SWPBS Overview: Establishing Continuum of Support for All George Sugai Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions & Supports Center on Behavioral Education & Research University of Connecticut www.PBIS.org www.cber.org [email protected].
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Transcript SWPBS Overview: Establishing Continuum of Support for All George Sugai Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions & Supports Center on Behavioral Education & Research University of Connecticut www.PBIS.org www.cber.org [email protected].
SWPBS Overview:
Establishing Continuum of
Support for All
George Sugai
Center on Positive Behavioral Interventions & Supports
Center on Behavioral Education & Research
University of Connecticut
www.PBIS.org
www.cber.org
[email protected]
Purpose
Provide over/review of SWPBS w/
focus on…..
• School partnerships with CMCC
• Defining SWPBS
• SWPBS Rationale & Features
• District Leadership & SWPBS
Challenge
“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.
5,100 referrals =
76,500 min @15 min =
1,275 hrs =
159 days @ 8 hrs
2001 Surgeon General’s Report on
Youth Violence: Recommendations
• Change social context to break up
antisocial networks
• Improve parent effectiveness
• Increase academic success
• Create positive school climates
• Teach & encourage individual
social skills & competence
School-based Prevention & Youth
Development Programming
Coordinated Social Emotional & Academic Learning
Greenberg et al. (2003) American Psychologist
• Teach children social skills directly in real context
• “Foster respectful, supportive relations among
students, school staff, & parents”
• Support & reinforce positive academic & social
behavior through comprehensive systems
• Invest in multiyear, multicomponent programs
• Combine classroom & school- & community-wide
efforts
• Precorrect & continue prevention efforts
Lessons Learned: White House
Conference on School Safety
• Students, staff, & community must have means of
communicating that is immediate, safe, & reliable
• Positive, respectful, predictable, & trusting studentteacher-family relationships are important
• High rates of academic & social success are
important
• Positive, respectful, predictable, & trusting school
environment/climate is important for all students
• Metal detectors, surveillance cameras, & security
guards are insufficient deterrents
Characteristics of Safe School
Center for Study & Prevention of Youth Violence
• High academic expectations & performance
• High levels of parental & community involvement
• Effective leadership by administrators & teachers
• A few clearly understood & uniformly enforced,
rules
• Social skills instruction, character education &
good citizenship.
• After school – extended day programs
SWPBS Logic
Successful individual student
behavior support is linked to host
environments that are redesigned
& supported to be effective,
efficient, durable, & relevant for
all students
(Zins & Ponte, 1990)
SWPBS is about….
Improving
classroom &
school
climate
Building family-
communityschool
collaborations
Integrating
academic &
behavior
initiatives
Improving
support for
students w/
EBD
Decreasing
reactive
management
Maximizing
academic
achievement
Supporting Social Competence &
Academic Achievement
4 PBS
Elements
OUTCOMES
Supporting
Decision
Making
Supporting
Staff Behavior
PRACTICES
Supporting
Student Behavior
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
IMPLEMENTATION
W/ FIDELITY
CONTINUUM OF
EVIDENCEUNIVERSAL
BASED
SCREENING
INTERVENTIONS
DATA-BASED
DECISION
STUDENT
MAKING &
PERFORMANCE
PROBLEM
SOLVING CONTINUOUS
PROGRESS
MONITORING
RtI
Intensive
Targeted
Universal
Dec 7, 2007
Few
Some
All
Continuum of
Support for
ALL
CONTINUUM of SWPBS
Tertiary Prevention
• Function-based support
•
Audit
•
~5%•
1. Identify existing efforts
•
by tier
~15%
2.Prevention
Specify outcome for each effort
Secondary
• Check in/out
3. Evaluate implementation accuracy
•
•
& outcome effectiveness
•
•
4. Eliminate/integrate based on
Primary Prevention
outcomes
• SWPBS
•
5. Establish
•
•
•
~80% of Students
decision rules (RtI)
Office Re fe rrals pe r Day pe r M onth
A v e R efer r als per D ay
Last Year and This Year
20
15
10
5
0
Sept
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
School Months
Apr
May
Jun
N um ber of O ffic e R efer r als
Referrals by Location
50
40
30
20
10
0
B ath R B us A
B us
C af
C lass C omm
Gym
H all
School Locations
Libr
P lay G S pec
Other
N um ber of R efer r als
Referrals by Problem
Re fe rr als
pe r Prob Be havior
Behavior
50
40
30
20
10
0
L a n g Ac h o l Ars o n Bo m bCo m b sDe f i a nDi s ru p tDre s sAg g / f g tT h e f tHa ra s sPro p D Sk i p T a rd y T o b a c Va n d W e a p
Types of Problem Behavior
Referrals per Location
N um ber of O ffic e R efer r als
Referrals by Location
50
40
30
20
10
0
B ath R B us A
B us
C af
C lass C omm
Gym
H all
School Locations
Libr
P lay G S pec
Other
N um ber of R efer r als per S tudent
Referrals per Student
20
10
0
Students
Referrals by Time of Day
N um ber of R efer r als
Re fe rrals by Tim e of Day
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
7 : 0 0 7 : 3 0 8 : 0 0 8 : 3 0 9 : 0 0 9 : 3 0 1 0 : 0 01 0 : 3 01 1 : 0 01 1 : 3 01 2 : 0 01 2 : 3 0 1 : 0 0 1 : 3 0 2 : 0 0 2 : 3 0 3 : 0 0 3 : 3 0
Time of Day
SWPBS
Subsystems
Classroom
Family
Non-classroom
Student
School-wide
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
Non-classroom
• Positive expectations & routines
taught & encouraged
• Active supervision by all staff
– Scan, move, interact
• Precorrections & reminders
• Positive reinforcement
Classroom
• 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
Individual Student
• 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
Family
• Continuum of positive behavior support
for all families
• Frequent, regular positive contacts,
communications, & acknowledgements
• Formal & active participation &
involvement as equal partner
• Access to system of integrated school &
community resources
Team-led Process
Team
GENERAL
IMPLEMENTATION
PROCESS
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
Redesign Learning &
Teaching Environment
Few positive SW expectations defined,
taught, & encouraged
Carmen Arace Intermediate, Bloomfield
SETTING
TEACHING
MATRIX
Expectations
All
Settings
Hallways
Playgrounds
Cafeteria
Library/
Computer
Lab
Study,
read,
compute.
Sit in one
spot.
Watch for
your stop.
Assembly
Bus
Respect
Ourselves
Be on task.
Give your
best effort.
Be
prepared.
Walk.
Have a plan.
Eat all your
food.
Select
healthy
foods.
Respect
Others
Be kind.
Hands/feet
to self.
Help/share
with
others.
Use normal
voice
volume.
Walk to
right.
Play safe.
Include
others.
Share
equipment.
Practice
good table
manners
Whisper.
Return
books.
Listen/watch.
Use
appropriate
applause.
Use a quiet
voice.
Stay in your
seat.
Recycle.
Clean up
after self.
Pick up
litter.
Maintain
physical
space.
Use
equipment
properly.
Put litter in
garbage can.
Replace
trays &
utensils.
Clean up
eating
area.
Push in
chairs.
Treat
books
carefully.
Pick up.
Treat chairs
appropriately.
Wipe your
feet.
Sit
appropriately.
Respect
Property
RAH – at Adams City High School
(Respect – Achievement – Honor)
RAH
Classroom
Hallway/
Cafeteria
Bathrooms
Commons
Respect
Be on time; attend
regularly; follow
class rules
Keep location neat,
keep to the right, use
appropriate lang.,
monitor noise level,
allow others to pass
Put trash in cans,
push in your chair,
be courteous to all
staff and students
Keep area clean, put
trash in cans, be
mindful of others’
personal space, flush
toilet
Achievement
Do your best on all
assignments and
assessments, take
notes, ask questions
Keep track of your
belongings, monitor
time to get to class
Check space before
you leave, keep track
of personal
belongings
Be a good example
to other students,
leave the room
better than you
found it
Honor
Do your own work;
tell the truth
Be considerate of
yours and others’
personal space
Keep your own
place in line,
maintain personal
boundaries
Report any graffiti
or vandalism
RAH – Athletics
RAH
Practice
Competitions
Eligibility
Lettering
Team Travel
Respect
Listen to coaches
directions; push
yourself and
encourage
teammates to excel.
Show positive
sportsmanship;
Solve problems in
mature manner;
Positive interactions with refs,
umps, etc.
Show up on time
for every practice
and competition.
Show up on time
for every practice
and competition;
Compete x%.
Take care of your
own possessions
and litter; be where
you are directed to
be.
Achievement
Set example in the
classroom and in
the playing field as
a true achiever.
Set and reach for
both individual and
team goals;
encourage your
teammates.
Earn passing
grades; Attend
school regularly;
only excused
absences
Demonstrate
academic
excellence.
Complete your
assignments missed
for team travel.
Honor
Demonstrate good
sportsmanship and
team spirit.
Suit up in clean
uniforms; Win with
honor and integrity;
Represent your
school with good
conduct.
Show team pride in
and out of the
school. Stay out of
trouble – set a good
example for others.
Suit up for any
competitions you
are not playing.
Show team honor.
Remember you are
acting on behalf of
the school at all
times and
demonstrate team
honor/pride.
Cheer for
teammates.
Acknowledge & Recognize
Janney Jaguers Jan 06
OMMS Business Partner Ticket
6
7
8
Date: ________________
Student Name __________________________________
For Demonstrating: Safety
EthicsRespect
(Circle the trait you observed)
Comments: ___________________________________________
Authorized Signature: ____________________________________
Business Name: ________________________________________
Minnesota 5/06
“Good morning, class!”
Teachers report that when
students are greeted by an
adult in morning, it takes less
time to complete morning
routines & get first lesson
started.
McCormick Elementary School, MD
Monitoring Dismissal
PBS Systems Implementation Logic
Funding
Visibility
Political
Support
Leadership Team
Active Coordination
Training
Coaching
Evaluation
Local School Teams/Demonstrations
District Leadership Investments
• Positive prevention & behavior
• Formalized coordination & leadership
authority
• Family, school, & community support network
• Integrated continuum of evidence based
behavior practices
• Local behavior capacity & continuous
professional development
• Fidelity of intervention implementation
SETTING
All
Settings
Hallways
Playgrounds
Cafeteria
Library/
Comput
er Lab
Assembly
Bus
Respect
Ourselves
Be on
task.
Give
your
best
effort.
Be
prepare
d.
Walk.
Have a plan.
Eat all
your
food.
Select
healthy
foods.
Study,
read,
comput
e.
Sit in one
spot.
Watch for
your stop.
Respect
Others
Be kind.
Hands/f
eet to
self.
Help/sha
re with
others.
Use
normal
voice
volume.
Walk to
right.
Play safe.
Include
others.
Share
equipment.
Practice
good
table
manners
Whispe
r.
Return
books.
Listen/watc
h.
Use
appropriate
applause.
Use a quiet
voice.
Stay in
your seat.
Respect
Property
Recycle.
Clean
up after
self.
Pick up
litter.
Maintain
physical
space.
Use
equipment
properly.
Put litter in
garbage
can.
Replace
trays &
utensils.
Clean up
eating
area.
Push in
chairs.
Treat
books
carefull
y.
Pick up.
Treat
chairs
appropriate
ly.
Wipe your
feet.
Sit
appropriat
ely.
[email protected]
[email protected]
www.pbis.org
www.cber.org