Transcript PowerPoint
Engaging Staff in PBIS:
Strategies for Tough Situations
(a PBIS follow-up)
Dr. Hank Bohanon
[email protected]
Thank you
Lucille, Steve, Marla, Candy (ISBE)
► PBIS Network Coaches
► Dr. Pamela Fenning, Kelly Carney, Myoung
Minnis, Dr. Beverly Kasper, Kira Hicks,
Kristyn Moroz, Sarrah Harriss
► Brigid Flannery and Rob Horner, U of
Oregon
► George Sugai, UCONN
►
Our Mentor!
►
Dr. Pamela Fenning
School-wide mentor for Positive Behavioral
Interventions & Strategies (PBIS)
Group level supports
Policy research
Purpose
►
Encourage people to stay in the field and
not to open a boutique in a small resort
town.
Unless this is a part of their own personal vision
for their overall quality of life.
PowerPoints
►
Participants will be able to identify what makes a
situation difficult
►
Participants will be able to articulate their vision
of what is a healthy climate or good quality of
life in a school (in general)
►
Participants will be able to identify strategies for
responding to difficult situations when they arise.
Topics
► What
makes something tough?
► What are you trying to do to me?
► K.
Rogers approach to intervention
Last Year’s Goal
► Orientation
for students
► Orientations for staff
► Developing a chair = a go-to person
► Major celebrations
► Systems for school acknowledgment
► Team meeting regularly
► Delegation of tasks
Your most difficult situation
► What
were you trying to accomplish and when you
became stuck?
► When
did this happen?
► What
happen afterward?
► Any
major events happening to teachers or
school?
For whom is the problem?
What are you trying to do to
me?
Teaching “Behavior”
► Every
one is different, and yet they are not
Model A, Minivan, Corvette, Pickup
► What
are the principles – the big ideas
► Why
are you doing this?
Your re-enforcers and setting events matter
► What
is the goal and objective of your lesson?
What IDEA says about PBIS
►
►
►
►
►
►
►
Consider if a behavior Impedes
School-wide consistency
General education
Incidental benefit
School is a Service not a place
Differentiated School-improvement
Analyzed with an FBA/BIP
Key Principles
ALL Behavior is Purposive & Communicative
Reinforcement = Add or take away
something, behavior increases +/Punishment = You do something, behavior
does not occur again
Setting events = before behavior
Discipline = to teach
Shaping = baby steps
What is the key?
►I
am not going to give them candy for doing
what I expect of them
(Fun time!)
You each get a piece of candy
Give a piece of candy to someone who is doing
something you like, or has on something you like
Give them the candy, but do not tell them why
They have to guess why they got the candy
Now, tell them what you liked and give them candy,
praise, high five, hug, etc.
Welcome to the School-wide
Free Operant Conditioning
Program
Be who you are!
Our motto: “We sure hope you know what
you are doing, ‘cause we sure don’t!”
Goal: at the School-wide level –
aim to get 80% of your staff
teaching behavior!
Illinois research – when schools get to 80/80
Fewer risk factors
More protective factors
More likely to have tried interventions beyond SW
More students with fewer discipline problems
Previous School-wide Evaluation
►
►
Teaching = 40%
Overall
= 78%
“Know when to hold ‘em,
know when to fold ‘em, know
when to walk away, know
when to run…”
Kenny Rogers
You have to start somewhere
► What
do you do when working with
individual students?
Start with one behavior
Start with one school
►Who
asks whom to the dance?
Kansas City
Kansas City
► We have ways
► We were ready for you
► We started with individual students
► We presented to one school first
► Now
how many schools?
Data on Beginning PBS Practices
12
# of Months
10
8
School # 1
6
School #2
4
2
0
Meeting with administration Meeting with administration
to first overview to staff
to first team meeting
Staff Who Attended First Team Meeting
25
# of Staff
20
15
School # 1
10
School #2
5
0
Number of School Staff at First Meeting
Battles
► Choosing
battle
battles – or choosing to not make it a
► When
do you become most frustrated with your
child, students, staff, or team?
► You
cannot stand between people and their
consequences
► Battle
only when you have to or when you think
you can win
Resolutions
►I
knew what was happening
► How
I felt – similar to what to struggle over
as a teacher,
► for
a brief moment…
Orientation for staff –
Could not get time, made guidebook
► Professional development tool
► Best thing since sliced bread
► Presentation for LRE came at end of the
year
Great, please do this at the beginning
SET/Referrals
►
New “Scores”
Teacher
Overall
=
=
60
82
(vs. 40)
(vs. 78)
► ODR’s
August to March - two years of reduction
November onward was great!
PBIS Team
► Assign
►
Tasks and Chairs
SET - Recommendations
Post expectations in classrooms
Fast access to tickets
Have go-to person
Teach and remind (particularly freshmen)
► Turned
out to be good modeling for
professional development
PBIS Team: (con’t.)
► Look
at the outcomes from data review
► Create hypothesis for behavior
► Create differentiated intervention(s)
► More teaching – fewer referrals
► Documentation for why orientation was
useful
► Practice in the classroom
Defining Next Steps
Top 3 Minor Infractions by Grade Level Per 100 Students
3.5
1-3 Dress code
3
# of Referrals Per 100 Students
1-4 Classroom Disruption
2.5
2
1-3 Dress code
1.5
1-3 Dress code
1
1-4 Classroom Disruption
1-6 Tardy to class
1-4 Classroom Disruption
1-6 Tardy to class
1-3 Dress code
0.5
1-6 Tardy to class
1-4 Classroom Disruption
1-2 Leaving Class
0
Fresh
Soph
Juniors
Grade Level
Seniors
Top 3 Reasons for Major Referrals Per Every 100 Students
1.8
2-6 Profanity
1.6
2-5 Failing to Abide Rules
2-6 Profanity
# of Referrals Per 100 Students
1.4
2-5 Failing to Abide Rules
1.2
1
2-8 Defy Authority
2-6 Profanity
2-8 Defy Authority
0.8
2-5 Failing to Abide Rules
2-8 Defy Authority
0.6
2-5 Failing to Abide Rules
2-6 Profanity
0.4
2-8 Defy Authority
0.2
0
Fresh
Soph
Juniors
Grade Level
Seniors
Next action plan already set
► Turned
them loose with data and get out of
their way – going to address uniforms
► Orientations are being scheduled
► Chair – go-to person elected
► Handbook is being updated
► Teachers will be supported for training
► Professional development is being
scheduled
Conclusion
► Stay
true to the PBIS model – the scientific
exploration of behavior – i.e., …
► Save
room for falling down, we learn through
example and non-example – it took 10,000 tries to
create the light bulb
► Be
prepared to be the only one who believes, for a
period of time. This is true for students, true for
schools – Einstein did not develop the theory of
relativity by committee
► If
you are using your data, then you never have to
list struggles as failure, they become “next steps.”