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Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer
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Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support

Maryland PBIS Summer Institute

July 13,2004Teri Lewis-Palmer

Page 2: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Purpose

• To describe features of a systems approach to positive behavior support

Page 3: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Themes

• Consider school as unit of analysis

• Emphasize role of educators individually and collectively

• Build multi-level continuum of behavior support

• Give priority to agenda of primary prevention

Page 4: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Big Idea

• Goal is to establish host environments that support the adoption and sustained used of evidence-based practices (Zins & Ponte, 1990).

Page 5: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Why are school important places for investing?

• Regular, predictable, positive learning & teaching environments

• Positive adult & peer models

• Regular positive reinforcement

• Academic & social behavior development & success

Page 6: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Four Challenges

• Educating increasing numbers of students who are more different than similar from each other

• Educating students with severe problem behavior

• Doing more with less

• Creating “host environments” or systems that enable adoption & sustained use of effective practices.

Page 7: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

“141 Days!”

Intermediate/senior high school with 880 students reported over 5,100 office discipline referrals in one academic year. Nearly 2/3 of students have received at least one office discipline referral.

Page 8: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

5100 referrals =

51,000 min @10 min =

850 hrs =

141 days @ 6 hrs

Page 9: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

“Works for me”

In one school year, Jason received 87 office discipline referrals.

Page 10: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

“Works for me”

In one school year, a teacher processed 273 behavior incident reports.

Page 11: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

“Da place ta be”

During 4th period, in-school detention room has so many students that overflow is sent to counselor’s office. Most students have been assigned for being in hallways after the late bell.

Page 12: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Typical responses

• “Get Tough”

• “Train-n-Hope”

Page 13: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Individual response..Get Tough

• Increase monitoring for future problem behavior

• Clamp down on rule violators

• Re-re-re-review rules & sanctions

• Extend continuum of aversive consequences

• Improve consistency of use of punishments

• Establish “bottom line”

Page 14: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

System’s response…Get tougher

• Zero tolerance policies

• Security guards, student uniforms, metal detectors, surveillance cameras

• Suspension/expulsion

• Exclusionary options (e.g., alternative programs)

Page 15: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Reactive responses are predictable

When we experience aversive situation, we select interventions that produce immediate relief by

– Removing student– Removing ourselves – Modifying physical environment– Assign responsibility for change to student

&/or others

Page 16: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

But….false sense of safety & security!

• Fosters environments of control

• Triggers & reinforces antisocial behavior

• Shifts accountability away from school

• Devalues child-adult relationship

• Weakens relationship between academic & social behavior programming

Page 17: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

2001 Surgeon General’s Report

• Risk factors associated with increasing # of antisocial behaviors

– Antisocial peer networks– Reinforced deviancy

Page 18: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

• Recommendations (rearrange contingencies…..prevention)

– Establish “intolerant attitude toward deviance”• Break up antisocial networks…change social context

• Improve parent effectiveness

– Increase “commitment to school”• Increase academic success

• Create positive school climates

– Teach & encourage individual skills & competence

Page 19: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

“Train & hope”…..NO!

1. React to identified problem

2. Select & add practice

3. Hire expert to train practice

4. Expect & hope for implementation

5. Wait for new problem….

Page 20: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

What is the greater challenge?

• The greater challenge is arranging opportunities for schools to achieve the ability to...

– Respond efficiently, effectively, and relevantly to range of problem behaviors observed in schools

– Engage in data-based problem solving– Adopt, fit, & sustain empirically-based practices– Give priority to unified agenda of

activities/initiatives

Page 21: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

What is PBS?

PBS is a broad range of systemic & individualized strategies for achieving important social & learning outcomes while preventing problem behavior.

PBS is the integration of (a) valued outcomes,(b) science of human behavior,(c) validated procedures, and (d) systems change.

Page 22: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

SYST

EMS

PRACTICES

DATASupportingStaff Behavior

SupportingDecisionMaking

SupportingStudent Behavior

PositiveBehaviorSupport OUTCOMES

Social Competence &Academic Achievement

Page 23: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Nonclass

room

Setting S

ystems

ClassroomSetting Systems

Individual Student

Systems

School-wideSystems

School-wide PositiveBehavior Support

Systems

Page 24: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Academic Systems Behavioral Systems

1-5% 1-5%

5-10% 5-10%

80-90% 80-90%

Intensive, Individual Interventions•Individual Students•Assessment-based•High Intensity

Intensive, Individual Interventions•Individual Students•Assessment-based•Intense, durable procedures

Targeted Group Interventions•Some students (at-risk)•High efficiency•Rapid response

Targeted Group Interventions•Some students (at-risk)•High efficiency•Rapid response

Universal Interventions•All students•Preventive, proactive

Universal Interventions•All settings, all students•Preventive, proactive

Designing School-Wide Systems for Student Success

Page 25: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Implementation Levels

Student

Classroom

School

State

District

Page 26: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Goals of PBS

• Select & adapt technologies that are most effective, efficient, & relevant than reactive practices

• Arrange opportunities to teach & practice evidence-based practices

• Remove conditions that occasion & maintain undesirable outcomes

Page 27: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

• Increase conditions that occasion & maintain

desirable practices

• Remove aversives that inhibit desirable practices

• Establish environments & routines that support

continuum of positive behavior supports

Page 28: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

Features

• Create continuum of behavior supports from a systemic perspective

• Focus on behavior of adults in school as unit

• Utilize effective, efficient, relevant data-based decision making

Page 29: Review of School-wide Positive Behavior Support Maryland PBIS Summer Institute July 13,2004 Teri Lewis-Palmer.

• Give priority to achievable success

• Invest in research validated practices

• Arrange environments for “working smarter”

– Do less, but better– Do it once, but for a long time– Invest in clear outcomes– Invest in a sure thing