SWPBS: Leadership Team Guidelines George Sugai University of Connecticut Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions & Supports October 31, 2007 www.pbis.org.

Download Report

Transcript SWPBS: Leadership Team Guidelines George Sugai University of Connecticut Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions & Supports October 31, 2007 www.pbis.org.

SWPBS:
Leadership Team
Guidelines
George Sugai
University of Connecticut
Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions &
Supports
October 31, 2007
www.pbis.org
Agenda
• Welcome & Advanced Organizer
• Review of “Basics”
• Review of Practices & Processes
• Guidelines for sustaining/enhancing
efforts
Assumptions
• Member of school leadership team
• 1+ years implementation
• Attending as “team”
• Familiarity with “basics”
BIG PICTURE:
SWPBS effort is about….
• Improving general classroom & school climate
& community relations
• Decreasing dependence on reactive
disciplinary practices
• Maximizing impact of instruction to affect
academic achievement
• Improving behavioral supports for students with
emotional & behavioral challenges
• Improving efficiency of behavior related
initiatives
SW-PBS Logic!
Successful individual student
behavior support is linked to
host environments or school
climates that are effective,
efficient, relevant, & durable
(Zins & Ponti, 1990)
PBIS objective….
Redesign & support teaching &
learning environments that are
effective, efficient, relevant, &
durable
– Outcome-based
– Data-guided decision making
– Evidence-based practices
– Systems support for accurate & sustained
implementation
CONTINUUM OF
SCHOOL-WIDE
INSTRUCTIONAL &
POSITIVE BEHAVIOR
SUPPORT
~5%
~15%
Primary Prevention:
School-/ClassroomWide Systems for
All Students,
Staff, & Settings
~80% of Students
Tertiary Prevention:
Specialized
Individualized
Systems for Students
with High-Risk Behavior
Secondary Prevention:
Specialized Group
Systems for Students
with At-Risk Behavior
Prevention Logic for All
(Walker et al., 1996)
• Decrease development of new problem
behaviors
• Prevent worsening of existing problem
behaviors
• Redesign learning/teaching environments
to eliminate triggers & maintainers of
problem behaviors
• Teach, monitor, & acknowledge prosocial
behavior
SWPBS Conceptual Foundations
Behaviorism
ABA
EBS/PBS
SWPBS
It’s not just about behavior!
STUDENT
ACHIEVEMENT
Good Teaching
Behavior Management
Increasing District & State Competency and Capacity
Investing in Outcomes, Data, Practices, and Systems
Designing School-Wide Systems
for Student Success
Academic Systems
Behavioral Systems
Intensive, Individual Interventions
•Individual Students
•Assessment-based
•High Intensity
1-5%
Targeted Group Interventions
•Some students (at-risk)
•High efficiency
•Rapid response
Universal Interventions
•All students
•Preventive, proactive
5-10%
80-90%
1-5%
Intensive, Individual Interventions
•Individual Students
•Assessment-based
•Intense, durable procedures
5-10%
Targeted Group Interventions
•Some students (at-risk)
•High efficiency
•Rapid response
80-90%
Universal Interventions
•All settings, all students
•Preventive, proactive
Basics: 4
PBS
Elements
Supporting Social Competence &
Academic Achievement
OUTCOMES
Supporting
Decision
Making
Supporting
Staff Behavior
PRACTICES
Supporting
Student Behavior
OUTCOMES
DATA
• Clear definitions
• Efficient procedures
• Easy input/output
• Readable displays
• Regular review
PRACTICES
OUTCOMES
OUTCOMES
• Data-based
• Relevant/valued
• Measurable
PRACTICES
OUTCOMES
PRACTICES
• Evidence-based
• Outcome linked
• Cultural/contextual
adjustments
• Integrated w/ similar
initiatives
• Doable
PRACTICES
SYSTEMS
OUTCOMES
• Training to fluency
• Continuous evaluation
• Team-based action
planning
• Regular relevant
reinforcers for staff
behavior
• Integrated initiatives
PRACTICES
Major SWPBS Tasks
• Establish leadership team
• Establish staff agreements
• Build working knowledge &
capacity of SW-PBS practices &
systems
• Develop individualized action plan
for SW-PBS
GENERAL
IMPLEMENTATION
PROCESS:
“Getting Started”
Team
Agreements
Data-based
Action Plan
Evaluation
Implementation
Sample Implementation “Map”
• 2+ years of school team training
• Annual “booster” events
• Coaching/facilitator support @ school &
district levels
• Regular self-assessment & evaluation data
• On-going preparation of trainers
• Development of local/district leadership
teams
• Establishment of state/regional leadership &
policy team
Working Smarter
Initiative,
Project,
Committee
Attendance
Committee
Character
Education
Safety
Committee
School Spirit
Committee
Discipline
Committee
DARE
Committee
EBS Work
Group
Purpose
Outcome
Target
Group
Staff
Involved
SIP/SID/e
tc
On Horizon:
Response to Intervention
IMPLEMENTATION
W/ FIDELITY
DATA-BASED
CONTINUUM OF
DECISION MAKING
EVIDENCE& PROBLEM
BASED
SOLVING
INTERVENTIONS
CONTINUOUS
PROGRESS
MONITORING
STUDENT
PERFORMANCE
CONTINUUM of SWPBS
Tertiary Prevention
• Function-based support
•
•
~5%
•
•
~15%
Secondary Prevention
• Check in/out
•
•
•
•
Primary Prevention
• SWPBS
•
•
•
•
~80% of Students
Audit (10 MINUTES)
1. Identify existing efforts by tier
2. Specify outcome for each effort
3. Evaluate implementation accuracy
& outcome effectiveness
4. Eliminate/integrate based on
outcomes
5. Establish decision rules (RtI)
School-wide Positive
Behavior Support
Systems
Classroom
Setting Systems
School-wide
Systems
“SW-PBS Monthly
Planning Guide”
(Sugai Draft May 2006)
Purpose
• Give SWPBS leadership teams
extra organizational tool for
reviewing & planning their current &
future implementation activities
• Use self-assessment to guide
teams in their action planning
• “Ending & Beginning School Year”
Monthly Activity Schedule
Month: _________ SWPBS Team Activities to Support…..
All Students/Staff (“Green”)

Monthly

Conduct SWPBS leadership team meeting to review
data and progress on action plan activities, and plan
new activities, as needed.
Report to staff on status of SWPBS.
Students w/PBS Needs (“Yellow/Red”)

Report to staff on status of students on secondary and
tertiary behavioral intervention plans.

Review progress of students on secondary and
tertiary intervention plans
Nominate/review new students who might need
individualized PBS
Send parents progress report

Weekly
Daily

Guidelines
•
•
•
•
•
•
Work as school-wide leadership team.
Begin by reviewing current behavioral data
Link all activities to measurable action plan
outcomes & objectives.
Use “effectiveness, efficiency, & relevance”
to judge whether activity can be
implemented w/ accuracy & sustained.
Use, review, & update this planning guide
at monthly team meetings.
Plan activities 12 months out.
Planning Guide Self-Assessment
Highlights essential SWPBS
practices & systems for years 1-2
implementation
F = fully in place (e.g., >80%)
P = partially in place
N = not in place/don’t know
“STAFF”
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
State definition of SWPBS?
State purpose of SWPBS team?
State SW positive expectations?
Actively supervise in non-classroom
settings?
Agree to support SWPBS action plan?
Have more positive than negative daily
interactions with students?
Have opportunities to be recognized for
their SWPBS efforts?
School-wide Systems
1. Common purpose & approach to discipline
2. Clear set of positive expectations & behaviors
3. Procedures for teaching expected behavior
4. Continuum of procedures for encouraging
expected behavior
5. Continuum of procedures for discouraging
inappropriate behavior
6. Procedures for on-going monitoring &
evaluation
“STUDENTS”
8.
State SW positive expectations & give
contextually appropriate behavior
examples?
9.
Received daily positive academic and/or
social acknowledgement?
10. Have 0-1 major office discipline referrals for
year?
11. Have secondary/tertiary behavior
intervention plans if >5 major office
referrals?
“TEAM”
12. Representative membership?
13. At least monthly meetings?
14. Active administrator participation?
15. Active & current action plan?
16. Designated coaching/facilitation
support?
“DATA”
17. Measurable behavioral definitions for rule
violations?
18. Discipline referral or behavior incident
recording form that is efficient and
relevant?
19. Clear steps for processing, storing,
summarizing, analyzing, and reporting
data?
20. Schedule for monthly review of school-wide
data?
www.swis.org
“SW POSITIVE
EXPECTATIONS”
21. Agreed to 3-5 positively stated SW
expectations?
22. Complete (behaviors, context,
examples) lesson plan or matrix for
teaching expectations?
23. Schedule for teaching expectations in
context to all students?
24. Schedule for practice/review/boosters
of SW expectations?
“ENCOURAGING/ ACKNOWLEDGING
EXPECTATIONS”
25. Continuum or array of positive
consequences?
26. At least daily opportunities to be
acknowledged?
27. At least weekly
feedback/acknowledgement?
Are “Rewards” Dangerous?
“…our research team has conducted a series
of reviews and analysis of (the reward)
literature; our conclusion is that there is no
inherent negative property of reward. Our
analyses indicate that the argument against
the use of rewards is an overgeneralization
based on a narrow set of circumstances.”
– Cameron, 2002
• Cameron & Pierce, 1994, 2002
• Cameron, Banko & Pierce, 2001
Reinforcement Wisdom!
• “Knowing” or saying “know” does
NOT mean “will do”
• Students “do more” when “doing
works”…appropriate & inappropriate!
• Natural consequences are varied,
unpredictable, undependable,…not
always preventive
“RULE VIOLATIONS”
28. Leveled definitions of problem behavior?
29. Procedures for responding to minor
(nonrecordable) violations?
30. Procedures for responding to minor (nonoffice referable, recordable) violations?
31. Procedures for responding to major (officereferable) violations?
32. Procedures for preventing major violations?
33. Quarterly review of effectiveness of SW
consequences for rule violations
http://rtckids.fmhi.usf.edu
Kutash, K., Duchnowski, A. J., & Lynn, N. (2006). Schoolbased mental health: An empirical guide for decision
makers. Tampa, FL: University of South Florida. Louis De
la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute, Department of Child
& Family Studies, Research & Training Center for Children’s
Mental Health.
http://cfs.fmhi.usf.edu
Duchnowski, A. J., Kutash, K., & Romney, S., (2006).
Voices from the field: A blueprint for schools to increase
involvement of families who have children with emotional
disturbances. Tamp, FL: University of South Florida, The
Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute,
Department of Child and Family Studies.
“NONCLASSROOM SETTINGS”
34. Active supervision by all staff
across all settings?
35. Daily positive student
acknowledgements?
Nonclassroom
Setting Systems
• Positive expectations & routines
taught & encouraged
• Active supervision by all staff
– Scan, move, interact
• Precorrections & reminders
• Positive reinforcement
“CLASSROOM SETTINGS”
36. Agreement about classroom & nonclassroom
managed problem behaviors?
37. Linkage between SW & classroom positive
expected behaviors?
38. High rates of academic success for all students?
39. Typical classrooms routines directly taught &
regularly acknowledged?
40. Higher rates of positive than negative social
interactions between teacher & students?
41. Students with PBS support needs receiving
individualized academic & social assistance?
Classroom
Setting Systems
• Classroom-wide positive expectations taught
& encouraged
• Teaching classroom routines & cues taught &
encouraged
• Ratio of 6-8 positive to 1 negative adultstudent interaction
• Active supervision
• Redirections for minor, infrequent behavior
errors
• Frequent precorrections for chronic errors
• Effective academic instruction & curriculum
“STUDENTS W/ PROBLEM
BEHAVIORS”
42. Regular meeting schedule for behavior
support team?
43. Behavioral expertise/competence on team?
44. Function-based approach?
45. District/community support?
46. SW procedures for secondary
prevention/intervention strategies?
47. SW procedures for tertiary
prevention/intervention strategies?
Individual Student
Systems
• Behavioral competence at school & district
levels
• Function-based behavior support planning
• Team- & data-based decision making
• Comprehensive person-centered planning &
wraparound processes
• Targeted social skills & self-management
instruction
• Individualized instructional & curricular
accommodations
Last Tasks
Homework
1. Go to “on-line library” at
www.pbis.org & get ppt & “Year
One Outcomes”
2. Review w/ school team
3. Develop 6-12 month action plan
Norwell, MA