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Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports

Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports. Metro and S3 Professional Development Session TSC Room 203. Agenda. PBIS Overview Committee Structures Teaching Communications Break Acknowledgements Data Task List . Expectations.

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Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports

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  1. Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports Metro and S3 Professional Development Session TSC Room 203

  2. Agenda • PBIS Overview • Committee Structures • Teaching • Communications • Break • Acknowledgements • Data • Task List

  3. Expectations • Participants will be able to gain knowledge and the capacity to apply structures and practices to support the sustainability and fidelity of PBIS. • Participants will understand the framework of PBIS. • At the end of this session, participants will be able to apply the information given directly to the SW-implementation of PBIS.

  4. PBIS Now More Than Ever • Quality • PBIS actually works - the percent of suspensions due to Learning Environment Violations decreased from 61% to 46% when compared to the previous school year. • Equity • PBIS builds equity among all groups (racial, gender, SES, and disability) • Schools cannot just be successful for some students • Efficiency • The district recovered the following number of days from the previous school year: • 293 teacher days lost to writing referrals for suspensions • 2,472 administrator days lost to issuing suspensions • 2,827 student days lost to the process of being suspended and 37,487 days lost serving suspensions for a total of 40,317 student days.

  5. PBIS • What do you KNOW? • What do you WANT to LEARN? • How will you measure success at your building?

  6. PBIS is like……… A Warm Cup of Coffee from Starbucks Bottle of Glue A rollercoaster Going to the gym

  7. A Framework • PBIS is Framework for everything we do • Should be “Business as Usual” • It’s just a part of everything you do • Culture of the building • Supports success of all student • Must be practiced and worked on over time • Must be exposed and experienced consistently over time

  8. How Does PBIS Help Schools? • PBIS provides supports and interventions to students • PBIS helps schools shift from a reactive approach to a proactive approach • PBIS helps to redesign learning and teaching environments.

  9. Review of the Framework

  10. Components of PBIS Supporting Social Competence & Academic Achievement OUTCOMES Supporting Decision Making Supporting Staff Behavior DATA SYSTEMS PRACTICES Supporting Student Behavior

  11. PBIS at a Glance • Set the expectations (no less 3, no more than 5) and posts throughout the school in all settings.  • Define the expectations. • Teach and model the expectations (Cool Tools/ Behavior Expectations). • Practice the expectations. • Set the consequences (negative and positive) - T-chart (Office Managed/Classroom Managed) • Establish an acknowledgement system. • Use data to monitor throughout the year (Big 5 Reports) • Provide interventions and supports for students that need additional help.

  12. Does your school look like a PBIS school? • Are your Rules and Expectations posted? • Has your staff taught the school rules and expectations to students? • Does your school have their acknowledgement system in place? • Does your staff understand the T-Chart? • Is your PBIS binder up-to-date? • Who is responsible for the PBIS binder? • Is your school using data to make decisions? • Does the staff review the PBIS process and data at every staff meeting?

  13. Committees • For the work to be sustainable and have more fidelity with all staff • Committees are needed • PBIS Committees: • Teaching • Acknowledgements • Communication • Data

  14. Committee • Allows for more staff to become involved • Committees meet to do their specific work • Work can be done outside of Universal Meeting • Allows staff to use their strengths to help PBIS • Takes all the work off of one individual • Makes what we are doing sustainable

  15. Teaching Committee • Designs behavioral lessons • Organize calendar of behavior lessons • Seeks new and innovative ways to create diversified lessons • Ensures behavioral expectation signage is posted in all areas, including classrooms • Update T-chart with staff regularly • Have sample lessons in PBIS Binder

  16. Some Best Practices

  17. Behavioral Lessons • Support the behavioral expectation • Data-driven • What does data tell you? • Big Five or qualitative data • Should occur minimum once a week • Tracking/ monitoring teaching is occuring

  18. Behavioral Expectation Signage • Comes from Matrix • Specific to area • Size appropriate • Eye-catching (engaging) • Remove/ update when needed • Used on a consistent basis to teach behaviors

  19. Classroom Signage • Created by teachers/ departments • Classroom / subject specific • Difference between a gym and science lab • Include classroom transitions • Whole Group, Small Group, Lab Work • Size appropriate • Used on a consistent basis to teach behaviors

  20. Classroom Matrix Example

  21. T-Chart • Schools need a discipline plan in place • Is NOT your discipline policy, is just a tool that defines office vs. classroom managed behaviors • Should be constantly reviewed • A working document • Must be understood by all staff members and administration

  22. T-Chart

  23. Binder • Behavioral matrix (examples of signage) • Focus Calendar • Monthly Behavior Focus • Teaching Schedule • Behavioral Lessons • T-Chart • Action Plan

  24. Working Session • Design next month’s Focus Calendar • Develop some behavior lessons • Share with members of other schools • Create behavior lesson developing a classroom matrix • Develop a behavior lesson evaluation tool • Which staff members at your school might you approach about joining teaching committee?

  25. Communication Committee • Alert staff and students to upcoming and current events throughout campus • Alert parents and community to PBIS events and needs • Update school website with PBIS information • Create newsletters, flyers, and student paper • Create PBIS bulletin board, electronic message board, and PBIS videos • Utilize school TLC site • Make daily announcements regarding PBIS • Place artifacts in PBIS Binder

  26. Examples

  27. Binder • Examples of all publications • Pictures of bulletin boards, etc • Action Plan

  28. Working Session/ Break • Gather information for newsletter • Create daily announcements for next week • How might you keep staff up to date with PBIS activities? • How might you recognize/ promote PBIS in your building? • Which staff members would you approach about joining communication committee?

  29. Acknowledgement Committee • Create frequent, intermittent, and long range acknowledgements for staff and students • Organize calendar of specific incentives for frequent, intermittent, and long range • Contact community businesses and partners for fundraising support to assist PBIS • Create celebrations • Place acknowledgement matrix in PBIS Binder

  30. Acknowledgments • Examples: • Acknowledge with a ticket • Raffle tickets • Student saves ticket for PBIS store • Stamping system • Verbal acknowledgements • Posting acknowledgements • Real examples from schools

  31. Purposes of Acknowledgments • Reinforce the teaching of new behaviors • Focus on one specific behavior • Encourages the behaviors we want to increase • Strengthen positive behaviors that can compete with problem behavior • Provides a prompt for adults to recognize positive or expected behavior • Life acknowledges us as adults

  32. Binder • Acknowledgement Matrix • Summary of acknowledgement system • Samples of coupon/ ticket/ token • Pictures of celebrations and events • Action Plan

  33. Working Session • Plan frequent, intermittent, and long range acknowledgements for staff and students • Organize calendar of specific incentives • What community businesses can you contact to support acknowledgements? • What do you have in your school to utilize as acknowledgements? • Plan your next celebration • What staff members might you be able to approach about joining acknowledgement committee?

  34. Data Committee • Pull Big Five Data weekly and analyze and share at staff meetings and PBIS meetings • Conduct periodic surveys as needed to gauge systems effectiveness • Place copies of Big Five in PBIS Binder

  35. Pulling data • Saving data • Sorting data • Analyzing data • What is data telling us? • Behavior lessons? • Acknowledgements?

  36. Other sources of data • Direct Observation • Focus on behaviors before data gets there • Behaviors not having data • Informal Survey • Teacher • Students • Other staff in building • Attendance

  37. Examples • Look at 3 data pieces • What are problem behaviors? • What are problem locations? • What are problem times? • How would you use this data with each of the committees? • What would teaching do as a result? • Acknowledgement?

  38. Binder • Big 5 Data • Informal Surveys • SIG Tab (instead of SIP tab) • Action Plan

  39. Tier 1 Task List • Look through list • Check off everything your school has completed • Rank those items you have not accomplished in order of importance for your school to complete

  40. Remember PBIS is no longer an option, it is a required expectation. All staff should be held accountable for PBIS, just like they are for academics.

  41. Next Steps • Safety Survey • Administrative Overview coming soon • Use your resources (coaches, supervisor, newsletter, website, each other) • Exit Evaluation

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