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National PBIS Leadership Forum Chicago, IL October 26-28, 2011 Wayne Sailor, University of Kansas

SUSTAINING SCHOOLWIDE PBIS IN URGAN SETTINGS: CHALLENGES & STRATEGIES PART 2 NESTING PBIS WITHIN RTI-DRIVEN SCHOOL REFORM: THE SCHOOLWIDE APPLICATIONS MODEL (SAM). National PBIS Leadership Forum Chicago, IL October 26-28, 2011 Wayne Sailor, University of Kansas. Inclusion The Good News.

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National PBIS Leadership Forum Chicago, IL October 26-28, 2011 Wayne Sailor, University of Kansas

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  1. SUSTAINING SCHOOLWIDE PBIS IN URGAN SETTINGS: CHALLENGES & STRATEGIES PART 2NESTING PBIS WITHIN RTI-DRIVEN SCHOOL REFORM: THE SCHOOLWIDE APPLICATIONS MODEL (SAM) National PBIS Leadership Forum Chicago, IL October 26-28, 2011 Wayne Sailor, University of Kansas

  2. InclusionThe Good News • Better educational and social outcomes as verified from research • Better fit with federal policy (i.e., ADA; IDEIA) • Consistent with Supreme Court decisions challenging LRE

  3. InclusionThe Bad News • Disconnected from general curriculum • Velcro-aide (dedicated paraprofessional) blocks natural interactions • Disruptive to general education class • Driven by special education with little or no participation from general education

  4. A Better Approach(Perhaps) • Integrate all school resources for the benefit of all students • Accomplish de facto inclusion through collaborative instruction • Driven by general education with support from special education

  5. Competing Logic Models • Contemporary logic • Medical Model • Teaching/learning informed by psychology • Locus of academic/social failure of child • Pathologizing process (i.e., LD; EBD; etc.) • Diagnostic/prescriptive remedy • Requires quasi-medical industry to service referrals • Emphasizes place rather than need (congregate service delivery).

  6. Competing Logic Models (cont.) • Suggested Logic • Schoolwice RTI Model • Teaching/learning informed not only by psychology (i.e., student assessment) but by sociology (i.e., school organization and leadership) and anthropology (i.e., focus on culture of the school). • Locus of academic/social failure is ecology of the child • Addresses measured needs of child rather than assesses pathology • Addresses prevention rather than remediation • Integrates specialized resources so all students benefit • Reduces referrals for IEPs (special education).

  7. Integrating Means: • No special population classes. • General ed teachers responsible for all students at each grade level • All support services delivered in ways such that non-designated students can also benefit • Collaborative teaching (general ed and support ed) • Team-driven infrastructure with coaching support.

  8. RTI as Comprehensive School Reform • Integrating all school resources for the benefit of positive academic gains for all student (i.e., no silos).

  9. Problem-Solving Logic • Extension of standard protocol RTI • Alternative to medical model • All personnel focused on all students • All resources integrated in a universal design for learning

  10. All resources means • General education • Special education • Title I • Gifted • English Language Learners • Section 504 • Anything else

  11. Does SAM Work? • Program Evaluation Model

  12. Ravenswood City School District

  13. Significant on Tuckey’s HSD Test Significant on Tuckey’s HSD Test Significant on Tuckey’s HSD Test Repeated Measure ANOVA- Significant main effect on year of measurement F(1.96, 522.13) = 53.62, p < .01, ηp2 = .17

  14. School B • CELDT (California English Language Development Test) Score Relationship between CELDT and SAMAN scores Correlation CELDT score (M = 516.83, SD = 54.97, N = 520) SAMAN score (M = 2.03, SD = .5) Significance r(518) = .286, p < .001 Regression SAMAN score could be a significant predictor of CELDT (ß = .286, p < .01), explaining about 8.2% of the variance. 2004 2005

  15. Significant on Tuckey’s HSD Test Significant on Tuckey’s HSD Test Significant on Tuckey’s HSD Test Repeated Measure ANOVA- Significant main effect on year of measurement F(2, 534) = 60.47, p < .01, ηp2 = .19

  16. Repeated one-way ANOVA School B CELDT (California English Language Development Test) Score Comparison among 2002, 2003, and 2004 school year Significant difference among 2002, 2003, and 2004 school year CELDT scores, F(1.83, 472.77) = 237.80, p < .001. Post-hoc Test with Tuckey’s Significant increase from 2002 (M = 470.55, SD = 65.18) to 2004 (M = 520.29, SD = 47.69) school year. 2002 2003 2004 Significant

  17. For More . . . Visit www.samschools.org Contact me . . . wsailor @ku.edu

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