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They ’ re "Ready, Respectful, and Ready to Learn"! What ’ s next? Moving Beyond Universal Interventions

They ’ re "Ready, Respectful, and Ready to Learn"! What ’ s next? Moving Beyond Universal Interventions. PBIS Southern Maryland Regional Meeting Elsa Velez, Ph.D. May 5 th , 2006. Agenda. UPDATES PBIS State Leadership Team

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They ’ re "Ready, Respectful, and Ready to Learn"! What ’ s next? Moving Beyond Universal Interventions

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  1. They’re "Ready, Respectful, and Ready to Learn"! What’s next? Moving Beyond Universal Interventions PBIS Southern Maryland Regional Meeting Elsa Velez, Ph.D. May 5th, 2006

  2. Agenda • UPDATES PBIS State Leadership Team • They’re "Ready, Respectful, and Ready to Learn"! What’s next? Moving Beyond Universal Interventions • Some Ideas for Targeted Groups-Parks and Hanson • Lunch • Behavior Education Program (BEP)/Check-In Check-Out • Some Fundraiser ideas -Stoddert • How to Keep Momentum Going – TC Martin

  3. They’re "Ready, Respectful, and Ready to Learn"! What’s next? Moving Beyond Universal Interventions Overview • Some things to consider first • Establishing a School wide Secondary System: Framework • Some Successful Programs

  4. Things to Consider First… • Establishment of a Universal System (School-Wide) Does Not Guarantee Individual Teachers are Implementing with High Integrity • Students Who Appear “At-Risk” May Benefit More When Teacher Improves Skills in Behavior Management Than Participate in Targeted Interventions

  5. Is It Really Resistance For Intervention? Before Implementing a Secondary Intervention, You Must Ask: Is the Student Receiving an Adequate “DOSE” of the Universal Intervention?

  6. Components often overlooked: • Positive Parent Contact • Random Reinforcement Strategies • Positive Public Posting • Continuous Behavioral Feedback for Students • Data on Positive Reinforcement • Other Enhancements…

  7. Tracking the Positive • Analysis of number of positive behavior tickets to discipline tickets to insure maintenance of at least 4:1 ratio • Analysis of number of positive behavior tickets by group (e.g., at-risk & high risk groups) • Analysis of number of positive behavior tickets by teacher

  8. Keep a Positive Ratio

  9. Tracking the Positive

  10. Discussion • Would you consider tracking positives? • How would you go about it?

  11. Establishing a School wide Secondary System: Framework • Framework/Process • Interventions

  12. Framework Process • Referral • Simultaneous Pre-Assessment *Classroom/Ecology *Student • Targeted Level Intervention • One-Month Review

  13. Step 1: Referral • Students and or Teachers can Select Themselves to Participate in this Process • Develop a criteria: # of referrals by X time • List will be compiled first week of each month

  14. Step 2: Pre-Assessment • Classroom/Ecology **Is student receiving the Primary Intervention? • Student Level **What is the hypothesized function of problem behavior?

  15. Step 3: Intervention (Decision) • Review Data from Classroom Assessment and ABC form • Determine if Targeted Level Intervention needed at : Classroom Level and/or Student Level • Choose a specific intervention

  16. Step 4: One-Month Review • Review data related to intervention and ODRs for identified student and/or teacher • Make decision: 1. Discontinue Targeted Intervention 2. Continue, Modify, or Change Targeted Intervention 3. Implement Tertiary Intervention

  17. Establishing a School wide Secondary System: Interventions • Framework • Interventions

  18. What is a Targeted Intervention? • An intervention (or set of interventions) known by ALL staff and available for students during the school day. • Interventions provide ADDITIONAL student support in academic, organizational, and/or social support areas.

  19. Prerequisites • Effective & Proactive SW System in Place • Team-Based Problem Solving • Administrator Participation • Local Behavioral Capacity • Functional assessment-based behavior support planning • Social Skills programming • Behavioral interventions

  20. No Heroes….Thanks Anyways • Do not try to provide support in isolation • We do not want heroes -we want self-managers, work your way out of the manager role • It takes a team • If you already know it, challenge yourself to explain or teach it to someone else

  21. Requirements • Multiple opportunities for high rates of academic success • Daily behavioral monitoring -self and/or adult • Regular, frequent opportunities for positive reinforcement -tangible to social -external to internal -predictable to unpredictable -frequent to infrequent • Home-School connection

  22. Other Strategies • Behavioral Contracts • Adult mentor/monitor • Targeted social skills instruction -problem solving -conflict management • Self-management programming • Academic restructuring

  23. Critical Features • Intervention is continuously available • Rapid access to intervention (less than a week) • Very low effort by teachers • Positive system of support • Students agree to participate • Implemented by ALL staff/faculty in a school • Flexible intervention based on data

  24. Adequate resources allocated (admin, team) • Continuous monitoring for decision-making • Administrative support -Time & money allocated • No major changes in school climate -e.g., administrative or faculty turnover • Plan implementation a top priority

  25. Why Do Targeted Interventions Work? • Improve Structure • Student is “Set-Up” for Success • Increase in Contingent Feedback • Increased Recognition for Appropriate Behavior • Applied Across Settings • Links Behavior and Academic Support • Evolves into Self-Management

  26. Who is Appropriate for Intervention? APPROPRIATE • Low-level problem behavior (not severe) • 3-7 referrals • Behavior must occur across multiple locations • Examples -talking out -minor disruption -work completion • INAPPROPRIATE • Serious or violent behaviors/infractions • Extreme chronic behavior (8-10+ referrals) • Require more individualized support • -FBA (School Psychologist) • -Wrap Around Services

  27. Which Schools Would Benefit from a Targeted Intervention? • How many students does your school have in the range of 3-7 referrals? • If >10 students- may be appropriate • If <10 students- implement individualized interventions • The plan should be able to reasonably maintain 15-30 students/year

  28. Obstacles to Implementation • Administrator not on the team that develops the plan and looks at data for decision making • Plan used as punishment rather than prevention program • Plan coordinator lacks skills to implement the program (e.g., behavior intervention, computer) • Schools expecting plan to solve all behavior problems • Fitting plan data evaluation into existing teams

  29. Defining Targeted Interventions at your school • Not all students require an intensive, individualized intervention • Basic rule: Do the least amount to produce the biggest effect! • We can match students with pre-existing programs that can address the function of the problem behavior is serving for a student

  30. Check-In Mentoring Cooperative Learning Social Skills Training Peer Tutoring Parent Training Procedures for Discouraging Infractions Procedures for Encouraging Expectations Clear Expectations Choices High Rate of Praise

  31. Some Successful Programs • The Behavior Education Program -also called Check In/Check Out -Crone, Horner, Hawken (2004) • Adult Mentoring Relationship • Individualized Case Management -Check and Connect • Social Skills Training -Second Step -The Coping Power Program -I Can Problem-Solve

  32. Behavior Education Program • BEP is part of a larger behavior support effort in school (i.e., PBIS) • BEP is a school-based program for providing daily support and monitoring for students who are at risk for developing serious or chronic problem behaviors. • Based on a daily check-in/check-out system that provides students with immediate feedback on behavior& increased positive adult attention. • Crone, Horner & Hawken (2004). Preventing Problem Behavior in Schools: The Behavior Education Program. Guilford Press

  33. School-Based Mentoring “…Is one of the most promising types of youth mentoring operating today. School-based programs can have tremendous effects on academic performance and delinquency prevention, if implemented properly.” http://www.nwrel.org/mentoring/topic_school.html

  34. Check and Connect • http://ici.umn.edu/checkandconnect/ • Check & Connect is a model of sustained intervention for promoting students' engagement at school and with learning. Demonstrated outcomes include: -decrease in truancy, -decrease in dropout rates, -increase in accrual of credits, -increase in school completion, and -impact on literacy.

  35. Peer Tutoring http://www.interventioncentral.org/htmdocs/interventions/rdngfluency/prtutor.shtml

  36. Coping Power Program • School-based intervention delivered to moderate-to high-risk children in the late elementary school to early middle school years. • Addresses high-risk children’s deficits in social competence, self-regulation, school bonding and positive parental involvement.   • Consists of 34 group sessions designed to be delivered over a 16- to 18-month period of time. • Designed to serve children at the developmental period of transition from elementary school to middle school. Larson & Lochman (2004)

  37. Cooperative Learning Why use Cooperative Learning? • Research has shown that cooperative learning techniques: • promote student learning and academic achievement • increase student retention • enhance student satisfaction with their learning experience • help students develop skills in oral communication • develop students' social skills • promote student self-esteem • help to promote positive race relations http://edtech.kennesaw.edu/intech/cooperativelearning.htm

  38. Resources • Intervention Central offers free tools and resources to help school staff and parents to promote positive classroom behaviors and foster effective learning for all children and youth. www.intervention.central.org

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