Universal School-wide Screening to Identify Students for Tier 2/Tier 3 Interventions 2008 National Forum for Implementers of School-Wide PBS Doug Cheney, Ph.D., Washington PBIS Coordinator, University of Washington, Seattle, [email protected]Kimberli Breen, M.S., C.A.S., M.A., Technical Assistance Director, IL-PBIS Network, [email protected]Jennifer Rose, M.Ed., Loyola University Chicago, [email protected]
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Universal School-wide Screening to Identify Students for Tier 2/Tier 3 Interventions
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Universal School-wide Screening to Identify Students for
Tier 2/Tier 3 Interventions
2008 National Forum for Implementers of School-Wide PBS
Doug Cheney, Ph.D., Washington PBIS Coordinator, University of Washington, Seattle, [email protected]
• Some evidence from Washington schools using SSBD
• Application of using SSBD in Illinois• Discussion of using Screening Tools
Universal Screening
• Reliable Tools available for past 20 years• Universal screening offers opportunity for
prevention, yet….• Schools reluctant to conduct behavioral
screening:– Fear of “stigmatizing kids”– Concerns regarding efficient/effective
methods of supporting identified youth
Source: Walker, Cheney, Stage, Blum (2005)
PBIS Systems Often:
• Develop behavior support team• Monitor ODRs and teacher referral• Use school or ODR criteria (2-5 ODR)
to nominate students for Tier 2• Capture externalizing disruptive
students
Universal (school-wide) behavioral screening :
• Addresses prevalence of emotional/behavior problems among school-age children ranges between 9%-13% (Tier 2 & 3 Students)
• Provides a valid and reliable approach for identifying student behavioral issues– Externalizing and Internalizing students are identified
• Highlights schools as an ideal environment for addressing mental health-related issues– “Less stigmatizing” than clinics– Potential to reach large groups of youth and families– Successfully identify kids with internalizing behaviors
Universal Screening• Behavioral screening viewed as normative,
e.g., Vision, Hearing, Literacy • Good fit with RTI behavior model• Links to prevention programs & reduces
need for more intensive services later– Untreated emotional/behavioral issues
correlate with negative outcomes• Poor grades & personal relationships• High school dropout & Unemployment• Incarceration, Substance abuse, Suicide
Systematic Screening for Behavior Disorders (SSBD; Walker & Severson, 1992)
• Research in the 1980s on predictors• Multiple gating procedures following mental
health model• Externalizing and Internalizing dimensions• Evidence for efficiency, effectiveness, & cost
benefits• Exemplary, evidence-based practice
• US Office of Special Education, Council for Children with Behavior Disorders, National Diffusion Network
Multiple Gating Procedure (Severson et al. 2007)
Teachers Rank Order 3 Ext. & 3 Int. Students
Teachers Rate Top 3 Students on Critical Events, Adaptive & Maladaptive Scales
Gate 1
Gate 2
Pass Gate 1
Classroom & Playground
Observations
Gate 3Pass Gate 2 Tier 2,3
Intervention
Tier 3 Intervention or Special Ed. Referral
Gating Procedures
• Gate 1 – Nomination based on Definitions• Gate 2 – Score and Criteria for:
positively, Expresses anger appropriately, Positive socials with peers
• Maladaptive Behavior – Refuses to participate in activities, Challenges teacher limits/rules, Manipulates peers, pouts/sulks
SSBD History in Washington
• Used in research over the past 10 years– 10 districts statewide
• School psychs review & adopt for district• Teachers informed & process reviewed in
staff meeting• Screening takes 1-2 hours per teacher to
complete• Tier 2 Students identified
Washington Schools: Study 1Walker, Cheney, Stage, & Blum (2005)
• 3 Elem. Schools, 80/80 SET, 1999-2003• 124 students (70 Ext./54 Int.) Ext. > 1 s.d. on
Social Skills and Prob Behs./ Not Int.• Screening & ODR: >ODR, >Prob. Behs.• Screening+ODR increases # of at-risk students• Screening and use of school supports
maintains students at SST level (Gate 2 Tier 2), and fewer FBA/BSP or referred to Special Ed (Gate 3, Tier 3)
Study 2:Cheney, Stage, Hawken, Lynass,
Mielenz, & Waugh (in review)
• 119 Tier 2 CCE Intervention, 86 Comparison Students in 18 schools
• 73/119 students (61%) graduate within 2 yrs• SSBD & Behavioral Measures differentiate
graduates, comparisons, nongraduates.• Graduates lower problem behaviors &
• Emphasis on building “system capacity”• Identify youth early• Support youth with effective interventions• Exit/transition youth off of interventions• Progress-monitor
– Individual youth response to interventions– Interventions themselves
Summary: 2007 SSBD Screening Results
4%
3%
6.7%
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
7%
1At-risk students identified by SSBD
Perc
ent o
f tot
al e
nrol
lmen
t
Kids identified as externalizers as percent of total enrollment Kids identified as internalizers as percent of total enrollmentKids identified as a percentage of total school enrollment
At-risk students identified by 2007 SSBD screening
3.4%
1.3%
23.2%
2.8%
7.1%6.4%
8.3%
4.3% 5.0%
6.8%
14.8%
7.2%6.1%
8.0%
6.0%
8.0% 8.6%
0%
6.7%
0.0%
5.0%
10.0%
15.0%
20.0%
25.0%
Schools
Perc
enta
ge o
f to
tal e
nrol
lmen
t
Kids identified as a percentage of total school enrollment
At-risk students identified by 2007 SSBD screening-North
0.0%
1.0%
2.0%
3.0%
4.0%
5.0%
6.0%
7.0%
8.0%
9.0%
School A School B School C School D School E School F School G School H School I AverageSchools
Perc
ent
of t
otal
enr
ollm
ent
Kids identified as a percentage of total school enrollment
Universal Screening in Illinois: Preparation Process
• District-level commitment• Secondary PBIS system in place
– Provides seamless transition from screening to intervention
• Logistics of preparation• SSBD Coordinator• Overview for all staff• Schedule & organize ‘day of administration’
Universal Screening: School Profile
• K-5 Elementary in southwest suburban Chicago• 65+% low income• Total enrollment of 580 reflects diverse student population
• Implemented universal screening in mid-March– Identified total of 82 students
• Represents 14% of enrollment
– Majority of students classified as externalizers• 56% of identified students
– However a significant percentage (43%) met criteria as internalizers
Universal Screening:Illinois Application
• Capitalized upon existing system of secondary interventions– Recruited additional adult volunteers for CICO– Paired 2-4 students for CICO with adults, prior to
sending permission slips– Tailored secondary level interventions to meet
unique needs of internalizers (e.g., using social skills groups)
– Contacted parents of internalizers prior to sending home permission slips
– Used SWIS/CICO data collection system
Universal Screening:Illinois Application
• Lessons learned:– Address slow response for granting
permission• Incorporate area on permission slips for
parents to request additional information• Anticipate need for follow-up phone calls,
sending additional permission slips
Universal Screening:Illinois Application
• Lessons learned:– Pair students and teachers based on physical
proximity– Increase size of CICO groups– Keep a “reserve” of adults to add to CICO– Review data weekly
• Identify students ready to transition to less intensive level of support/students who are not responding to CICO
Resources
Severson, H.H., Walker, H.M., Hope-Dolittle, J., Kratochwill, T.R., Gresham, F.M. (2007). Proactive, early screening to detect behaviorally at-risk students: Issues, approaches, emerging innovations, and professional practices. Journal of School Psychology. 45, 193-223.
Walker, B., Cheney, D., Stage, S., Blum, C. (2005). Schoolwide screening and positive behavior supports: Identifying and supporting students at risk for school failure. Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions. 7(4) 194-204.