Transcript Slide 1

Welcome to the 2014-2015
School Year!!
Elementary School Students are
inherently well-behaved!
…until they aren’t!
Can we really manage student
behavior?!?
PBIS
Positive
Behavioral
Interventions and
Supports
It’s all about
Prevention!
How can we decrease the likelihood that
certain behaviors will occur
(and others won’t) ?
By creating environments that are safe,
predictable, positive and consistent.
Our ultimate goals:
o Violent and disruptive behaviors are not
tolerated!
o Everyone has same understanding of
expectations
o Everyone uses the same language.
o Responses to behavior are the same.
o Regular recognition of positive behavior
Four critical features
Clear expectations
Be safe
o Be responsible
o Be respectful
o
Students come to school with broad differences
in their understanding of what is safe,
responsible and respectful!.
We can’t assume students
OF ANY AGE
know how to behave!
“They should know it by now”
…but maybe they don’t!
Instead of punishing students for not
automatically knowing how we want them
to behave, we spend time teaching them
what good behavior looks like!
Be specific!
“This is how we wait our
turn to get on the bus.”
“This is how we sit on
the school bus.
Expectations shouldn’t be expressed
just one time!
…reteach … reteach … reteach … reteach …
“Students learn appropriate
behavior the same way a child learns to
read – through instruction, practice,
feedback, and encouragement.”
Positives
Positives!
The use of positives can help
shape attitudes and behavior!
Positive relationships
Positive interactions
If these things
are important
to adults,
why wouldn’t
they be important
to students?
Positive feedback
Positive reinforcement
Many students get an abundance of
negatives at home.
Kids need (and want) positive adult
attention in order to thrive!
The single most important thing you
can do to prevent student discipline
problems is to build a relationship
with students!
o
o
o
o
o
o
Welcome students every day
Smile, make eye contact
Make it a point to use their name
Have conversations, ask questions
Be trustworthy. “What I say today is
still going to be true tomorrow”.
Be fair. If the rules are true for one
person, they are true for everyone.
Try to have at least 4 positive
interactions to each “negative” one
“Nice to see you!”
“Thanks a lot for
picking that up.”
“Good job of staying in
your seat today!”
“Oh boy…”
“Have a great day!”
Incentives!
Why use them?
o
o
o
o
They help you learn to look for the good in kids.
They give you an opportunity to build
relationships with kids.
They multiply the positive reinforcement.
It is more effective in helping kids change habits
than verbal praise alone…but it needs to be
meaningful and sincere!
PLEASE NOTE: The most
effective reward for kids
is positive adult attention!
If you teach it
and expect it
and they DO IT,
acknowledge it!
(Catch them being good!)
Children comply with the
rules 80% of the time. However
they are complimented for their
behavior less than…..
2%
Research indicates that you can
significantly improve behavior just by
pointing out what someone is doing
correctly.
Focus more attention on
what kids do
right than on what they
do wrong!
Corrections
CORRECTIONS
PUNISHMENTS!
Punishment doesn’t work!
The most difficult students have a
high tolerance for our punishments.
Punishment doesn’t
work when most
everything
in someone’s life
is already punishing.
Jeff Sprague
“If your only tool is a hammer, every
problem becomes a nail”
Too often we
continue to do
the same thing
(often punitive)
and expect
different results!
PBIS approach to correction:

Re-teach expected behavior
 If student complies, acknowledge
them!

If student refuses to comply, generate a
written referral about behavior

If student STILL refuses to comply,
follow progressive discipline policy.
Data driven decisions
Data-driven decisions
To make good decisions, we need good
data …
… “ so our decisions aren’t based on our last
worst day!”
It’s important to keep data about student behavior!
Discipline referral data helps when entering incidents
into SWIS (School-Wide Information System), tracking
behavior patterns and making decisions regarding
behavior challenges.
School PBIS teams look at
the “BIG 5” in data:
HOW MANY referrals per day are we averaging?
WHO are we seeing the most of?
WHAT behaviors are happening?
WHERE are they
happening?
At WHAT times
of day?
Teams make decisions based
on that data…
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Do we need to do a reteach of a particular
expectation?
Does EVERYONE need it…or just one grade level?
(Or just one person?)
Is there anything we can alter in the environment?
Does a particular area need more supervision?
Etc.
Hopefully next month’s data will tell
us if our decisions were good ones!
5% of students
may require “tier
three” helps to
manage chronic
problems with
behavior.
80% of students
will respond to
instruction; no
problem!
5%
15%
15% of students may
need some “tier two”
interventions to help
them with behavior.
80%
It pays to put the
majority of effort and attention into
PREVENTION!!
Now the BIG QUESTION!
“Does it work?”
17,000 schools across the Nation are
implementing PBIS
o It is used in Juvenile Detention
centers and Mental Health facilities
o Other Nations have adopted it
o PBIS is fast becoming the “gold
standard” of behavior management
o
It takes time, effort and practice!
Adults need to work together to:
 stay “on the same page”
 keep their agreements
 communicate
 use the same language
 deliver the same message
…consistency, consistency, consistency…
Everyone involved with students is an Educator!
Thank you for doing your
part to make
sure school
is the best
part of every
kids’ day!
Sue Ann Moore, BA, CPS
PBIS Coach, Roseburg Public Schools
[email protected]