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School Wide Positive Behaviour Support. “A broad range of systemic and individualised strategies for achieving important social and learning outcomes while preventing problem behaviour with all students” ( S ugai & Horner). Today. Introducing the SWPBS team What is SWPBS?
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School Wide Positive Behaviour Support “A broad range of systemic and individualised strategies for achieving important social and learning outcomes while preventing problem behaviour with all students” (Sugai & Horner)
Today • Introducing the SWPBS team • What is SWPBS? • Why is it relevant to ESC? • Task • Where to from here?
SWPBS Team Staff Students Scott Watson BrentonNoye Kairen Patterson Brenna Kleinig Marion Wetherbee Serena Down Shane Read Gayle Furphy Angela Tough
Why are we doing this? • Jo Lange- encouraging the positive behaviours we want to see- 6:1 ratio • “Whale Done” – how to train killer whales • Hume Region initiative- regional data • Our data- identifying our needs • It’s a program that benefits all students and staff
SWPBS is • a whole school strategy to improve the behaviour of all students, inside and outside the class room • an inclusive program – students, parents, teaching and non teaching staff make it work • a 3-5 yr commitment • a researched, proven program which has made a dramatic difference to schools
SWPBS is NOT • being ‘nice’ to children • a single ‘quick fix’ solution that can be ticked off after a few months • tolerating or accepting aggressive or violent behaviour • limited to those with specific behaviour problems • a system that sits outside the everyday curriculum
Common assumptions about academic errors • Students are trying to make the correct response. • Errors are accidental. • Errors are inevitable. • Learning requires exploration. • Students who are having difficulties need additional or modified teaching. • Students who achieve good work deserve some recognition
Common assumptions about behaviour mistakes • Students are trying to be disruptive, that is to make an incorrect response. • Errors are deliberate. • Students are refusing to cooperate. • Students should not explore limits; they should obey them. • Students who are having difficulties should be punished. • Students who achieve good work deserve some recognition
Students who perform well • Are of Anglo or established migrant background, • Are not living in poverty, • Have parents value education, • Come from Brisbane or another major city, • Are not living with domestic violence, • Have has stable accommodation, • Are not living with mental illness, • Are not otherwise disabled, • Are is not pregnant • Are heterosexual, • Are not living with family drug issues, • Have physical space and emotional support to complete homework
Who doesn’t do well • indigenous children, • poor children, • those based in the country, • regular truants, • students with low literacy and numeracy • those living with drug and alcohol issues • those from violent family environments • young people in institutions • pregnant young women • the children of refugees or recent migrants • mentally ill or disabled students • gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students
Structure of SWPBS A 3 tiered approach • Primary- for all • Secondary- for some • Tertiary- for a few A Few Some All
Our context- ESC Categories: school wide, classroom and non classroom settings, individual We will trial non- classroom settings: • Positive expectations & routines taught & encouraged • Active supervision by all staff • Scan, move, interact • Pre-corrections & reminders • Positive reinforcement
Strategy Teaching Expected Behaviours: • Teach the rule • Demonstrate the skill • Students practice the skill • Review and test the skill • Embed in the curriculum • Practice, practice, practice
Key to Success • Reward the positives: no danger in rewarding students! • Timing: has to be on the spot • Specific: be able to name the behaviour • Relevance: a genuine reward, not bribery
E Tokens • All staff will be given five numbered tokens, collected from the office and signed out. • While in the yard all staff can be on the look out for opportunities to reward the behaviours we would like to see more of (6:1) • Tokens can be redeemed for various rewards E E E
TASK • Think about the positive behaviours we want to encourage in our students. As a group, discuss the specific positive behaviours in the non- classroom setting we can target for reward. Remember: Be concrete! Be specific! • Each person in the group gets 3 sticky notes to write the top 3 behaviours they would like to encourage • Place these on the butchers paper at the front
SWPBS Team Tasks • We will collate your responses and set up the system of reward. Next staff meeting we will present this system to you. Trial will begin mid term. • We will produce a school newsletter about SWPBS to inform parents • We will track data in order to analyse the effectiveness of this program • Update staff and share new information as it comes to hand
So what can you do? • Hand out the tokens to reward appropriate behaviours in the yard and be explicit about why they are receiving the token • Get new tokens when you need them and keep rewarding those doing the right thing! • Read our newsletters • Be positive about positive behaviour!