to think about it • Gradual process Once initial teaching has been conducted use these steps for maintenance: Provide: Reminders Supervision Feedback

  19. Teach Students to Self-Manage • Once students know the routines, allow routine initiation to be prompted by normal events (the bell… completion of an assignment) rather than teacher prompts. • Teach self-management • The target behavior • The self-management behavior • Prompts • Consequences

  20. Prompt or Remind Students of the Rule • Provide students with visual prompts (e.g., posters, illustrations, etc). • Use pre-corrections, which include “verbal reminders, behavioral rehearsals, or demonstrations of rule-following or socially appropriate behaviors that are presented in or before settings were problem behavior is likely”(Colvin, Sugai, Good, Lee, 1997).

  21. 3. I have posted, taught, reviewed, and reinforced 3-5 positively stated expectations (or rules). Number 3, YES or NO?

  22. 4. I provided more frequent acknowledgement for appropriate behaviors than inappropriate behaviors • Maintain at least 5 to 1 • Interact positively once every 5 minutes • Follow correction for rule violation with positive reinforcer for rule following

  23. 4. I provided more frequent acknowledgement for appropriate behaviors than inappropriate behaviors. Number 4, YES or NO?

  24. 5. I provided each student with multiple opportunities to respond and participate during instruction. • Vary individual v. group responding • Vary response type • Oral, written, gestural • Increase participatory instruction • Questioning, materials

  25. 5. I provided each student with multiple opportunities to respond and participate during instruction. Number 5, YES or NO?

  26. 6. My instruction actively engaged students in observable ways (e.g., writing, verbalizing). • Vary format • Written, choral, gestures • Specify observable engagements • Link engagement with outcome objectives

  27. Actively engage students in observable ways.What does the research say? • Increasing the pace with which teachers presented students with opportunities to respond was associated with: • an increase in on-task behavior • an increase in academic engagement • a decrease in disruptive behavior • an increase in the number of correct responses (Sutherland, Alder, & Gunter, 2003; West & Sloane, 1986)

  28. Actively engage students in observable ways.What does the research say? • The use of response cards (i.e., all students simultaneously holding up written responses) resulted in an increase in student responses, academic achievement, and on-task behavior (Christle & Schuster, 2003; Lambert, Cartledge, Heward, & Lo, 2006). • Response cards • Choral responding • Traditional hand raising (Godfrey, Grisham-Brown, & Schuster, 2003)

  29. Actively engage students in observable ways.What does the research say? • Use of computer assisted instruction (CAI): • in math resulted in an increase in both active engagement time and on-task behavior for students with ADHD (Ota & DuPaul, 2002) • in reading resulted in an increase in both oral reading fluency and on-task behavior for students with ADHD (Clarfield & Stoner, 2005) • The use of guided notes (teacher-provided outlines containing main ideas as well as fill-in-the-blanks) during lectures and readings resulted in an increase in academic achievement as measured by quiz scores (Lazarus, 1993; Sweeney et al. 1999)

  30. 6. My instruction actively engaged students in observable ways (e.g., writing, verbalizing). Number 6, YES or NO?

  31. 7. I actively supervised my classroom during instruction. • Move • Scan • Interact • Remind/precorrect • Positively acknowledge

  32. Active SupervisionWhat does the research say? • Use of active supervision (moving, looking, interacting with students, providing positive reinforcement) resulted in: • a classroom-wide decrease in minor behavioral incidents (De Pry & Sugai, 2002) • higher levels of active participation (moderate to vigorous physical activity) in a physical education class (Schuldheisz & van der Mars, 2001)

  33. Active SupervisionWhat does the research say? • Degree of active supervision—and not the supervisor/student ratio—accounted for the most variance in problem behavior in non-classroom transition settings. • A significant inverse relationship was identified between the number of supervisor-student interactions (one component of active supervision) and the degree of problem behavior (Colvin, Sugai, Good, & Lee, 1997)

  34. 7. I actively supervised my classroom (e.g., moving, scanning) during instruction. Number 7, YES or NO?

  35. 8. I ignored or provided quick, direct, explicit reprimands/redirections in response to inappropriate behavior. • Respond efficiently • Attend to students who are displaying appropriate behavior • Follow school procedures for major problem behaviors objectively & anticipate next occurrence

  36. Quick Error Corrections • Your error corrections should be… • contingent: occur immediately after the undesired behavior • specific: tell learner exactly what they are doing incorrectly and what they should do differently in the future • brief: after redirecting back to appropriate behavior, move on

  37. Establish a continuum of strategies to respond to inappropriate behaviorWhat does the research say? • Error correction should be direct, immediate, and end with the student emitting the correct response (Barbetta, Heward, Bradley, & Miller, 1994) • Systematic performance feedback delivered to an entire classroom, increased the appropriate behavior of all students, as compared to a control classroom (Winett, & Vachon, 1974) • Corrective feedback during oral reading improved word recognition and reading comprehension (Baker, 1992; Singh, 1990; Singh & Singh, 1986)

  38. Establish a continuum of strategies to respond to inappropriate behaviorWhat does the research say? • Publicly posting feedback (e.g., rates of student target problem behaviors), in addition to other strategies, reduced the occurrence of such behaviors (Brantley & Webster, 1993) and classroom transition times (Yarbrough, Skinner, Lee, & Lemmons, 2004)

  39. 8. I ignored or provided quick, direct, explicit reprimands/redirections in response to inappropriate behavior. Number 8, YES or NO?

  40. 9.I have multiple strategies/systems in place to acknowledge appropriate behavior. • Social, tangible, activity, etc. • Frequent v. infrequent • Predictably v. unpredictably • Immediate v. delayed

  41. Establish a continuum of strategies to acknowledge appropriate behavior. • Specific and Contingent Praise • Group Contingencies • Behavior Contracts • Token Economies

  42. Specific and Contingent Praise • Praise should be… • contingent: occur immediately following desired behavior • specific: tell learner exactly what they are doing correctly and continue to do in the future • “Good job” (not very specific) • “I like how you are showing me active listening by having quiet hands and feet and eyes on me” (specific)

  43. Group Contingencies • Three types: • “One for all” (Dependent Group Contingency) • “All for one” (Interdependent Group-Oriented Contingency) • “To each his/her own” (Independent Group Contingency)

  44. Further Remarks on Group Contingencies (Lewis-Palmer & Sugai, 1999) • Group contingencies can be an efficient way to reinforce desired behaviors. • Without careful monitoring, potentially harmful situations can arise: • Peer pressure can turn into ridicule • Negative stigma or social status can result • May or may not be fair to all clients • So, monitor closely and apply the contingencies consistently and systematically.

  45. Consequence: Behavioral Contracts • A written document that specifies the contingency for an individual student. • Contains the following elements: • Operational definition of BEHAVIOR • Clear descriptions of REINFORCERS • OUTCOMES if student fails to meet expectations. • Special BONUSES that may be used to increase motivation or participation. (Wolery, Bailey, & Sugai, 1988)

  46. Ten Basic Rules for Behavioral Contracting(Homme, Csanyi, Gonzales, & Rechs, 1970) • Payoff (reward) should be immediate. • Initially call for and reward successful approximations. • Reward frequently with small amounts. • Call for and reward accomplishments. • Reward the performance after it occurs (i.e., do not bribe the learner). (As stated in Alberto & Troutman, 1999, pp. 249-250)

  47. Ten Basic Rules for Behavioral Contracting(Homme, Csanyi, Gonzales, & Rechs, 1970) • The contract must be fair. • The terms must be clear. • The contract must be honest. • The contract must be positive. • Contracting must be used systematically (and consistently). (As stated in Alberto & Troutman, 1999, pp. 249-250)

  48. Establishing a Token Economy • Determine and teach the target skills • Select tokens • Identify what will be back-up reinforcers • Identify the number of tokens required to receive back-up reinforcers • Define and teach the exchange and token delivery system • Define decision rules to change/fade the plan • Determine how the plan will be monitored Guidelines from Sulzer-Azarodd & Mayer, 1991

  49. 9. I have multiple strategies/systems in place to acknowledge appropriate behavior (e.g., class point systems, praise, etc.). Number 9, YES or NO?

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