1 / 25

Phases of the Acting-Out Cycle

Phases of the Acting-Out Cycle. Functional Divisions of the Cerebral Cortex. Cortical Area Function Prefrontal Cortex Problem Solving, Emotion, Complex Thought Motor Coordination of Association complex Cortex movement

Download Presentation

Phases of the Acting-Out Cycle

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. Phases of the Acting-Out Cycle

  2. Functional Divisions of the Cerebral Cortex • Cortical AreaFunction • Prefrontal Cortex Problem Solving, Emotion, Complex Thought • Motor Coordination of Association complex Cortex movement • Visual Complex Association processing of Area visual information • Wernicke’s Area Language Comprehension • Speech Center Speech production and Articulation

  3. The Sources of Emotions • Researchers believe that the frontal lobes and the amygdala are among the most important brain structures affecting emotions. • Feelings of happiness and pleasure are linked to the prefrontal cortex. • Anger, fear, sadness, and other negative emotions are linked to the amygdala.

  4. THREE KEY STRATEGIES • Identify how to intervene early in an escalation. • Identify environmental factors that can be manipulated. • Identify replacement behaviors that can be taught & serve similar function.

  5. The MODEL High Peak Acceleration De-escalation Agitation Trigger Calm Recovery Low

  6. 1. Calm • Student is cooperative. • Accepts corrective feedback. • Follows directives. • Sets personal goals. • Ignores distractions. • Accepts praise.

  7. Calm • Intervention is focused on prevention. • Assess problem behavior • Triggers • Function • Academic & behavioral learning history • Arrange for high rates of successful academic & social engagements. • Use positive reinforcement. • Teach social skills. • Problem solving • Relaxation strategy • Self-management • Communicate positive expectations.

  8. 2. Trigger • Student experiences a series of unresolved conflicts. • Repeated failures • Frequent corrections • Interpersonal conflicts • Timelines • Low rates of positive reinforcement

  9. Trigger • Intervention is focused on prevention & redirection. • Consider function of problem behavior in planning/implementing response. • Remove from or modify problem context. • Increase opportunities for success. • Reinforce what has been taught.

  10. 3. Agitation • Student exhibits increase in unfocused behavior. • Off-task • Frequent start/stop on tasks • Out of seat • Talking with others • Social withdrawal

  11. Agitation • Intervention is focused on reducing anxiety. • Consider function of problem behavior in planning/implementing response. • Make structural/environmental modifications. • Provide reasonable options & choices. • Involve in successful engagements.

  12. 4. Acceleration • Student displays focused behavior. • Provocative • High intensity • Threatening • Personal

  13. Acceleration • Intervention is focused on safety. • Remember: • Escalations & self-control are inversely related. • Escalation is likely to run its course.

  14. Acceleration • Remove all triggering & competing maintaining factors. • Follow crisis prevention procedures. • Establish & follow through with bottom line. • Disengage from student.

  15. 5. Peak • Student is out of control & displays most severe problem behavior. • Physical aggression • Property destruction • Self-injury • Escape/social withdrawal • Hyperventilation

  16. Peak • Intervention is focused on safety. • Procedures like acceleration phase, except focus is on crisis intervention

  17. 6. De-escalation • Student displays confusion but with decreases in severe behavior. • Social withdrawal • Denial • Blaming others • Minimization of problem

  18. De-escalation • Intervention is focused on removing excess attention. • Don’t nag. • Avoid blaming. • Don’t force apology. • Consider function of problem behavior • Emphasize starting anew.

  19. 7. Recovery • Student displays eagerness to engage in non-engagement activities. • Attempts to correct problem. • Unwillingness to participate in group activities. • Social withdrawal & sleep.

  20. Recovery • Follow through with consequences for problem behavior. • Positively reinforce any displays of appropriate behavior. • Intervention is focused on re-establishing routines activities.

  21. Recovery • Debrief • Purpose of debrief is to facilitate transition back to program….not further negative consequence • Debrief follows consequences for problem behavior. • Goal is to increase more appropriate behavior.

  22. Recovery • Problem solving example: • What did I do? • Why did I do it? • What could I have done instead? • What do I have to do next? • Can I do it?

  23. The MODEL High Peak Acceleration De-escalation Agitation Trigger Calm Recovery Low

  24. THREE KEY STRATEGIES • Identify how to intervene early in an escalation. • Identify environmental factors that can be manipulated. • Identify replacement behaviors that can be taught & serve similar function.

More Related