1 / 34

PBIS

PBIS. Positive Behavior Interventions & Supports. We know…. To improve the academic success of our children, we must also improve their social success. Academic and social failures go hand in hand. Tertiary Prevention: Specialized Individualized

anne
Download Presentation

PBIS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PBIS Positive Behavior Interventions & Supports

  2. We know… • To improve the academic success of our children, we must also improve their social success. • Academic and social failures go hand in hand.

  3. Tertiary Prevention: Specialized Individualized Systems for Students with High-Risk Behavior SCHOOL-WIDE 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

  4. Emphasis on Preventionat Each Level • Universal Level *Goal: To reduce new cases of problem behavior and/or academic failure • Secondary Level *Goal: To reduce current cases of problem behavior and/or academic failure • Tertiary/Wraparound Level *Goal: To reduce complications, intensity, severity of students with chronic problem behavior and/or academic failure

  5. Logic for School-wide PBIS • Schools face a set of difficult challenges today -Multiple expectations (Academic accomplishment, Social competence, Safety) -Students arrive at school with widely differing understandings of what is socially acceptable. -Traditional “get tough” and “zero tolerance” approaches are insufficient. -Faculty come with divergent visions of effective discipline. • Individual student interventions -Effective, but can’t meet need • School-wide discipline systems -Establish a social culture within which both social and academic success is more likely

  6. Traditional Discipline vs. PBIS • Traditional -Focuses on the student’s problem behavior -Relies on punishment to stop unwanted behavior • PBIS -Replaces unwanted behaviors with new behaviors or skills -Alters environments -Teaches appropriate skills -Reinforces appropriate behaviors

  7. Tier 1/Universal Practices of PBIS • Define -3 to 5 school-wide expectations • Teach/Pre-correct -cool tools/behavior lesson plans direct instruction -in-the-moment reminders • Model/Practice -adults model what they teach -students practice what we teach • Acknowledge -daily recognition – ex. Gotchas -weekly/quarterly grade-level/whole school celebrations • Re-teach -re-teach the expectations using different strategies -have the student practice the skill

  8. School-Wide Behavioral Matrix Purposes: *Defines the expected behaviors for specific non-classroom settings: -hallways, gym, cafeteria, bus, bathrooms, assemblies, playground *Creates the “curriculum” that will guide the teaching of expected behaviors *Enhances communication and creates common language among staff and between students and staff

  9. TITANPRIDE Productive Respectful Individuals Dedicated to Education

  10. Establish Procedures for Teaching Expected Behavior • Since behavioral skills are learned, it is necessary to teach expected behaviors to fluency as we would academic skills. • The purpose of Cool Tools/Behavior Lesson Plans is to teach behaviors like we teach academics.

  11. “Why Should I Acknowledge Students for Something They Should Be Doing Anyway?”

  12. Guidelines for Use of Acknowledgements • School-wide reinforcements are for every student in the building, regardless of where they fall in the PBIS triangle • Move from -highly frequent to less frequent -predictable to unpredictable -tangible to social -other-delivered to self-delivered • Individualize for students needing greater support systems

  13. Why do we use data? • Data gives a picture of what’s happening behaviorally in the school • Sets baseline to measure improvement • Identifies need • Guides intervention planning • Measures effectiveness of interventions

  14. PBIS Team CONSISTENTLY Review the Following Data/Graphs(Current to within 48 hours): The “Big Five” Reports Other Data Ethnicity Disability Attendance Detentions/Suspensions Academic -grades -missing work Etc. • Average per day per month • By type of behavior • By location • By time of day • By student

  15. Other Levels of Support… • Secondary Systems • Problem Solving • Tertiary Systems

  16. 3-Tiered System of Support Necessary Conversations (Teams) UniversalTeam Secondary Systems Team Problem Solving Team Tertiary Systems Team Uses Process data; determines overall intervention effectiveness Uses Process data; determines overall intervention effectiveness Plans SW & Class-wide supports Standing team; uses FBA/BIP process for one youth at a time CICO Universal Support Brief FBA/BIP SAIG Complex FBA/BIP WRAP Group w. individual feature Brief FBA/BIP Sept. 1, 2009

  17. Benefits to Implementing PBIS with Integrity • Safe, calm, and predictable environment • Consistency among ALL adults and in ALL settings • Gain of instructional minutes • Fewer ODRs, suspensions and expulsions • Engaged families have a positive effect on the school environment

  18. What you can see in a PBIS School • Small number of positively stated & behaviorally appropriate school wide expectations. • Expectations are taught and encouraged. • Positive adult-to-student interactions exceed the negative. • Data & team-based action planning & implementation is happening. • Administrators are active participants in all aspects of implementation process. • More than 80% of students can tell you what is expected of them & give behavioral example because they have been taught, actively supervised, practiced and acknowledged.

  19. What evidence of PBIS do you see in your building???

  20. Do you see a small number of positively stated & behaviorally appropriate school-wide expectations???

  21. Do you see that expectations are taught and encouraged???

  22. Do you see that positive adult-to-student interactions exceed the negative???

  23. Do you see that data & team-based action planning and implementation is happening???

  24. Do you see your administrator as an active participant???

  25. Do you see that more than 80% of students can tell you what is expected of them & can give a behavioral example because they have been taught, actively supervised, practiced, and acknowledged???

  26. How can I support creating this consistent and positive environment for my student? • Be aware of and use the common language used at school. • Model the expectations so the students can see examples. • Help the students practice the expectations by using positive language. -helping them with what TO do, not what NOT TO do • Acknowledge students for success!

  27. Tips for Teaching Behavior • Pre-correct • Have a plan for behavioral acting-out • Practice should be conducted in actual setting whenever possible • Use example and non-example • Use high frequency acknowledgments

  28. How to Give an Acknowledgement? Example: Step 1: Acknowledge specific behavior Step 2: Tie back to school-wide expectations Example: Nice job sitting in your seat when the bell rang. Way to be there, be ready. Non-example: Giving ticket without saying anything Giving ticket for non-school wide expectations Only giving for “above and beyond” behavior

More Related