1 / 13

PBIS Coaching: Making it “Do-able”

PBIS Coaching: Making it “Do-able”. www.pbismaryland.org. Sharon Conley & Sara McGarvey School Psychologists PBIS Coaches since 2000 Washington and Frederick Counties. Outcomes. Gain knowledge about coaching Acquire tips for effective coaching

quintin
Download Presentation

PBIS Coaching: Making it “Do-able”

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 Coaching:Making it “Do-able” www.pbismaryland.org Sharon Conley & Sara McGarvey School Psychologists PBIS Coaches since 2000 Washington and Frederick Counties

  2. Outcomes • Gain knowledge about coaching • Acquire tips for effective coaching • Learn strategies to enhance coaching efficiency www.pbismaryland.org PBIS in MD: “A Plane Built in Flight”

  3. Roles of a Coach 1.) “Positively Nag” and “Cheerlead” 2.) Empower the Team Leader 3.) Be a resource for information and a liaison 4.) Facilitate Data-Based Decision-Making 5.) Facilitate PBIS Implementation at School www.pbismaryland.org

  4. “Positively Nag” and Cheerlead • Provide frequent, positive communication • Find positives in school data • Provide edible reinforcers, thank you’s, other kudos • Celebrate successes • Cc-ing key people, PR contact, presentations • Encourage positive behavior by administrator • Maintain coaches’ school binder • Means of documenting efforts and celebrating success • Encourage team’s documentation of programming www.pbismaryland.org

  5. Empower the Team Leader • Meet with TL outside of scheduled meetings • Work “behind the scenes” • Establish rapport, encouragement, guidance • Foster the image of the TL • Within Team meetings and School system • Encourage independence with website • Offer tools from toolkit and other resources www.pbismaryland.org

  6. Facilitating vs. Leading www.pbismaryland.org

  7. Be a resource for information and a liaison • Multiple levels • School(s), LSS coordinator, MSDE • Attend coaches’ meetings and other training opportunities • Collect data for state or LSS Coordinator • Forms • Distribute information (“timing is everything”) • Toolkit www.pbismaryland.org

  8. Information resource and Liaison • Stay Sane (i.e., organization) • Notebook System • #1: School notebook • #2: Toolkit • #3: Accessing Technical Information • Monthly Form Requirements • Post-it notes vs. PDA (the coaches’ best friends) • Readily-Available Contact Information • School’s Team “Group Contact” for email • Seek out answers/support as needed www.pbismaryland.org

  9. Facilitate Data-Based Decision-Making • Use data to measure outcomes • Refer to the “general data-based decision-making rules” (front pocket of tool kit) • SWIS access • Consult with SWIS Facilitator as needed • Obtain “Read-only” passwords and use as needed www.pbismaryland.org

  10. Facilitate PBIS Implementation at the School Level • Attend team meetings and trainings regularly • Refer to Form A (TIC) • “Light Wand” image • Guiding principles and monitoring tool • Take the “Show me…” stance • Outcomes of implementation steps • Presence of critical features • Provide periodic review of “Big Ideas” www.pbismaryland.org

  11. PBIS Outcomes Supporting Decision Making Supporting Staff Behavior DATA SYSTEMS www.pbismaryland.org PRACTICES Supporting Student Behavior

  12. Continuum of Effective Student Support Students with Chronic/Intense Problem Behavior (1-7%) Students At-Risk for Problem Behavior (5-15%) Students without Serious Problem Behaviors (80-90%) Specialized Individual Interventions (Individual Student System) Specialized Group Interventions (At-Risk System) Universal Interventions (School-Wide Systems Classroom Systems) www.pbismaryland.org All Students in School

  13. Q & A

More Related